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 Octet: Codes and Contexts in Recent Art

An exhibition of work by faculty, students and alumni of the BFA Fine Art Department at the School of Visual Arts

November 24 - December 23, 2009
Reception: Thursday, December 3, 2009, 6-8pm

Panel discussion:
Modernism and the Global Diaspora
with Thelma Golden, Hou Hanru, Susan Hefuna, Vasif Kortun and David Ross
Tuesday, December 1, 2009, 7pm
SVA Theatre, 333 West 23 Street
New York City

"Octet: Codes and Contexts in Recent Art," curated by BFA Fine Arts Department Chair Suzanne Anker and faculty member Peter Hristoff, is a survey of 111 works by 66 artists from the School of Visual Arts (SVA), offering a multi-generational response to current trends in contemporary artistic practice. The selected works reflect the preponderance of available influences in a global, media-driven society, where technology allows for instantaneous transmission of culture and access to an enormous data bank of shared images and ideas. Suzanne Anker explains, "In our global world where the familiar can seem foreign and the foreign sometimes overtly familiar, borders have become exceedingly porous between cultures and communities. 'Octet' presents an amalgam of stylistic concerns as a way to present the dynamic flow of advancing patterns within the visual arts."

As historical dialogues permeate present thought, our educational imperatives combine traditional genres with more experimental investigations," explains Anker of her role in training artists. "It is within this context of developing the new from the profound influences of the past, that each generation defines for itself the parameters of its conceptual and material base."

As each generation defines the kinds of questions that come to the fore, a myriad of issues are worthy of investigation. Reflecting the multi-generational roster of participating artists, "Octet" is divided into eight thematic sections: Word and Image; Identity and Identity Politics; Post Pop Art and Tabloid Culture; The Corporeal and Divine; Material Matters; Narrative Imperatives; World Dramas; and Relational Aesthetics.

Word and Image examines visual articulations of language, as in Stephen Ellis's They Feed the Lion, an interpretation of the last stanza of a poem by Philip Levine, and Taney Roniger's Stone Series (Scroll), which explores the commonalities of organic forms and digital language.

Identity and Identity Politics looks at constructions of self and community in today's heterogeneous world culture, ranging from Felipe Garcia's piece about immigrant experience Untitled #3, showing images of South American indigenous people superimposed over grayscale city landscapes, to Aura Rosenberg's photograph Ei Arakawa/Maximillian of a young child wearing a mask made from visa application documents.

Post Pop Art and Tabloid Culture comments on the proliferation of consumerism and celebrity culture via mass media today. Works include Nils Karsten's woodcut Two Virgins, based on John Lennon's iconic 1968 album cover, and Soner Ön's lithograph 5 of 10,000 (no.2) referencing the rapper MC Hammer's extensive wardrobe at the time of his bankruptcy.

The Corporeal and Divine addresses how religion, spirituality and myth narrate concerns over ethical dilemmas. Selections in this section include Suffering and Faith by Tim Rollins and K.0.S., a visual counterpoint to the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. made by layering book pages on to the canvas, and Eric Rhein's Fly Leaves - Installation of 24, a series of tributes to friends and acquaintances who have died of AIDS.

Material Matters explores the syntax of matter and its novel combinations and possibilities, ranging from Lynda Benglis' Stainless Wax Totem, a vertical organic form capturing the gesture of flowing material, to Elaine Breiger's series of monoprints Penumbral, created from the superimposed printing of metal sections juxtaposed with collage and film.

Narrative Imperatives delves into the fantasy life of the human psyche, ranging from Judith Linhares' Plenty, a painting of a woman giving honey to forest dwellers while a group of spirits look on, to Amy Wilson's images of industrious little girls, which explore both internal narratives and conceptions of femininity.

World Dramas centers on the expression of widely-held societal concerns like ecological stewardship, geopolitical tensions and economic meltdowns. Works include Nancy Chunn's Front Pages: September 1996, a record of her responses to The New York Times every day for a year, and Joshua Allen Harris' Air Bear and Cub, an inflatable sculpture made from discarded trash bags.

Relational Aesthetics samples recent experiments in interactivity, audience participation and ways to create collective social experiences through works of art, as in Joseph Tekippe's mixed media installation Data Sonification 1 (Stock Market), which translates the fluctuations in the global financial market into an ambient soundtrack.

"Octet" was previously on view at the Suna and İnan Kiraç Foundation Pera Museum in Istanbul, Turkey from August 13 - October 4, 2009. A bilingual, fully-illustrated catalogue has been produced in conjunction with the exhibition featuring contributions by Suzanne Anker and Peter Hristoff and a forward by SVA President David Rhodes.

The Visual Arts Gallery and the Suna and İnan Kiraç Foundation Pera Museum presentations of "Octet" have been supported by the following institutions: the Turkish Culture and Tourism Office in New York, The American Turkish Society, the Moon and Stars Project and the U.S. Consulate General in Istanbul.

In conjunction with the exhibition, SVA will present Modernism and the Global Diaspora, a panel discussion on the impact of the global art scene on Modernism. Panelists include: Thelma Golden, executive director and chief curator of the Studio Museum in Harlem; Hou Hanru, the director of exhibitions and public programs at the San Francisco Art Institute; Susan Hefuna, an artist based in Egypt and Germany; and Vasif Kortun, the director of the Platform Garanti Contemporary Arts Center in Istanbul. The discussion will be moderated by SVA faculty member David Ross, former director of the Whitney Museum of American Art and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. The discussion will take place on December 1, 2009, 7pm at the SVA Theatre, located at 333 West 23 Street. The event is free and open to the public.


Click here for a complete list of participating artists


 
 
Gallery Information
 Visual Arts Gallery
601 West 26 Street, 15th floor
New York, NY 10001
212.592.2145

The Visual Arts Gallery is SVA's premier exhibition facility. Located in Chelsea on the 15th floor of the landmark Starrett-Lehigh Building, it comprises four state of the art galleries and a large terrace with a commanding view of Lower Manhattan and the Hudson River. Staffed by six full-time professionals, Visual Arts Gallery offers select students the opportunity to exhibit and sell their work in the same environment as some of the country's leading artists--a number of whom have exhibited there as well.

Since the Visual Arts Gallery moved from 137 Wooster Street in Soho to its present location in 2004, it has exhibited works by renowned SVA alumni such as Renee Cox, Inka Essenhigh, Joseph Kosuth, Robert Lazzarini, Sol Lewitt, Vera Lutter, Elizabeth Peyton, Alexis Rockman, Collier Schorr, Lorna Simpson and Sara Sze,  Works by Richard Avedon, Milton Glaser, Anish Kapoor, Stefan Sagmeister, Sebastiao Salgado have also been exhibited at the Visual Arts Gallery.

SVA students of every discipline derive great educational benefit from being able to study the work of celebrated artists, hear them speak at lectures, or even get the chance to meet them in person -- all right here at the College.

The Visual Arts Gallery is open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and is closed Sunday and federal holidays*. The gallery is accessible by wheelchair.  For more information, or to purchase student's work (the gallery takes no commission), please call 212.592.2145.

*
Summer Hours:  The gallery will be closed for the Independence Day holiday weekend from Friday, July 2, 1pm through Monday, July 5.  June 4th through August 20th, 2010, the gallery will be closing one hour earlier on Fridays (5pm instead of 6pm). 

For press inquiries, please call the Office of Communication at 212.592.2010 or email proffice@sva.edu


 
 
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