And They Papered The Room, Lilina Bloch Gallery | Kathy Lovas

Screen Shot 2015-06-29 at 1.18.06 PM
Photo by Mayra Barraza, Mating Season VIII, ink on paper, 13 x 9 1/2 inches, 2013

Congratulations to Texas Woman’s University Alumna, Kathy Lovas, for being included in And They Papered The Room, a group exhibition, at Lilina Bloch Gallery in Dallas, TX. The exhibition runs from June 27 – August 1, 2015.

The exhibition is a testimony of a medium that has become a constant experiment that combines ancient and high-technology techniques and exposes the exciting times for contemporary artists that seek to expand the scope of paper behind their creative process.
Participant artist are Mayra Barraza, Tim Best, Kristen Cochran, Michael Corris, Reinhold Engberding, Ann Glazer, Lynne Harlow, Letitia Huckaby, Vince Jones, Kathy Lovas, Shawn Mayer, Leigh Merrill, Mi-Hee Nahm and Sally Warren.

Exhibition Dates: June 27 – August 1, 2015

Part of the Glasstire’s TOP 5 EXHIBITIONS IN TEXAS as of June 25!

Kathy Lovas was born in Duluth, Minnesota. She holds a B.S. degree in biology from St. Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana and an MFA in photography from Texas Woman’s University in Denton. She is a 1995 recipient of a Mid-America Arts Alliance National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in photography, and was a 1991 fellow of the American Photography Institute National Graduate Seminar at New York University.

Kathy lives in Dallas, Texas and has been on the photography faculty in the College of Visual Arts and Design at the University of North Texas in Denton since 1992. In addition she has held teaching appointments at Southern Methodist University, UT Arlington, UT Dallas, and Texas Woman’s University.

My Favorite Intern, Holly Johnson Gallery | Mary Kathryn Wimberly

front_RGB_home_w
Congratulations to Texas Woman’s University Alumna, Mary Kathryn Wimberly, for having her work included in My Favorite Intern at Holly Johnson Gallery in Dallas, TX. The exhibition runs from June 27 – August 15, 2015.

Exhibition Dates: June 27 – August 15, 2015

Mary Kathryn Wimberly is a Texas based fine art photographer, instructor, and commercial photographer. Her work has been shown nationally and internationally in group and solo exhibitions. She holds a BFA from the University of North Texas and an MFA from Texas Woman’s University.

Michael Kenna: France | Photographs Do Not Bend

Screen Shot 2015-06-25 at 3.00.48 PM

Michael Kenna: France | Photographs Do Not Bend

Exhibition Dates: May 16 – August 1, 2015

This will be PDNB Gallery’s fourth solo exhibition for the renowned landscape photographer, Michael Kenna (b. 1953, Widnes, Lancashire, England). This very special show will highlight photographs of France taken in the past several decades. The exhibition follows the release of his latest book, FRANCE, by Nazraeli Press, and his exhibition in Paris at Le Musée Carnavalet.

Kenna has photographed all over the world, but perhaps the work he did in France in the 1980’s put him on the map. His long exposures of Versailles, taken at dawn or dusk, produced memorable images. His sublime photographs were first published in his most recognized book, Le Nôtre’s Gardens. The locations included Vaux-le-Vicomte, Versailles, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Fontainebleau, Chantilly, Les Tuileries, Saint-Cloud, Sceaux, and Marly.

Now, when we see the perfectly manicured trees of Versailles, we think of Michael Kenna’s photographs. Later, when Kenna photographed Japan (exhibited at PDNB in 2003), his meditative skill of photographing took off to a new level. But France was where this artist developed the eye to see the divine beauty of nature.

This exhibition will include some early works from the 1980’s, and some newer images that have not been exhibited. Locations will include Le Desert de Retz, Les Tuileries, Falaise d’Aval, Mont Saint Michel and the Eiffel Tower.

Michael Kenna’s photographs are housed in over 100 museum and institution collections throughout the world, including the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, George Eastman House, Los Angeles County Museum of Art,  Musée national d’Art modern, Paris, San Francisco Modern Art Museum, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

He has received several awards including an Honorary Master of Arts from Brooks Institute in Santa Barbara, and the Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters from the Ministry of Culture, France.

The companion book, FRANCE, will be available for purchase.

An Interview with Michael Kenna:

PDNB – Why France? I loved your earlier work from the 1990’s that was published in the beautiful monograph, Le Nôtre’s Gardens. What was your motivation to create a new book on France that includes old and new images?

MICHAEL – I was born in England and my early work comes out of the European tradition of photography. My masters were Eugene Atget, Bill Brandt, Brassai, Mario Giacomelli, Josef Sudek and others. These photographic giants influenced me greatly. I suppose they are all romantics at heart, all concerned with photographing a feeling as much as documenting external reality. Atget was the springboard for my work in Paris and the
Le Nôtre gardens that you refer to.

France is a huge country, very close to England, enormously varied, with unlimited potential for creative expression. My photographic work is generally about the juxtaposition, relationship, connection between the “natural” elements: earth, water, sky, etc., and the structures that we humans leave behind. I enjoy the patina of age, the passage of time, the footprints, traces, memories left in the landscape. I photograph what I am drawn to, which can be directly linked back to my childhood experiences in the Northern England: train tracks, church interiors, parks, gardens, seafronts, industrial buildings, bridges, urban environments, etc. France has all these elements and many more.

I first visited France in the late seventies and have been photographing there fairly consistently since the early eighties. It is a country that I feel very much at home in. These photographs are from my limited experiences in the places I have been fortunate enough to spend time. This is not a comprehensive survey of France. I see this collection as more of an ongoing personal, visual diary. I’m sure I could spend the rest of my life photographing in France and there would still be much, much more to see and photograph.
PDNB – How do you feel about your older work in France and was there any temptation purely to make this a book of your more recent French photos?

MICHAEL – I couldn’t image excluding older images just because I have newer images. Where would I draw the line? I like my newer friends to mix with my older friends. The chronological development of some thirty years of photography in France is also very interesting for me. Pairing new with old can add an extra dimension to both. Over the years I have had a number of books published on specific areas of France: Le Notre’s Gardens, Le Desert de Retz, Calais Lace, Mont Saint Michel, In France, Jefferson’s Walks in Paris, etc. I have also received commissions to photograph a number of other specific areas. This book combines all this work, mixes it up and presents it in a fresh way. I like that a lot.

Dawn Mist, Mont St. Michel, France, 1994
PDNB – Why do you prefer small prints?

MICHAEL – I’ve experimented with big prints but I just don’t like them. We all see about 35 degrees in focus so naturally approach artwork from a certain distance. I prefer viewers to be about ten inches from my prints. It is a very intimate viewing distance. Also, I have printed this way since the seventies so my work is one large, quite happy family. Prints from 1975 get along fine being exhibited next to prints from last week.
PDNB – You printed for Ruth Bernhard when you lived in San Francisco. How long did you work for her? How did she influence your career?

MICHAEL – I was very fortunate to meet Ruth Bernhard in 1978. She had signed an exclusive contract with The Stephen White Gallery in Los Angeles. As part of this contract, she agreed to make many prints over a period of two years. Unfortunately for her, she had recently suffered some carbon monoxide poisoning and did not feel able to make these prints. I had just begun to be represented by the same gallery and Stephen White kindly asked me if I would be interested to help Ruth.

My ten years of working with Ruth
Bernhard were priceless. I cannot over estimate her influence on both my life and work. Before working with Ruth, I thought that I was a good photographic printer. I had printed my own work and that of a number of other photographers along the way, both in colour and black and white. However, Ruth gave me new insights into the process. Her basic starting point was that the negative was a starting point! She would radically transform an initial straight print into a Ruth Bernhard print. This might involve tilting the easel to achieve a different perspective, softening the focus to create an evenness of tone, making masks to burn and dodge, using different chemicals to change the contrast or color of the image, etc. She essentially refused to believe that the impossible wasn’t possible, and that there were no rules that couldn’t be broken, which made for many late nights in her darkroom.

Ruth often said that she regarded her role of teacher to be far more important than her role of photographer. I was a young photographer trying to navigate in the extremely puzzling world of art galleries, publishers and commercial agents. Ruth was a guiding light for me. “Today is the day” was her mantra, and her determination to live in the present, to appreciate every moment, to always say yes to life, has left an indelible impression on me. I remain in debt to her kindness and wisdom.

PDNB – You are known for your black and white work. Do you ever photograph in color?

MICHAEL – Black and white is immediately an interpretation of the world rather than a copy of what we see. We see in color all the time. I have always found black and white photographs to be quieter and mysterious than those made in color. For me, the subtlety of black and white inspires the imagination of the individual viewer to complete the picture in their mind’s eye. It doesn’t attempt to compete with the outside world. I believe it is calmer and more gentle than color, and persists longer in our visual memory. In the past I have worked as a commercial color printer and I have also photographed in color for advertising assignments, but it is not my preference.

PDNB – Do you collect photographs? Describe a few of your favorites.

MICHAEL – Sitting here typing out this interview I look around my studio and I can see prints from Ruth Bernhard, Bill Brandt, Linda Connor, Imogen Cunningham, Jim Dine, Frederick Evans, Mario Giacomelli, Andrea Modica, Daido Moriyama, Edward Muybridge, Olivia Parker, Penti Sammallahti, O. Winston Link, and yes, even an Alfred Steigliz photogravure! I have many more prints in flat files and boxes so, although I have never considered myself a collector, I seem to have collected some beautiful photographs along the way. These images continue to give me inspiration and visual pleasure. It’s interesting that they are all black and white too!

PDNB – Finally, for the techies out there….analog or digital?

MICHAEL – I am 100% analog. I use film cameras and insist on making all prints myself in my own traditional wet darkroom. Having said that, I believe that every photographer, every artist, should choose materials and equipment based on their own personal vision. I don’t believe that analog is better than digital, or the reverse for that matter. They are just different, and it is my personal preference and choice to remain with the traditional silver process. I don’t need or desire instant gratification in photography and it is the long, slow journey to the final print that captivates me. I still prefer the limitations, imperfections and unpredictability of the silver based analogue world. Having worked with silver materials and film cameras for well over forty years, both commercially and in my own fine art work, I now find it a little out of character to fully embrace the digital medium even though I have experimented a little with it. It is true that the whole photographic process has been made much easier, faster, cleaner and more accessible to people by digital innovations, and that’s a very good thing. It doesn’t mean that all photographers need to follow this trend, or perhaps I should more accurately describe it as a tidal wave : ).

A Certain Displacement, Cliff Gallery | Kristina Smith and Ashley Whitt

11334088_10206772357655605_5925022693003359339_o

Congratulations to Texas Woman’s University Alumnae, Kristina Smith and Ashley Whitt, for their group exhibition, A Certain Displacement, in Cliff Gallery at Mountain View College. The exhibition is June 15 – August 7, 2015, with a reception on June 20, 2015, from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM.

A Certain Displacement:
Rachel Rushing, Kristina Smith, and Ashley Whitt

Exhibition: June 15 – August 7, 2015

Reception: Saturday June 20, 2015 | 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM

A Certain Displacement is a collaborative project between three emerging North Texas artists: Rachel Rushing, Kristina Smith, and Ashley Whitt. Each artist explores transitory states of being related to their shared experiences of commuting, collaborating, working, and living across multiple social geographies. Through the investigation of place and identity, this project encompasses video and a combination of historical and contemporary photographic processes to create installations that invite viewers to become immersed in surreal, disorienting environments.

The title specifically references the experience of being an adjunct instructor in the Dallas / Fort Worth area. Contemporary higher education is undergoing great scrutiny, in part due to the still-recent economic recession of 2008. With external pressures pushing against rising tuition costs, much of America is now re-examining the value of higher education and the cost of attendance. As a result of this examination, new light is being shed on those in instructional positions. According to the American Association of University Professors, as much as 76% of faculty across all types of institutions are adjunct, or contingent, faculty.

As members of the group of 76%, these three artists use a variety of photographic processes to explore their circumstances. Processes: this word refers to chemical, mechanical, or digital changes occurring. It also refers to a compulsion found in each artist to work through, to operate in a way that meets their pragmatic needs and simultaneously fulfills their personal creative practices. Processes become rituals to make sense of a lifestyle that is often overwhelming, unpredictable, and ultimately contingent.

http://www.mountainviewcollege.edu/Academics/acaddivisions/Ahss/arts/Pages/artgallery.aspx

Contemplating the Temporal – Photography and Time | Group Exhibition

Contemplating the Temporal

Contemplating the Temporal – Photography and Time

This is a group exhibit exploring themes related to the landscape, history, materiality, time and space. Each of the artists is studying photography at Texas Woman’s University. The opening reception will be held Friday, May 8th at 7 pm at Audacity Brew House in Denton. All are welcome.

Exhibition Dates: May 1 – 31, 2015

Opening Reception: May 8, 2015 | 7:00 PM

Works by:

Ashley Boydston
Diane Chenault
Tabitha Gray
Ashley Harris
Alex Khraish
Michele Poindexter
Madeline Potter
LaRae Rippetoe

Opening Reception on Friday, May 8th at 7pm. The show will be up for the rest of the month.

Location: Audacity Brew House
1012 Shady Oaks Dr
Denton, TX 76205

MFA Graduating Exhibitions | Rachael Banks, Amber Hall, Allison Jarek, and Gary McCoy

FullSizeRender

Congratulations to Rachael Banks, Amber Hall, Allison Jarek, and Gary McCoy for their Master of Fine Arts Graduating Exhibition at the East | West Galleries at Texas Woman’s University. The exhibition dates are April 15 – 23, 2015.

Opening Reception: Thursday, April 16, 2015 | 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM

Exhibition Dates:  April 15 – 23, 2015

The exhibition also features paintings by Bailey K. Chapman and James Zamora.

Neal Daugherty, Brookhaven College | Neal Daugherty

Daugherty_1713c

Neal Daugherty
Brookhaven College | School of the Arts | Art Department

Forum Gallery

Exhibition: March 16, 2015 – April 13, 2015

Opening Reception: April 2, 2015 | 6:00 – 8:00 PM

Neal Daugherty

RomulusRemus, digital pigment prints 60 x 40,  with Untitled sound piece and laser engraved OR coded plexiglas labels. The Brookhaven College Art Department is delighted to present the exhibition Neal Daugherty  in the Forum Gallery 3.16 – 4.13.2015. Neal Daugherty is Lecturer in Digital Foundations in the Art Department at the University of Texas at Austin.

Exhibitions, gallery lectures, and receptions are free and open to the public.  Brookhaven College is located at 3939 Valley View Lane, between Midway Road and Marsh Lane in Farmers Branch. The Forum Gallery is located in Building F, Room F101, open Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

For more information about  exhibitions, contact David Newman, gallery director, at 972-860-4101 or at dNewman@dcccd.edu.

3939 Valley View Lane     Farmers Branch, TX 75244-4997    V 972.860.4101    F 972.860.4385

A Natural Order and Of Nature | Lectures and Exhibitions at UT Dallas

LucasFoglia_ANaturalOrder_AlexwithMagnoliaLeaf

Photographer Lucas Foglia will lecture on his series A Natural Order on March 31st, Tuesday, 7:30 pm in JSOM Davidson Auditorium, 1.118

A reception for the artist will be held in the O’Donnell Building Gallery, first floor, 6:00 – 7:00 pm, before the lecture.
http://www.lucasfoglia.com

Of Nature
(Comer Photography Collection / curated by Twyla Bloxham)

Exhibition Dates:   March 27 – April 24, 2015

Of Nature presents an overview of photographers who take inspiration from the natural world. From an emphasis on scientific phenomena and the recording of flora and fauna, to fictional images of natural phenomena, these artists reveal to us the power of observation and our relationship to our environment. Exhibiting artists include Lucas Foglia, Tom Chambers, Camille Solyagua, John Pfahl, Zeke Berman, Steve Goff, Robert Langham III, Laszlo Layton, and Kate Breakey.

Curator Twyla Bloxham will lecture on the exhibition Of Nature on April 2nd, Thursday, 2:00 pm in JSOM Davidson Auditorium, 1.118
A reception for the curator will be held in the O’Donnell Building Gallery, first floor, 3:30 – 4:30 pm

Film Screening | Miss Representation

MissRepresentation_web_FINAL

Miss Representation at Texas Woman’s University
Thursday, March 26th, at 6:00 p.m. CFO 203
Film Screening: Miss Representation w/ Director Ms. Jennifer Siebel Newsom

Miss Representation reveals the betrayal of women in the media. The film demonstrates how society is misguided by media content, which generally highlights the mere physical attributes and nurturing abilities of women, but limits recognition of their intellectual capabilities. The film also uncovers how successful women in various careers are still deprived of respect and recognition for their achievements in comparison to the male gender.  Miss Representation will leave the audience thinking of the many opportunities our world could be deprived of if women’s endeavors continue to go unsupported or underrepresented.

Join our guest speaker; film Director, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, as she discusses Miss Representation and its efforts to raise awareness about stamping out inequality and discrimination. The event is sponsored by Commuter Services and Lasso 100th in celebration of Women in the Media and International Women’s Day.

Follow the link to the Miss Representation trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2UZZV3xU6Q.

Existential Virtuality, Dallas Medianale | McKinney Avenue Contemporary

unnamed-2

On Saturday, February 28, 2015, the Dallas Medianale will present its grand finale at the McKinney Avenue Contemporary, curated by Carolyn Sortor.

The program, titled Existential Virtuality, comprises two blocks – one of which will screen twice (yielding 3 screening start times) – comprising exciting, recent works by internationally-known artists.

The longer block comprises a number of shorter pieces, including the video that won Laure Prouvost the Turner Prize in 2013 and a piece by Cécile B. Evans just reviewed in this month’s ArtForum, among other works.  This block will screen twice, first at 5:45pm and then again at 8:15pm.

The shorter block consists of a single, 30-min. video by My Barbarian, which was included in the 2014 Whitney Biennial and which will screen at 7:15pm.

The full line-up is provided below.  You can also find the updated programme here.