Lawndale Art Center is pleased to announce the 2013 mural at Lawndale Art Center will feature a collaboration between artists Daniel Anguilu and Aaron Parazette. This project will be the third phase of the rotating mural at Lawndale. Both painters employ forms of abstract patterns in their work, though their individual approach differs greatly. Anguilu’s intuitive approach to painting outdoor spaces result in gestural forms that take shape on the wall, while the clean lines and mathematical forms of Parazette’s work result from a more calculated approach to painting. The mural, titled Skywriting, will open along with five exhibitions on Friday, March 15, 2013, 6:30 - 8:30 PM, with artist talks beginning at 6 PM. The mural will remain on view until January 14, 2014.
This project is generously sponsored by Kinzelman Art Consulting, Judy Nyquist, Deborah Perl, Mellow Mushroom and Power Electrical.
Abhidnya Ghuge Halls without walls...
May 10 - Jun 15, 2013
Site specific installation made from thousands of wood block printed paper plates.
Halls without walls,
room to feel in.
The door awaits,
your return within. • Abhidnya Ghuge
Grace R. Cavnar Gallery
Abhidnya Ghuge’s installation begins with an original wood block carving that is printed on thousands of paper plates, which are transformed through simple folds to create a larger organic form. For Ghuge, the meditative process of carving the woodblock, printing and transformation of the paper plates suggests the possibility of preciousness and indispensable beauty. The site-specificity of the installation allows the form to change, thus echoing the global and ever changing nature of “home” in today’s fast pace, mobile culture.
DOMOKOS / FUTURE BLONDES 0.0.0.0., Nancy Douthey & Patrick Turk Round 7 • Lawndale Artist Studio Program Exhibition
May 10 - Jun 15, 2013
Round 7 features residents for the seventh round of the Lawndale Artist Studio Program.
Round 7 • DOMOKOS / FUTURE BLONDES 0.0.0.0., Nancy Douthey & Patrick Turk
Lawndale Artist Studio Program Exhibition
John M. O‘Quinn Gallery
DOMOKOS / FUTURE BLONDES 0.0.0.0.
Nancy Douthey
Patrick Turk
The Lawndale Artist Studio Program is part of Lawndale’s ongoing commitment to support the creation of contemporary art by Gulf Coast area artists. With an emphasis on emerging practices, the program provides three artists with studio space on the third floor of Lawndale Art Center at 4912 Main Street in the heart of Houston’s Museum District. This exhibition features residents for the seventh round of the Lawndale Artist Studio Program, DOMOKOS / FUTURE BLONDES 0.0.0.0. (Domokos Benczédi), Nancy Douthey & Patrick Turk.
DOMOKOS / FUTURE BLONDES 0.0.0.0. presents new works on aluminum, installations, disposable/free items, video manipulations and a sound series to accompany his new body of work created during Lawndale’s 2012-2013 Artists Studio Program. These works are a visual / aural extension of the sound and concept of his ongoing work with the experimental music project, future blondes network / network 0.0.0.0. / .
Nancy Douthey wanders through the Lawndale halls in Dom’s polkadot pajama pants and oversized slippers. He has let her borrow these items in an attempt to help her look presentable for tonight’s guest. She has locked herself out of the studio for the fourth time - this time without pants and only in a blue striped button down men’s shirt in which she has a three foot pile of in the studio and has given as a gift only once to Lane Hagood. Meanwhile, Patrick hosts the Looking at Art collectors group and is in no position to provide words of comfort or advice – she loves his advice. Her phone is also locked in the studio. She tries to use Facebook on Dom’s computer from 2001 to make contact with the outside world – this world consists of one person – Dennis Nance. She is known to make regular late night phone calls to Dennis requesting the third set of keys to get back into her studio all the while trying to take a bath in the large industrial sink on the third floor with the orange industrial soap in order to wash all the pink sugar off of her body in hopes of regaining a good grip on the 10 lb. camera she is borrowing from her cop friend that she met during her last car accident on the way to work. She is making work based on ideas around the drama of performance and the mystery of what is and what might be and what we can only wish for.
Patrick Turk's highly detailed collages not only use images of the body, or body parts, but are meant to excite a physiological experience for the viewer. Turk is a story teller who uses psychedelic movements and intricate designs to captivate the viewer and bring them into an exotic reality where the body becomes more than it seems. The work produced during the Lawndale Artist Studio Program is a glimpse into Earth’s future as The Superorganism, in which the planet’s surface becomes one gigantic, interconnected biomass comprised of all of the flora and fauna on Earth. The integration is both biological and telepathic creating a planetary network in which the whole truly is comprised by the sum of its parts. This transformation begins as a last ditch effort to save humanity, reduced by plague, from imminent extinction.
Justin Boyd I'll Send The Message Along The Wires
May 10 - Jun 15, 2013
Justin Boyd's site-derived sound installation employs the sounds of heartbeats, railroads, comets and homecoming mum-bells
I'll Send The Message Along The Wires • Justin Boyd
Cecily E. Horton Gallery
Through installations, sculptures, videos, and sound pieces, Justin Boyd’s work explores Americana and the American Landscape in search of true American spirit and inspiration. In finding these moments and stories that define us and the environment we live in, it is Boyd’s hope to make work that expands upon those histories and locations, and opens them up for current day exploration and participation. Boyd will be creating a site-derived sound installation in the Cecily E. Horton Gallery employing the sounds of heartbeats, railroads, comets and homecoming mum-bells.
Massa Lemu PRECARIOT
May 10 - Jun 15, 2013
PRECARIOT is a self-portrait of the artist as a continental drifter in perpetual precarity.
PRECARIOT • Massa Lemu
Project Space
PRECARIOT is a self-portrait of the artist as a continental drifter in perpetual precarity. The Precariat is a term that combines the word “proletariat” with “precarious” to describe an emerging “barbarian” class of migrant laborers and professionals living and working precariously, holding temporary underpaid jobs, lacking a political voice and increasingly frustrated by their living and working conditions. Attracted by its revolutionary aspects, Massa Lemu embraces the label and adopts it as his title. For Lemu the old patriot was proud of, and ready to die for fatherland, the “precariot” however is one whose only possession is the unstable and indeterminate terrain of precarity, staking claims and maneuvering in this uncertain landscape. In the age of heightened mobility, PRECARIOT focuses on processes of inspection and scrutiny, labeling and branding to highlight the realities of migration.
Juried by Duncan MacKenzie, Bad at Sports (Chicago, IL) The Big Show
Jul 12 - Aug 10, 2013 Reception: Fri Jul 12 6pm - 8pm
The Big Show is Lawndale Art Center's annual open-call, juried exhibition.
Houston, Texas - Lawndale Art Center invites artists living within 100 miles of Houston to submit artworks for a chance to be included in its annual open-call, juried exhibition, The Big Show, and a shot at $3,000 in cash awards. This year's Guest Juror, Duncan MacKenzie, Artist/Critic/Writer and Co-Founder of Bad at Sports, will select the show and award winners based on work submitted in person to Lawndale Art Center. Artists may submit up to three pieces of artwork along with a $30 entry fee ($25 for Lawndale members) on June 26 and 27. Jurying of the actual artwork will be conducted over two days. Works not selected for the show must be picked up by the artists on July 1 and 2. More information about The Big Show and artist entry forms can be found on our website, www.lawndaleartcenter.org. The exhibition will open on Friday, July 12, 2013, 6:30 – 8:30 PM, and awards will be announced at 7PM, along with a DJ set by Night Drive and complimentary beverages provided by Bombay Sapphire World Bazaar and Saint Arnold Brewing Company. Artists selected for The Big Show will give short informal presentations of their work during The Big Slide Show on July 31 & August 1 at 6 PM each night.
Cary Reeder Now, What Was There?
Aug 23 - Sep 28, 2013 Reception: Fri Aug 23 6pm - 8pm
Cary Reeder’s paintings focus on vanishing historic 1920s bungalows, using these physical structures to explore themes of loss and secrecy.
Cary Reeder’s paintings focus on vanishing historic 1920s bungalows, using these physical structures to explore the themes of loss and secrecy. Reeder’s own home and neighborhood have been the inspiration for this series. Rather than portraying charm and nostalgia, Reeder brings the soul of these houses onto the canvas with an aim to reveal more than simply a structure but to peak the viewer’s curiosity into the stories that lie within. For this exhibition, Reeder focuses specifically on houses that are endangered for demolition in an attempt to document a disappearing history and to recreate the lost sense of place that occurs with each cleared lot. The resulting exhibition brings focus to home, history and memory disappearing in the wake of progress, and to the mysteries and unknown stories of the people next door.
Lina Dib MURMURATIONS
Aug 23 - Sep 28, 2013 Reception: Fri Aug 23 6pm - 8pm
For this site-specific installation, Lina Dib will generate soundscapes in three transitional areas at Lawndale Art Center.
For this site-specific installation, Lina Dib will generate soundscapes in three transitional areas at Lawndale Art Center: the elevator, stairwells and 3rd floor window. These spaces are thresholds that mark the difference between up and down, and inside and outside. Drawing attention to the architecture of Lawndale, Dib will fill these generally unnoticed spaces with sounds that range from the microscopic to the monumental. Sound takes time. It can only exist in time. And unlike sight, sound is immersive. Sound physically hits and penetrates. It bundles us with it. It requires and even creates our presence, such that we are not in front of something, but within it. By situating the viewer within the piece, this intervention will make space itself more pliable creating a kind of soft architecture using sonic fields that change and at times respond to the viewer, while playing with motion and scale.
Susannah Mira Room Divider
Aug 23 - Sep 28, 2013 Reception: Fri Aug 23 6pm - 8pm
Susannah Mira creates objects and environments from industrial sidestream, inspired by the demise of American manufacturing.
Susannah Mira creates objects and environments from industrial sidestream, inspired by the demise of American manufacturing. The decline of this sector, the financial crisis, and gender and wage distribution in the labor market are all inspirations for this body of work. In creating orderly, geometric constructions, she applies a personal logic to the by-products of large enterprise. She also frequently employ the traditionally feminine arts to these industrial remainders, such as sewing, weaving, or detailed handwork, in a willful dislocation of art, design, and craft. Mira's installation in the Project Space employs thousands of laser cut plywood pieces, offcuts from a small business manufacturing build-your-own rocket kits for children.
Susi Brister Fantastic Habitat
Aug 23 - Sep 28, 2013 Reception: Fri Aug 23 6pm - 8pm
Photographic work depicting anonymous figures covered in densely textured or patterned textiles inserted into various landscapes.
Susi Brister Fantastic Habitat
Aug 23 - Sep 28, 2013 Reception: Fri Aug 23 6pm - 8pm
Photographic work depicting anonymous figures covered in densely textured or patterned textiles inserted into various landscapes.
Fantastic Habitat is a body of photographic work depicting anonymous figures covered in densely textured or patterned textiles inserted into various landscapes as mysterious organic forms. Lush faux fur and vivid fabrics conceal the still figures, producing a bizarre visual and contextual relationship between the shrouded form and its environment and creating a landscape-within-landscape effect. Recent images from this series depict figures covered in bold, kitschy textiles situated within unearthly landscapes of the American Southwest, enhancing the strangeness of the figure/environment relationship and introducing further slippage between real and imaginary. Throughout this work Brister questions the nature of sculpture, performance and portraiture, playing with notions of natural vs. artificial, and challenging traditional photographic renderings of the figure in the landscape. At once both humorous and melancholy, these images resonate with a psychological tension, evoking notions of the sublime and the vulnerability of the human body.