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2000-2002 Exhibitions
2002
Nancy
Floyd
Weathering
Time


November
15, 2002 -
Weathering
Time is a mixed-media room installation that includes a series of videos,
back lit photographs, and 50,000 Popsicle sticks. reception will
The
subtle changes that occur over time are recorded through images of Nancy
Floyd’s body and home. The straight forward style of the images
makes a powerful statement by relating the personal to a more universal
concept of the inevitability of change. Weathering Time engages the viewer,
allowing individuals to make connections with their own lives and their
own mortality.
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2001
Sara
Hornbacher
A
Thousand Plateaus
January
12- March 10, 2001

Atlanta-based
artist Sara Hornbacher creates a video installation comprised of three
large projections and interactive components that merge viewer, images
and sound. She draws on a dense archive of imagery collected over a twenty-year
period to create this piece. As spectators move through the space they
trigger sensing devices that create shifts and changes in the environment.
The
piece was inspired by a text by philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Felix
Guatarri. In their writings, a plateau is reached when circumstances combine
to bring an activity to such an intense pitch that it is not automatically
dissipated in climax. The heightened energy level is sustained long enough
to leave a kind of “afterimage” of its dynamism that can
be reactivated or injected into other activities. The projected images
in Hornbacher’s work are layered and fade in and out of view, thus
offering a visual interpretation of ideas in the Deleuze and Guatarri
text.
This
exhibition marks the first large-scale interactive DVD environment by
an individual artist both at the Contemporary and in Atlanta. It is significant
in this respect and is a major event in the artist’s twenty-five
year career. Hornbacher started working in video in 1975 and built a strong
career in New York City. In 1994 she relocated to Atlanta to assume the
Chair of the Video Department at the Atlanta College of Art. In 2000,
Hornbacher received the Mayor’s Fellowship in the Arts (Media)
and she was short-listed for an important public art commission for a
hi-tech permanent installation at Hartsfield International Airport.
A
color catalogue accompanies the exhibition featuring an essay by John
Johnston, widely published professor of Comparative Literature at Emory
University. Support for A Thousand Plateaus is being provided by Pioneer
Media Technologies, USA, Southern Business Communications Group, Atlanta,
the Fulton County Arts Council, The City of Atlanta Bureau of Cultural
Affairs, the Atlanta College of Art and Experimental Television Center,
Oswego, NY. Hornbacher is represented by Fay Gold Gallery, Atlanta.
Sara
Hornbacher from Meta Mapping
Gretchen
Hupfel
Horizontal
Stabilizer

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2000
Here
Kitty, Kitty
January
14 February 26, 2000
Organized by Teresa Bramlette
The beginning of widespread pet ownership coincided with a philosophical
conceit to tame the natural world to shape and control behavior.
Today, pets figure prominently in our complex lives, often filling the role
of a child, a friend or a mate. A great deal of our time, energy and money
is now devoted to meeting the needs (physical and otherwise) of our pets.
Here Kitty, Kitty is an exhibition that looks lovingly
at he contemporary phenomenon of pet obsession. The show is intended to
be playful and accessible, but not without bite. Here Kitty, Kitty
features Janet Biggs (New York), Patricia Cronin (New York),
Nicole Eisenman (New York), Vincent Fecteau (California),
Katharina Fritsch (Germany), A.B. Frost (Collection of the
Wrens Nest, Atlanta), Pam Longobardi (Atlanta), Joe Peragine
(Atlanta), Carolee Schneemann (New York), Katja Seltmann (Athens,
GA), Sons of Caviar, V. Elizabeth Turk (Atlanta) and William Wegman
(New York).

Pam Longobardi from Here Kitty, Kitty |
Found
Wanting
March 10 April 22, 2000
Organized by Helena Reckitt
This exhibition explores the awkward, the in-between, and the search for
beauty in unexpected places in the work of contemporary artists from Britain,
Canada, Japan, Sweden and the USA. Found Wanting pursues the
possibilities of the uncertain, the unlovely and the out of place. Artists
include Laura Aguilar (Los Angeles), Lucy Gunning (London),
Genevieve Cadieux (Montreal), Adam Chodzko (London), Tomoko
Takahashi (London), Annika Von Hauswolff (Stockholm) and John
Zeppetelli (Montreal) as well as books from The Atlanta College of Arts
collection.

Adam Chodzko from Found Wanting |
Precious:
The Pathos and Pleasure of Kitsch
May 5 June 17, 2000
Organized by Felicia Feaster
Precious will unite a variety of artwork in photography, film,
collage, and painting to address how kitsch can be seen as a language our
memories are trapped within. Relegated to the realm of "bad taste"
and lower-middle class pursuits, clown art, knit afghans, and decorative
handicraft are considered devoid of meaning, when in fact they often express
a sense of limited options, inexpressible emotions and economic marginality.
Artists include Mark Bennett (Los Angeles), Boym Design Studio
(New York), Jody Fausett (New York), Mike Cockrill (New York),
Amy Hill (New York), Catherine Howe (New York), Bimey Imes
(Mississippi), David Levinthal (New York), Guy Maddin (Winnipeg,
Canada), Lisa Petrucci (Seattle), J. John Priola (San Francisco),
and Robert Sherer (Atlanta).

Catherine Howe from Precious: The Pathos and Pleasure of Kitsch
A Selection of work by Atlanta Artists in the 2000 Whitney Museum
Biennial
May 5 June 17, 2000
Organized by Teresa Bramlette
The East Gallery
Robin Bernat (video artist), Kojo Griffin (painter), Ruth
Leitman (filmmaker) and Chris Verene (photographer) will exhibit
their work in The Contemporarys East Gallery. All four artists have
previously shown at the Contemporary.

Chris Verene from A Selection of work by Atlanta Artists in the 2000
Whitney Museum BiennialBrad
Freeman: Lite Interventions Into the Symbols of Power
May 5 June 17, 2000
Organized by Teresa Bramlette
Brad Freeman, Director of Production for Nexus Press and Editor of
the Journal of Artist Books (JAB) will exhibit his work in spanning over
20 years of artmaking from silver gelatin prints to highly wrought digital
prints and complex artists books. Freeman explores the shifting interface
of private zones and the surrounding public sphere through visual and textual
narratives. His concerns range from leftover people whose stories demand
to be told to wry interventions within the symbols of power. |
Between
Space & Time: Contemporary Norwegian Sculpture and Installation
July 7 August 19, 2000
Organized by Louise E. Shaw
This show is a compendium of some of the strongest and most innovative
work by Norwegian artists. Deep interest in the spiritual, in Eastern
religions and a focus upon archetypal forms drawn from such diverse
sources as Norwegian folklore and folkways, or aboriginal cultures
characterize much of the work. The great care given to the use of material
and craft, even if the content is highly conceptual, is consistent with
this sense of introspection and interiority. Artists include Per Barclay,
Per Inge Bjorlo, Bard Breivik, Bente Stokke, Gunnar Torvund, and Kristin
Ytreberg. Supported by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Per Barclay from Between Space & Time: Contemporary Norwegian Sculpture
and Installation
Lupus
Viator Atlanta by Darya von Berner
July 7 August 19, 2000
The East Gallery
Lupus Viator Atlanta created by Darya von Berner and published
by Nexus Press during the 1996 Centennial Olympics will transcend its
traditional codex structure of the artist book and be presented as a 14
x 60 foot image bearing wall installation in the Contemporarys East
Gallery. Lupus Viator, Latin for wolf walking is the basis
for this ephemeral, traveling wolf image, which is created by placing
100 books in a ten by ten book grid. This American gray wolf has traveled
to Lima, Perus Centro Cultural de Espana, The High Museum of Art
in Atlanta and The Lamar Dodd School of Art at the University of Georgia
in Athens. With the edition of 1000 artists books, the wolf can travel
to 1000 new destinations.

Darya von Berner from Lupus Viator Atlanta by Darya von Berner |
September
9 - October 21 (four exhibitions)
The Boat of My Life, an installation by Ilya Kabakov
September 9 October 21, 2000
Organized by Jonathan Fineberg

Ilya Kabakov from The Boat of My Life
Drawings by Corrine Colarusso
September 9 - October 21, 2000
Organized by Teresa Bramlette

Corrine Colarusso from Drawings by Corrine Colarusso
James Castle
September 9 - October 21, 2000
Organized by Teresa Bramlette
College of Architecture, Georgia Institute of Technology Exhibition
September 9 - October 21, 2000
The East Gallery
Atlanta Contemporary Art Center (the Contemporary) presents four separate
exhibitions, in its Main and East Galleries , September 9 October
21, 2000. An Opening Reception will be held during ArtParty 2000, on Saturday,
September 9 from 8 PM 1 AM. Admission for ArtParty is $35 in advance
and $45 at the gate. Gallery Admission during regular hours is Free for
members if The Contemporary, $3 General and $1 Students/Seniors/Children.
The
featured exhibtions include Ilya Kabakov's The Boat of My Life, Corrine
Colarusso's Drawings, James Castle's mixed-media work and Monumental Presence
by architect Wellington Reiter.
Ilya
Kabakov emerged from the tight-knit underground community of dissident
artists in Moscow in the 1980s into one of the most celebrated international
artists of the 1990s. Expatriated from Russia, Kabakov lives primarily
in New York and creates installations (often involving extensive narrative
texts written by him) in museums and exhibitions.
Kabakov has shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City (The Bridge,
1995) and in the Venice Biennale (The Red Pavilion, 1993 and We Were in
Kyoto, 1997). He focuses on the tiniest scraps that one encounters in
the ordinary course of a daya crumpled gum wrapper, a bent nail,
a snapshot or a common postcard. His paintings, stories and installations
are fantastic tales, provoked in this way by the trivialities of daily
experience.
Kabakovs installation The Boat of My Life, addresses his flight
from the Nazis to Samarkand at the age of 9 with his parents as well as
his internal exile. It also speaks to the persecutions of a "Jewish
national" within postwar Russia, and his emigration to New York in
the spring of 1988 at the beginning of the Cold War thaw. The show was
organized by Jonathan Fineberg, Professor of Art History at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and is accompanied by a catalogue.
Atlanta-based artist Corrine Colarusso, represented by Fay Gold Gallery
debuts her most recent drawings. Bird calls, bioluminescence, optimistic
shapes, things that glow, dark of the day, free wandering, pattern languagethese
are some of the words pinned as titles to the group of drawings that will
be shown for the first time in this exhibition. These extremely detailed
renderings are variations on images and ideas found in her larger paintings
and accumulations of bits and pieces made over several years.
James Castle was born deaf in 1900 in rural Garden Valley, Idaho, and
though he briefly attended a school devoted to teaching deaf and blind
students, Castle never learned to sign, speak or read. Never venturing
more than 150 miles from his birthplace, Castle made thousands of meticulously
illustrated books and drawings. He worked on butcher paper, matchbook
covers, cardboard, and mail order catalogues (his parents home served
as the local post office. His subject matter was his environment.
Castle died in 1977 at the age of 77, and has remained relatively unknown
to the contemporary art world until a recent show at The Drawing Center
in New York City (March 4 May 4, 2000). His work is represented
by J. Crist Gallery in Boise, Idaho.
Monumental Presence by Wellington Reiter, AIA is meditation on the abstractness
of the cemetery both in form and conception. The drawings and models that
accompany the exhibition. also concern the collapsing of layers of history
to reveal unanticipated juxtapositions in the lives of those who are now
interned together. Mr. Reiter is the author of the recently published,
Vessels and Fields, which details similar investigations into the intersection
between public art, architecture, and urban design. |
Presentation
by Georgia Institute for Technology, College of Architecture
November 3 - December 30, 2000
East Gallery
Travel Writing, an installation by Mark Cottle, explores problems
of representation that arise in constructing narratives of the remote.
Ongoing formal concerns include:
The atomization (pixelization) of the image.
The interaction of figure and field.
And the role craft and the decorative arts may play in artistic inquiry.
Cottle was educated at Clemson, Rice, and Harvard Universities. In 1991
he was a Dinkeloo Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. He won the Steedman
in 1996, the result of a biannual international competition, and spent a
year in India, Italy, and France. He has taught at Georgia Tech, RISD, and
the University of Hawai'i.
November 3 - December 30, 2000 (two exhibitions)
James Herbert; Paintings, Film, Videos and Stills
November 3 - December 30, 2000
Organized by Teresa Bramlette
link to press release

James Herbert from Paintings, Film, Videos and Stills
Mix Tape
Mixed by Jeremy Helton
November 3 - December 30, 2000
link to current events
link to press release
www.fasciamedia.com
www.scannerdot.com
www.dfuse.com
www.sulphurrecords.com
www.atrecordings.com

Q-bert- Syd & Eric from Mix Tape
Film Screenings
November 3 - December 30, 2000
Saturday, November 4, 8 p.m.
The Celluloid Canvas
Presented by the Contemporary and IMAGE Film and Video Center
www.imagefv.org
Celluloid Canvas: Speedy Boys by James Herbert
Cinefest--Georgia State University

James
Herbert from The Celluloid Canvas
Wednesday, November 8, 8 p.m.
Celluloid Canvas: Orpheus by Jean Cocteau
Cinefest--Georgia State University
Friday, November 17, 9 p.m. - 1 a.m.
Mixer
A multimedia event with a film series by IMAGE Film and Video Center
& The Contemporary, performances by musician/artists Scanner and DJ
Gnosis and a screening with a live musical score of an experimental short
by fascia.
eleven50-1150-B Peachtree Street in midtown
www.imagefv.org
www.eleven50.com |
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| © 2000
| the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center | All rights reserved
535 Means Street, NW, Atlanta, GA 30318, 404 688 1970

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