Archive for the ‘Intros4’ Category

Announcing Introductions5

July 8, 2009

Irvine Contemporary is pleased to announce Introductions5, our fifth curated “MFA annual” that brings a selection of new artists from leading art college programs to Washington, D.C. Through a combined process of thesis exhibition visits, artist studio visits, and open submissions, we reviewed over 200 recent graduates from leading MFA programs across the US.

Opening reception with artists, Saturday, August 8, 6:30-9 PM.

Congratulations Introductions5 Participants:

Jonathan Dankenbring (MFA, Indiana University): Sculpture and Installation

Ultra, 2009. Hematite and jade. 4.3 x 2.4 x .3 inches each

Ultra, 2009. Hematite and jade. 4.3 x 2.4 x .3 inches each

John Hill, Jr. (MFA, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill): Drawing

Proactive Teamwork (scene 4), 2008-2009, Pen on paper, 24 x 32 inches

Proactive Teamwork (scene 4), 2008-2009, Pen on paper, 24 x 32 inches

Christopher LaVoie (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art): Sculpture

Headstone Milestone, 2009. Concrete and cord. Dimensions variable

Headstone Milestone, 2009. Concrete and cord. Dimensions variable

Paris Mavroidis (MFA, Pratt Institute): Digital Media & Film

Divers, 2009. Short Animation (Color), 3 minutes

Divers, 2009. Short Animation (Color), 3 minutes

Matt Sartain (MFA, Academy of Art University, San Francisco): Photography

Untitled (Night), 2009. Archival digital pigment print. Dimensions variable

Untitled (Night), 2009. Archival digital pigment print. Dimensions variable

Wayne Toepp (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art): Painting

Monitor #12, 2008. Oil on canvas. 36 x 48 inches.

Monitor #12, 2008. Oil on canvas. 36 x 48 inches.

Yi-Hsin Tzeng (MFA, Savannah College of Art and Design): Painting and Mixed Media

Invisible: Box Series (Black), 2008. Acrylic and printmaking on panels, 8.5 x 8.5 x 19.5 inches

Invisible: Box Series (Black), 2008. Acrylic and printmaking on panels, 8.5 x 8.5 x 19.5 inches

Stacey Lee Webber (MFA, University of Wisconsin-Madison): Sculpture

Screwball 1, 2009. Screws, thread, mixed materials. Dimensions variable

Screwball 1, 2009. Screws, thread, mixed materials. Dimensions variable

It’s That Time Again

April 14, 2009

INTRODUCTIONS5: Call for Submissions
An exhibition of works by recent art school graduates in August 2009

APPLICATION PROCESS
Deadline: Friday June 5, 2009
Notification: No later than June 21, 2009
Eligibility: Artists who have graduated in 2008 or 2009 and are available for gallery exhibition

Application must include:
•    Artist’s statement
•    Artist’s resume
•    A CD-ROM of up to ten images.  For New Media and Time Based Media (Sound, Film/Video, etc)
please submit only ten minutes worth of work.
•    Self-addressed stamped envelope – required to have submitted materials returned

Submitted materials will be handled with care, but Irvine Contemporary cannot assume responsibility for lost or damaged materials.

Send to:
Lauren Gentile, Director of Sales
Irvine Contemporary
1412 14th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005

Irvine Contemporary specializes in contemporary art by emerging and mid-career artists with
growing national and international reputations.  We participate in major nation and international art
fairs and have launched the careers of young artists now in major private and institutional
collections.

four

Specullector, meet Photopreneur

August 15, 2008

Thank you Dean Shanson of Photopreneur for the great reporting!

Content below, but I suggest subscribing to their feed – all the posts are info packed:

Edgy Photos Sell In the Art World

Posted 08/14/08 by Dean

Photography: voteprime

For most workaday photographers, the world of auctions, collectors and the art market can seem very far away. But that doesn’t stop just about everyone who picks up a camera from dreaming about it. While few photographers seriously expect their wedding formals or baby portraits to change hands for six-figure sums, many would certainly like to believe that one day, just maybe, they’ll see their landscapes or their street photography hanging in a gallery, reviewed by critics, adored by curators and fought over by collectors.

Not only it could happen for photographers with the right talent but according to art expert, Lauren Gentile, photographers might even be in an enviable position in comparison to some other artists. Because many copies of a photo can be produced from a single shot, the prices for each print are lower and therefore easier for art-lovers to add to their collections.

“Photography is becoming more collectible because it is accessible in terms of price,” Lauren told us. “You can get a nice photograph for a couple thousand – this is so, and differs from collecting painting because photography is editioned like traditional prints.”

Blue-Chip Photographs

For major buyers, though, those low prices aren’t necessarily an attraction. Lauren, who is an Assistant Director and Director of Sales at the Irvine Contemporary gallery in Washington D.C., reports that her collectors are now buying “blue-chip” photographs (works by top-sellers like Andreas Gursky whose 99 Cent II Diptych sold for $3.34 million in 2007) or artworks from “the emerging sector,” and often both. From new artists, collectors are interested in photographs that she describes as either edgy or nostalgic. Irvine Contemporary’s list of artists includes Marla Rutherford, for example, a fashion, editorial and advertising photographer whose photographs includes fetish images that have been exhibited at SCOPE Miami Art Basel.

If all that talk of “blue-chips” and “emerging sectors” sounds very financial however, perhaps that’s not too surprising, despite the artistic context. Lauren’s own background includes researching art funds – investment portfolios made up of artworks that are intended to rise in value like stocks – and she describes herself as a “specullector,” a fine art collector who looks not only at a work’s artistic value but also its market price and the potential of that price to grow.

Clearly, predicting those changes is not easy to do — which is why Lauren says that she can only speculate. The prices of works created by artists completing their Masters in Fine Arts (MFA), such as those included in Irvine Contemporary’s “Introductions4″ on show through August, can only rise, she notes, but for established photographers, some research can offer clues to the chances an artist’s work will become more valuable.

“If the artist is mid-career I look at what exhibitions they have scheduled for the future, who they will be showing with, is their work being contextualized with the works of higher valued artists? Whether or not critics are reviewing their works in Aperture, ArtForum, etc. and what curators have included them in shows and where? Also if museums have started to collect their work, and what ‘tastemakers’ do too.”

The increasing numbers of buyers in China and Russia is also raising the prices of work by established artists, Lauren notes, but as the art heads east, the money flowing west leaves European and American collectors more cash to spend on new, lower-priced emerging artists.

Chinese Buyers Help Emerging Photographers

So what can a photographer dreaming of breaking into the art world do to raise their profile and take their share of the sales?

Building a website is one necessity, says Lauren. Finding gallery representation is another. While one of those is obviously much easier than the other, working with a gallery can provide all sorts of benefits that allow the artist the freedom and time to work. The gallery will also provide guidance, career management and help to develop price structures.

But there is a price to be paid for this success and it goes beyond the share of the sales price taken by the gallery. The photograph can disappear from view.

“Works of art that are bought purely for investment reasons are put in a storage facility,” Lauren explained. “[F]or tax purposes these works of art cannot be displayed because then the collector (or fund manager) is deriving physical benefits from being able to view the work — the IRS has a big problem with that.”

Artists still waiting for their big gallery break then can console themselves that while their photographs have yet to make the big time, people can at least see and enjoy them.

Introductions4 – About the Artists

July 18, 2008

Becky Alprin (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art)

Becky Alprin’s sculptures reference architectural models, urban design, and landscapes in imagined three-dimensional spaces. Through a minimal reduction of colors and materials — black and white cut acrylic — Alprin creates miniature histories of the human intervention in the natural world, the density of urban spaces, and the often ephemeral quality of human structures.

Reid Bingham (BFA, Rutgers University)

Using a “single use” camcorder, Reid Bingham produces video that represents the ephemeral nature of the medium and a commentary on the current state of the technology—ubiquitous and disposable. By attaching video cameras to moving machines like car hubcaps and bicycle wheels, Bingham recovers some of the strategies of Dadaism by using intentionally “low-tech” inversions of commonplace image-making technology. Bingham’s videos surprise and delight by recording the camera’s random and impersonal view of motion.

Christina Empedocles (MFA, California College of the Arts, San Francisco)

Christina Empedocles employs realist and trompe-oeil techniques with found imagery to create paintings that renew the question of representation, illusion, memory, loss, and nostalgia in contemporary painting. Her paintings show objects and imagery detached from their sources, but recalled and reassembled in convincing imaginary spaces.

Adam Frezza (MFA, University of Florida)

Adam Frezza’s paintings and drawings examine the links and loopholes of science, technology, and religion. By referencing objects often considered useless or trivial, Frezza playfully creates theoretical machines that suggest both maps of magical parallel universes and plausible schematics of hidden correspondences.

Andrea Land (MFA, San Francisco Art Institute)

Andrea Land’s luminous photographic portraits of young girls in domestic settings reveal a world of curiosity, innocence, and vulnerability. While the imagery suggests childhood introspection caught between the innocence and self-awareness, the pictures also hover between the beautiful and the grotesque, the private world of childhood fantasy and reality.

David Linneweh (MFA, Southern Illinois University)

Employing a combination of line drawing and oil painting techniques on wood panels, David Linneweh deconstructs and reconstructs American idealism in landscapes and buildings. The scenes are shown in transition – caught between demolition and refurbishment – revealing the cycle of urban sprawl and cultural recomposition.

Sebastian Martorana (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art)

Through his conceptual series, Un-commissioned Memorials, Sebastian Martorana uses marble and granite to critique the function of memorials. His work reveals a keen understanding of the interplay of artifice and the artificial and the traditional function of memorials: creating stable icons of memory detached from history or real events. He shows how the codes of memorials, which we know mainly in stone, can be appropriated to create “memorials” that may be completely fictive and artificial, but thoroughly convincing.

Jimmy Joe Roche (MFA, Maryland Institute College of Art)

Jimmy Joe Roche’s hand-cut and painted paper wall sculptures create a striking contemporary mythology through a series of new cultural totems. His visual language draws from traditional American and Eastern meditative symbols rechanneled through today’s cultural landscape. The works are painstakingly hand-crafted and symmetrical, requiring a long process of repetition, cutting, weaving, and painting, and embody the artist’s contemporary mantra.

Matthew Woodward (MFA, New York Academy of Art)

Focusing on process and movement, Matthew Woodward’s works in graphite on paper serve as a synthesis between drawing and painting, objects and time. Capturing the simple presence of architectural details from historical buildings in New York, Woodward focuses on the process of drawing and the fluidity between surface, ground, and object. The record of the act of drawing and the drawing that appears seem natural in both mastery and innovation.

Thank you Philip Barlow, Joseph DiGangi, Richard Dubeshter, Veronica Jackson, Kate Nicholson, Dr. Fred Oginbene, and Dennis Shea for being our jurors!!!

It’s That Time Again

April 10, 2008

INTRODUCTIONS4: Call for Submissions

An exhibition of works by recent art school graduates

August 2 – September 6, 2008

APPLICATION PROCESS

Deadline: Saturday June 7, 2008

Notification: No later than June 21, 2008

Eligibility: Artists who have graduated in 2007 or 2008 and are available for gallery exhibition

Application must include:

  • Artist’s statement
  • Artist’s resume
  • A CD-ROM of up to ten images. For New Media and Time Based Media (Sound, Film/Video, etc) please submit only ten minutes worth of work.
  • Self-addressed stamped envelope – required to have submitted materials returned

Submitted materials will be handled with care, but Irvine Contemporary cannot assume responsibility for lost or damaged materials.

Send to:

Lauren Gentile, Assistant Director

Irvine Contemporary

1412 14th Street, NW

Washington, DC 20005

Irvine Contemporary specializes in contemporary art by emerging and mid-career artists with growing national and international reputations. We participate in major nation and international art fairs and have launched the careers of young artists now in major private and institutional collections.


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