Daily Archives: 04/09/2019

3 posts

VALS Lecture—boychild—Tuesday April 9, 6:30pm

VALS: boychild
Tuesday, April 9
Prentis 101, 6:30pm

boychild is a movement-based performance artist whose work operates through improvisation as a mode of survival and world building in the liminal, performative space where becoming meets representation. Adamant about the visceral experience of live visual performance, she makes a case for how the movement of form can communicate what remains impenetrable in images, and through language. Her performances have been presented at MoMA PS1, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Kulturhuset, Stockholm, MOCA Los Angeles, MOMA Warsaw, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, ICA London, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, MACBA, ICA London, the Sydney Biennial and Berghain. boychild has toured with Mykki Blanco, and collaborated with Korakrit Arunanondchai, Wu Tsang, as well as the streetwear label Hood By Air.

all about the boychild
Hand dances. 1,000 Caresses.
Wu Tsang & boychild by Tess Altman

poster by Vikram Ashvin Divecha, MFA ’19

VALS Lecture—Katherine Bradford—Tuesday March 26, 6:30pm

 

VALS: Katherine Bradford

Tuesday, March 26th

Prentis 101, 6:30pm

 

Katherine Bradford is a figurative painter represented in New York by CANADA and in Berlin by Haverkampf Gallery.  In June she will have a solo show in London with Campoli Presti Gallery.

In 2011 she received a Guggenheim and in 2012 a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant.  She has been a Senior Critic at Yale School of Art and a Resident Faculty at Skowhegan School in Maine.

This past season she has exhibited her work at Pace Gallery in New York, Union Gallery in Cologne, Chrystal Bridges Museum in Arkansas and the Nerman Museum in Kansas.

“My paintings as a whole celebrate the mystery of ceremony, the directness of folk art and the immediacy of expressionistic mark making.  They hint at stories of survival and escape as well as our desire for community on the one hand and quiet solitude on the other.  I mean to call attention to both image and mark as a way to prolong the act of looking and to convey the excitement of embarking on a quest where the outcome in unknown.”

A Conversation: Katherine Bradford (New American Paintings)

The Amazing Katherine Bradford (Hyperallergic)

Katherine Bradford “Friends and Strangers” at CANADA (YouTube)

poster by Esteban Jefferson, MFA ’19

 

 

VALS Lecture—Fred Wilson—Thursday March 28, 6:30pm

 

VALS: Fred Wilson
Thursday, March 28th
Prentis 101, 6:30pm

Fred Wilson (b. 1954, Bronx, New York) challenges assumptions of history, culture, race, and conventions of display with his work. By reframing objects and cultural symbols, he alters traditional interpretations, encouraging viewers to reconsider social and historical narratives. Since his groundbreaking and historically significant exhibition Mining the Museum (1992) at the Maryland Historical Society, Wilson has been the subject of many solo exhibitions, including the retrospective Objects and Installations 1979-2000, which was organized by the Center for Art and Visual Culture at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, and traveled to Saratoga Springs, Berkeley, Houston, Andover, and Santa Monica, before closing at the Studio Museum in Harlem. Other solo presentations include So Much Trouble in the World—Believe It or Not! at the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire (2005); Works 2001–2011 at the Cleveland Museum of Art (2012); Local Color at The Studio Museum in Harlem (2013); Black to the Powers of Ten and Wildfire Test Pit at Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College, Ohio (2016); and Fred Wilson at the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, New York (2017). In 2003, Wilson represented the United States at the 50th Venice Biennale with the solo exhibition Speak of Me as I Am. His many accolades include the prestigious John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation’s “Genius” Grant (1999); the Skowhegan Medal for Sculpture (2006); the Alain Locke Award from The Friends of African and African American Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts (2013); and a Lifetime Achievement Award, Howard University, Washington, D.C. (2017). He was honored by The Black Alumni of Pratt Institute during their 2017 Celebration of the Creative Spirit.

Fred Wilson in “Structures” (Art21)

Fred Wilson: Afro Kismet at Pace Gallery (Hyperallergic)

How Mining the Museum Changed the Art World (BmoreArt)

poster by Esteban Jefferson, MFA ’19