Wednesday, October 8, 2008
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Hi Folks, I am in a show at the new Chace Center at RISD. It is a beautiful new gallery and certainly worth a look if you are around. This show should be really nice. I have a new video in it.
Lapse of Time
Curated by Elizabeth Skadden
Openning Reception this Thursday October 9th 6-8pm
Gelman Gallery at Chace Center
20 Main St. 02903
“Life without editing, it seems, is just not that interesting.”–Bill Viola
Time in our lives flows unchecked. Art uses our memory and five senses to distill life down to the essentials. Memory within our lives condenses time for our consciousness. What we don’t remember is thrown away. What we do remember becomes all the more important. Within art, time lapse decides for the artist what they choose to show. The easiest sort of time-lapse to see is that associated with video or film. But other art methods can show a span of time as well through slow building processes and the display of a process of time. Lapse of Time includes work from several different artists in a wide range of departments. Through slow processes and broad temporal concepts, these artists collapse time, fold it over itself, and re-create new timelines that result in the following art pieces.
Work by these artists:
Alexander Field, Alison Roberts , Ted Yoon, Caleb Larsen, Emma Hogarth, Steve Silber, Kelley Goff, Nora Rabins, Evan Chamberlain, Noel O'Connell, Peter Wilson, Korakrit Arunanondcha, Johnny Adimando, Cooper Holoweski, Annabeth Marks, Dionne Yang
Lapse of Time
Curated by Elizabeth Skadden
Openning Reception this Thursday October 9th 6-8pm
Gelman Gallery at Chace Center
20 Main St. 02903
“Life without editing, it seems, is just not that interesting.”–Bill Viola
Time in our lives flows unchecked. Art uses our memory and five senses to distill life down to the essentials. Memory within our lives condenses time for our consciousness. What we don’t remember is thrown away. What we do remember becomes all the more important. Within art, time lapse decides for the artist what they choose to show. The easiest sort of time-lapse to see is that associated with video or film. But other art methods can show a span of time as well through slow building processes and the display of a process of time. Lapse of Time includes work from several different artists in a wide range of departments. Through slow processes and broad temporal concepts, these artists collapse time, fold it over itself, and re-create new timelines that result in the following art pieces.
Work by these artists:
Alexander Field, Alison Roberts , Ted Yoon, Caleb Larsen, Emma Hogarth, Steve Silber, Kelley Goff, Nora Rabins, Evan Chamberlain, Noel O'Connell, Peter Wilson, Korakrit Arunanondcha, Johnny Adimando, Cooper Holoweski, Annabeth Marks, Dionne Yang
Labels: art, exhibition