Allan McCollum

Jeff Grimes

Allan McCollum was born in 1944. When he was about 20 he began to consider an occupation in theater, he then changed his mind and attended school to study restaurant management. In the 1960s, he began to teach himself to be an artist. He began using pieces of ordinary supplies to design art. When viewing his work people often get the effect of being intoxicated. You slowly realize that a large number of identical patterns are made of many different items. His artwork incorporates the aides of scientists and many local artists. McCollum uses a collaborative and democratic form of creativity, his drawings and sculptures usually have a very an illustrative purpose.

He has had more than one hundred solo exhibitions in both Europe and the United States. Allot his work has appeared in displays at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. He has also been in many overseas shows, an example is the Bienal de São Paulo.

Shape (#11), 2006
Laminated birch plywood sculpture,
in a unique shape
Twenty Plaster Surrogates, 1992, Plaster and paint, Overall: 41 x 91 x 1 3/4 in. (104.1 x 231.1 x 4.5 cm)

He is known for using the techniques of mass production in his work, while made in large quantity and are unique. In 1988-91 he made over 30,000 completely different objects he titled Individual Works, which were collected and displayed in large amounts. The objects were created by many rubber molds found in common household objects such as bottle caps, food containers, and kitchen tools. In 1989, he used the same system to create thousands of handmade pencil drawings, using hundreds of templates he designed. Each drawing was made differently by uniting the templates according to a “combinatorial protocol” that never repeated itself.

Shapes from Maine runs from Friday January 16th through February 14th, 2009.
Friedrich Petzel Gallery

Beginning in the early nineties, McCollum expanded his interests in quantity production to include explorations into the ways regional communities give meaning to local landmarks and geological oddities in establishing community identity, and collaborated with a number of small towns and small historical museums in Europe and throughout the United States, bringing attention to the way local narratives develop around objects peculiar to geographic regions, and drawing comparisons to the way artworks develop meaning in a parallel manner. Often these projects involved reproducing local objects in quantity or creating models or copies of local artifacts and symbols. In 1995, he collaborated with the College of Eastern Utah Prehistoric Museum in Price, Utah, to make replicas of their entire collection of dinosaur track casts, and exhibited these in New York and throughout Europe; in 1997 he collaborated with the International Center for Lightning Research and Testing in Starke, Florida, to trigger lightning with rockets, and worked with a local souvenir manufacturer to create over 10,000 replicas of a fulgurite created by the lightning strike.

Allan McCollum
“The Event: Petrified Lightning from Central Florida (With Supplemental Didactics)”
eight-inch-long object, made of epoxy and zircon sand
dimensions variable
Photo: Yesikka Vivancos

AACA’S ANNUAL THEMED ART COMPETITION & EXHIBIT

AACA is proud to present Re: Imagined, a themed juried and judged show for high school, college, and adult artists in McMinn and surrounding counties. Arists may enter up to two works either made from reused or recycled materials OR promoting the idea of conservation and recycling in art.

WHY ENTER?

  1. EXPOSURE More than 1,500 people will see your work.
  2. CASH Top winners receive cash prizes

HOW TO ENTER?

Click here for more information, including prospectus, entry form, and payment options.


IMPORTANT DATES & INFORMATIONJURY AND JUDGE All entries will be subject to a jury process by AACA visual arts committee. Accepted work will then be judged by AACA host judge

ENTRY FORM DEADLINE Friday October 26, 2018 5:00 PM

WORK DELIVERY DATES Wednesday – Friday October 31 – November 2

ARTIST STATEMENTS DUE Friday November 2 at 5:00 PM

EXHIBIT DATES November 12, 2018 – January 4, 2019

OPENING RECEPTION AND AWARDS CEREMONY FridayNovember 16, 2018 5:30 PM

Gallery is open Monday – Friday, 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM, and during special events and is free and open to the public

ENTRY FORM

Frist Center and Cheekwood

Frist Center
Cheekwood Art and Gardens

Nashville – October 19

Screen Shot 2013-09-24 at 11.36.33 PM

30 Americans

Frist Center

This engaging and thought-provoking exhibition is composed of more than 70 objects—paintings, sculptures, photographs, and multi-media installations—created by many of the most important African American artists working over the last 30 years. The artists range from well- known, established figures such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Kerry James Marshall, and Carrie Mae Weems to emerging younger ones like Kehinde Wiley, Hank Willis Thomas, and Mickalene Thomas. Seen together, 30 Americans provides an opportunity to examine the various relationships between these artists and, ultimately, to experience a cross generational exploration of the influence of race, sexuality, history, gender, and popular culture on individual identity.

Screen Shot 2013-09-24 at 11.36.46 PM

Bruce Munro

Cheekwood

Using an inventive array of materials and hundreds of miles of glowing optic fiber, Munro’s fascination with light as an artistic medium has transformed Cheekwood’s beautiful gardens into an enchanting, dream-like landscape.  At the center of the exhibition’s many installations is theField of Light, which submerges the viewer within a landscape of 20,000 lighted glass spheres, each rising from the ground on a slender stem.

For more information email mmcleod@clevelandstatecc.edu

Trip to the High Museum

Johannes_Vermeer_(1632-1675)_-_The_Girl_With_The_Pearl_Earring_(1665)

High Museum of American Art

Atlanta – September 21

The High Museum of Art in collaboration with the Mauritshuis, The Hague, will present a major exhibition of Dutch masterworks in 2013, including Johannes Vermeer’s iconic “Girl with a Pearl Earring,” which has not been on view in the United States for more than 15 years and has never been seen in the Southeast. Drawn from the Mauritshuis’s collection, “Girl with a Pearl Earring: Dutch Paintings from the Mauritshuis” will highlight the artistic genius of  Dutch Golden Age painters, including Vermeer, Rembrandt van Rijn, Frans Hals and  Jan Steen,  through the presentation of more than 35 exceptional paintings.

“Girl with a Pearl Earring: Dutch Paintings from the Mauritshuis” will showcase such masters as Johannes Vermeer, Rembrandt van Rijn, Frans Hals,  Jan Steen, Jacob and Salomon van Ruysdael, Paulus Potter, Meindert Hobbema and Jan van Goyen. Through landscapes and portraits, the exhibition will explore the idea that Dutch artists more readily embraced genre paintings of secular subjects than their southern European contemporaries and focused on capturing commonplace scenes of daily life. Dutch artists not only recorded representations of the domestic interior, still lifes and revelrous crowds, but often imbued these scenes with moral undertones and humorous, sarcastic wit.

Key paintings featured in the exhibition include:

• Johannes Vermeer, “Girl with a Pearl Earring”
• Carel Fabritius, “Goldfinch”
• Rembrandt van Rijn, “‘Tronie’ of a Man with a Feathered Beret”
• Jan Steen, “The Way You Hear It, Is The Way You Sing It”
• Jacob van Ruisdael, “View of Haarlem with Bleaching Grounds”

For more information email mmcleod@clevelandstatecc.edu

“Ms. Conception” Opening

“Ms. Conception”
Opening Reception, Thursday 4-6pm
Art exhibition area of the Johnson Cultural Heritage Building
Cleveland State Community College
Facebook Event

Student artist Kate Leko has spent the past semester recreating historical works of art that depict mothers and their children. The original paintings illustrate the idealistic nature of motherhood, while Leko’s recreations examine the difficult balance of being both a mother and an artist. After the paintings were finished, after her art life was done, her home life, in the form of her daughter Caroline, took over.

From the artist statement:

I am interested in issues that deal with domesticity in an era of feminism and sexual equality. My work explores how motherhood fits into the feminist perspective and where these two ideas overlap and contradict each other in my personal experiences. The work explores gender roles imposed by society while maintaining self-identity and dispelling ideals of what makes a good woman, mother, and partner.

This series of works illustrates a traditional view of motherhood that does not necessarily exist in today’s society.  Just being a mother and a wife is not enough.  Traditionally, these labels have such expectations that are not realistic to who I am.  They seem to define me, rather than letting me define them.  By having my daughter draw on the paintings, it makes a more realistic statement of motherhood than the actual paintings themselves. The idealistic images portrayed in these painting do not necessarily define the values of myself as a mother. My daughter’s chaotic scribbles more accurately describe the truths of our reality.”

 

Annual Juried Student Art Exhibition

Entries will be accepted in the Exhibition area of the Johnson Cultural Heritage Center on Wednesday and Thursday, April 11-12 from 4-5.

All work must be ready for display and an exhibition entry form must be filled out.

Unaccepted work should be picked up on Friday, April 13 from 2-5.

Download an entry form here.

Okay Mountain at UTC Cress

Okay Mountain, a multi-media installation of recent works.
Exhibition Dates: February 8 – March 20, 2012
Artists Lecture Wednesday, February 8, 5:30 – 6:30pm, followed by an opening reception, Room 356 Fine Arts Center

okaymountain.com

Formed in 2006 and based in Austin, OKAY MOUNTAIN is a collective consisting of ten artists who live and work in Austin, Cambridge, Chicago, and Los Angeles. All exhibit as solo artists as well. Originating as an artist-run alternative gallery space, OKAY MOUNTAIN evolved into an artist collective when its founding members began creating art together outside of the gallery environs. What began as collaborative drawing sessions during weekly staff meetings has since developed into a wide range of collaborative projects across a variety of media, including drawing, video, sound, performance, prints, zines, murals, and large-scale sculptural installations. Their shared artworks reveal the unique perspective provided by a group dynamic, give emphasis to drawing and the artist’s hand, and are always leavened by a sense of humor, whimsy, and larger-than-life Texan spirit. Playing on the conventions and absurdities of contemporary consumer culture and drawing upon pop graphics and styling, their works are scrappy, colorful, and maximal-just like the artists themselves. Most of the artists are graduates of the University of Texas at Austin, others are graduates of University of California Los Angeles, Rhode Island School of Design, and the University of Kansas.

OKAY MOUNTAIN has exhibited at Freight + Volume, NYC, Austin Museum of Art, Galeria Enrique Guerrero in Mexico City, Paragraph in Kansas City, PULSE in Miami, Texas State University in San Marcos, TX and the Creative Research Lab in Austin. Upcoming projects include exhibitions at Prosect 1.5 in New Orleans, Blaffer Art Museum, Houston TX and McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX.