Spectacle at Austin Peay University | Re-Opening for 2020-21

Spectacle
Brandon Donahue, Vesna Pavlović and Chris Boyd Taylor
August 19 - September 18, 2020
The New Gallery
Austin Peay University

Austin Peay reopens ‘Spectacle’ exhibit with renewed examination of life with – and without – sports

The New Gallery at Austin Peay State University, with support from The Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts and the Department of Art + Design, is pleased to reopen Spectacle to kick off the 2020-21 exhibition season.

Spectacle was closed early due to concerns about the spread COVID-19 back in March, but it has remained installed in The New Gallery. During this time of national shutdown and the cancellation of major sports leagues around the world, Spectacle, reopens to new conversations about the importance of sport and safety of large gatherings. 

Though gallery hours will be limited this coming fall semester, The New Gallery will be open to visitors with limited occupancy and appropriate safety measures. Spectacle also will be available for viewing online via a 360º/4k VR video walk-through experience. In lieu of an in-person panel discussion with the exhibiting artists, a pre-recorded panel discussion will also be available online.

The exhibition will reopen to the public on Aug. 19 and run through Sept. 18. The virtual walk-through experience will be available indefinitely.

The pandemic led to the cancellation of March Madness and nearly all American sports, but they have started to trickle back this summer, delivering an entirely unprecedented experience, one in which spectators are removed from stadiums and arenas. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiJWJ5PeS74

Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship 2020

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Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship 2020

The Archives of American Art, Washington DC

 In Fast Obsolescence, Vesna Pavlović explores the themes of technological and material obsolescence of photographic and film media while considering two archives at the Smithsonian: Hildreth Meière papers, 1901-2011, bulk 1911-1960, at the Archives of American Art, and Hal Linker Film and Video Collection, ca. 1955-1985, at the Human Studies Film Archive, housed in the National Anthropological Archive. Archival research is a starting point to consider cultural significance of these archival sources, and use them as materials for visual translation.

At a time when historical and technological obsolescence is accelerating, revisiting obsolete media provides a context for understanding the new media landscape and the position archives have in the shaping of cinema and media history.  The study and analysis proposed will emphasize female perspectives through exploring materiality and representation in Hildreth Meière’s photographs and films and Halla Linker’s travelogues.  Both archives provide an opportunity to expand Pavlović’s ongoing work with historical archives.  Her photography challenges the conditions of the overwhelming presence of images in our culture by exploring institutional archives, often suspended, forgotten, and in danger of disappearance. 

Scale drawing for Traveler's Insurance Company mural, ca. 1956. Hildreth Meière papers, 1901-2011. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.

Viral Self-Portraits | Online exhibition | 15 May – 31 December 2020

Viral Self-Portraits
Online exhibition
15 May – 31 December 2020

Concept: Zdenka Badovinac

Curators selectors:

Afiaty Riksa, Zdenka Badovinac, Ekaterina Degot, Tandazani Dhlakama, Galit Eilat, Charles Esche, iLiana Fokianaki, Boris Groys, Hou Hanru, Vít Havránek, Koyo Kouoh, Pablo Lafuente, Tammy Langtry, Maria Lind, Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez, Bojana Piškur, Tjaša Pogačar, Igor Španjol, Mabel Tapia, Christine Tohme, Abhijan Toto, Jelena Vesić, Raluca Voinea, WHW

We started thinking about the Viral Self-Portraits online exhibition at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, when we were still self-isolating at home. We first contacted 23 curators across the globe to invite five artists each to do self-portraits, according to the invitation below. 100 international artists responded.

Rather than literal images of artists’ faces, what we had in mind with self-portraits was all the forces currently (co)shaping our subjectivities. Forces of a reality that is today full of unknowns due to the pandemic: without a way to prognosticate the kind of future that lies ahead we tend to imagine it on a range between two extremes: the possibility of outrageously authoritarian regimes and the prospect of a society of more equitable division of wealth. This is our first time of truly facing the transience of all existence, ourselves included, of facing our own death, which we had been pushing to the back of our minds for so long. Our increasingly fast-paced life has now come to a halt, at least for a while, hopefully long enough to allow for collective reflection.

http://www.mg-lj.si/en/online-exhibitions/2888/viral-portraits/#page/100

The Claude Mirror

whitespace
May 8 – June 6, 2020

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My third solo exhibition at whitespace was supposed to open on May 1, 2020 but due to COVID-19 it has been postponed until 2021. Like many other artists I have maintained my practice through the quarantine and isolation period. In April I started working on a series of collaborative screen portraits. Engaging the community virtually, I have asked artists and friends to sit for a portrait via zoom. The result is an ongoing Claude Mirror (please link here to the Claude Mirror site), series presented on whitespace virtual platform together with Carolyn Henne and Judy Rushin’s I’m Never Coming Home https://commabox.art/ project.

The digital screen acts much like the Claude Mirror, an 18th century invention with the slightly convex surface of the mirror, which widens the background view while allowing foreground to come into focus. The digital device held by the model acts like a mirror, framing the model and the scene. In a make-shift studio, the author’s camera frames another screen. The camera is connected to a laptop with an image capture software, which then takes a shot. The exposure happens through the mediation of multiple cameras and digital screens. The physical distance is diminished by the act of communication. The outcomes are portraits, stretched both by the very genre of portrait and the digital bandwidth which enables them. In the times of ever-increasing digital communication, the physical attributes of images are considered in terms of digital pixels, their surfaces flattened even further. Digital image testifies about the digital distance, compressed within a new mode of perception.