CHARLOTTE STREET FOUNDATION VISUAL ARTIST ...mixed media application in the background layer. These...
Transcript of CHARLOTTE STREET FOUNDATION VISUAL ARTIST ...mixed media application in the background layer. These...
CHARLOTTE STREET FOUNDATIONVISUAL ARTIST AWARDS EXHIBITION
Ari Fishsonié ruFFinCAleb TAylor
Celebratingitsthirteenthyear,havinggrantednearlyhalfamilliondollarsinunrestrictedcashawardsto70artistslivingandworkingintheKansasCityMetro,the2010CharlotteStreetVisualArtistAwards Exhibition honors three artists: Ari Fish, Sonié Ruffin,andCalebTaylor.Additionally, theCharlotteStreetFoundationhas awarded $25,000 to local performance artists throughtheir Generative Performing Artist Awards begun in 2008. TheCharlotte Street Foundation Visual Artist Awards are given inrecognition of artistic merit; nominated artists demonstrateoutstandingindividualpracticesasestablishedinKansasCity’sartscommunity.Annually,theCSFVisualArtistAwardsExhibitionisachancetohonorandcelebrateartistsworkingindifferentmedia,withdifferentartisticpracticesandconcerns.
This year’s recipients, Ari Fish, Sonié Ruffin and Caleb Taylor,were chosen from the largest selection of artist nominees in thehistory of the award. Selecting this year’s CSF Visual Awardwinnerswasapaneloffiveartsprofessionalswhoconsideredtheseartists’strengthswithintheirindividualpractices,withinthelocalcommunity and within the larger cultural zeitgeist reflected inthe contemporary art world. In addition to the Charlotte StreetFoundation’sannualawards,itsUrbanCultureProjectfocusesonincubatingartisticvitalityintheurbancoreofKansasCity.GrandArts occasionally co-presents events, lectures and visiting artistprojectswithCharlotteStreetFoundation/UrbanCultureProject,and is pleased to host this year’s Awards Exhibition. We hopeyou will join us in proudly celebrating the work of Fish, RuffinandTaylor,andinencouragingtheartisticdevelopmentoftheseindividualswithintheKansasCityartscommunityandbeyond.
The work of Ari Fish spans many mediums and disciplinesfrom drawing to conceptual and intuitive lifestyle and costumeconsultation, to surreal sets for fashion shoots and spontaneousperformances,tocollaborativelystagedeventswithawiderangeofperformers,bandsandartists.Fish’sinstallationatGrandArts,speak and spell, show and tellisasensorialenvironmentthatexploresthesilentexpressionofQigongthroughmulti-channelvideosprojectedontoaseriesofwhitesilkbannerswithasoundtrackbyFishandJ.AshleyMiller.TheQigongisaChinesemartialartofenergytransferencethrough synchronized movement and breathing – Fish asks howwemightexperiencethisexercisecloakedinfashion.Enteringtheinstallation,viewersnavigatethepiecefromvariousperspectivesandare invited to move through and around the projections, therebybecomingindirectcollaboratorsinthework.
SoniéRuffinhasbeensteeped in thefiberandfashion traditionsfor as long as she can remember. Her sophisticated artistic voiceandoriginalvisualnarrativesshiftthestory-tellingtraditionofquiltmakingfromthehometothegallery.Ruffincomposestextsbasedon individual andcollectivememories to accompanyeachquiltedwork.Inaddition,sheleadsworkshopsandhaswrittenbookswhichcompile documentation of her work, instructional guides, andbackgroundonheroriginalfabricdesigns.Ruffin’sbooksserveasakindofarchive:partautobiography,partAmericanhistory,andpart contemporary quilt design workbook. They are intended togivereadersthetoolstosharetheirownstoriesthroughart,fabricandthequilt.Ruffinisactiveinmanyspheres.Asacontemporaryartistandeducatorwhoremainsconnected to traditionalquiltingcommunitiesacrossthecountry,RuffindrawsfromAfricantextiletraditionsandsymbolism,passedonthroughexamplebymembersofherfamily.Ruffinisalsoanadvocateforwomen’sissues,andisdeeplyengagedinpreservingthelegaciesofNegroLeagueBaseballandJazzinKansasCity.Ruffin’slocalanddispersedcommunitiesoffamily,faith,friends,artandpoliticslaythefoundationforherwork.
Caleb Taylor works in a variety of media including sculpture,ceramics, painting, drawing and installation. His work combinesa strong design sensibility and dedication to formal concernswith an interest in the postmodern gleaning of cultural detritus
as content. Taylor’s concepts are rooted in his process, whichis playful, prolific and responsive to the particulars of a givenmedium. In the studio, Taylor is a quick problem solver and isconstantly making adjustments in media, scale, gesture, and thelevelofrepresentationashestrivestomaintaincriticaldistanceandagenerativeprocess.Renderingmomentsofarchitectureinfluxorcollapse, Taylor visually juxtaposes geometric forms with gesturalmixedmediaapplicationinthebackgroundlayer.Theseexpressiveelements are thencroppedwith a concealing foreground layerorstencil that reveals just a portion of the background. This push-pull of abstraction against a solid color surface suggests alternateplaneswherepositiveandnegativespacerubupagainsteachother,morphingorfracturingintootherpossiblerealities.
ARI FISH AriFish listens to themuses.Walkingdown 18thStreet inKansasCityafewyearsago,Iwastransfixedbytwooversized,overstuffedhandbags ina shopwindow.Thesemusclebags, as I called them,werepuffy,quilted,bulbousforms;oneblackandonered,theybothincorporatedwhat Inowrecognize tobeFish’scharacteristicgridmotif,withconfidentlinesandhems,inplacesdoubleorquadruplestitched.Iwascovetousofthesewovensacksofhyper-stylizedsinews,andIhadafeelingofstrange,resonantbeautythatwasalsodeeplyfamiliar.Iknownowthat this isexactlywhatFishseeks toachieveinherwork.She’snotsomuchinterestedinthehighartobjectorfashionpiece–rather,shewantstocreateavisceralexperienceandopenadoortoapsychicplaceofreckoning.This,Fishargues, isnottobefoundinthestaticorfixed.Asshesays,“It’sallmeta,”whetherherworkisplacedonaclothingrack,displayedinaglasscase,or–ideallyforFish–wornonthebody.Wearingoneofhergarments is likerecognizingoneself inaphoto–atoncefamiliarandstrange.Asshesaidduringoneofourstudiovisits,“Iwantmyclothestoremindyouofhowitfelttowearyourfavoriteshirtwhenyouwerefive.”
Fishtailorsherclothingtothedeterminedorintuitedconceptualneedsofaprojectorcollaboration.WhetherFishisdesigningclothestoreflectthenarrativeofPeaches’“IFeelCream”2009Tour,ortheextemporaneousstagechoreographyofCodyCritcheloeinaSSIONconcert,thegarbis intendedtoreflectthemovementandfeeling
ofthewearer.Fish’sstyleborrowsandextrapolatesfromfeministdesign a la Lucy Orta, Rei Kawakubo’s “like some boys” a.k.a.CommedesGarçonsdesignsandguerrillastoreantics,andYokoOno’sFluxusgames;punkandDIYculturerecallingDavidBowie’sevolutions of persona and Kim Gordon’s oscillations betweenmusic,fashionandart;occultsymbolismandritualgarbevocativeoftheTarotandtheKnightsTemplar;AlejandroJodorowsky’sHoly Mountainsurrealistplayers;andThe Labyrinth’sMuppetedcast.AspartofthecollectiveCarnalTorpor,Fishhasconstructedsensorialartprovocations and experiences based on manifestoes and culturaldiagrams;installationswithtaste,smell,andtouch;andcostumesand accoutrement for conjuring ritualistic experience. In Fish’srevelry, designing a space for feeling is a multi-dimensionaloperation; a spiritual service; the work of making one’s lifehabitableandaesthetic,yetperceptiveandchallenging.
Fish’sNativeAmericaandWarriorWearcollectionsoffermodularoutfits that are adaptable and androgynous. Earlier this year,Fish created an intimate two-person robe for an exhibition inBrooklyn,NYcalledspeak and spellofwhichherCSFexhibitionpieceisacontinuation.Participantsshareasilkveilthatdrapesbetweentheir foreheads as they sit facing each other. When showing thispiece, Fish occupies one half of the robe, assuming the role ofdesigner and Tarot Reader, and an audience member/querentjoins her in the other half. Together they wear the garment asequals–anentryintoasacredspacewithinagallerysetting.Workssuchasthisfloutthemodelofassemblyline,ready-to-wearattire,emphasizing instead a personal environment conducive to focus
andfeeling.Fishdesignsexperientialsituationswithclothingandcostumeintendedtoinspireachangeinperspective.Usingfashionasaformofself-expressionandpsychologicalreorientation,Fishhopes to offer her audience the conditions for channeling one’senergyandachanceforempowerment.
SONIÉ RUFFIN
SoniéRuffinlivesinstories.Herartandtextstellstories—fromthebeautifulandredeemingtotheoppressiveandtragic—whichcoalesce to preserve oral tradition. Ruffin learned fiber arts bywatchingher family’squilting, crochet, cutworkandother fabricprojects that surrounded and informed her youth. The artist’sfirstdesignswereinarunwayshowwhenshewas14yearsold.Anexuberant storyteller, Ruffin relayed to me a memory from the1950s.Whenshewasveryyoung,oneofherrelativesgavehersomefabricbroughtbackfromAfrica.Elatedandthenrebuked,Ruffinwaspreventedfromcuttingintotheimportedclothbyhermotherwho quipped, “These fabrics have a power you must understandbefore you can use them.” Her family took care to preserve andcontinue some of the traditional African fiber practices andsymboliciconography.Ruffin,aquickandcleverstudy,wassoonsitting at the table with her “Queens” (female relatives workingaroundthetable),andevennow,Ruffin‘squiltsincorporatesomeofthesetraditionalAfricanclothsandmotifs.TheyincludeKente,a clothcommissionedbyAshantikingsandotherroyalsmadebymenformen(RuffinusesthistotrimpiecesincludingthediptychMammogram,2010),andMudCloth,madebythewholecommunity,originating in Mali (Mud Cloth inspired Ruffin’s original fabriccalled“DrumsofAfrika”whichsheusesinHome Run,2009).
Ruffin’smostelaborateworktodate,Wynton Marsalis’ Conversation with Jazz, is inspiredbyachanceencountershehadwith themusicianattheGemTheaterin2005.Onthisevening,Ruffinwastakingin the view, snapping and swaying to the music, when she had aflashbacktothenightshefirstheardjazzmusicasaneight-year-oldgirl.Herfatherhadtakenheronanerrandandinstructedher
towaitinthecarathisworkplace,MickeyMantle’sHolidayInninJoplin,MO.Whilewaitinginthecar,Ruffinrealizedtherewasajazzshowinthehotelthatnight.ThesceneheldRuffininatrance:thewomenwiththeirsequindresses,crinolinepetticoatsandup‘do’sandthemusicpouringoutofthevenuewerelikenothingshe’deverseenorheardbefore.Notwantingtomissout,theyoungRuffinletherselfinandsquirmedthroughthecrowdtoseethewholestage.Ruffin’sfathersoonfoundherinthecrowdandtheclubmanager,afamilyfriend,promptlybroughttheyoungjazzenthusiastaShirleyTemple. Flashing forward to the Gem concert in 2005, Ruffinwatched Wynton Marsalis play his horn and was enlivened by thememoryofherfirstjazzset.SocametheinspirationforherdynamicMarsalistriptych.Inthefirstpanelthemoodisanticipatory,andalocusofcoloredcirclesmadeofhand-dyedfabricformtherecessof an abstract horn. Circles/notes and threads of sound streamforthreferencingamusical staff.The secondand largestpanel iscalled“Syncopation&Strings.”Here thecompositionappears tobecrackingopeninasoundburstrepresentedbythecircularnotesexplodingacrossthepanel.“Copasetic,”thelastpanel,referstothecoolpartofajazzsequencewheretheleadmusicianpatientlylistens,waitingforhisturnforsoloimprovisation.
Acrossthecountry,quiltingbeesandguildsgatherforcommunityand fellowship. In Ruffin’s workshops, she encourages fellowquiltersandtextileartiststoopenupnewmodesofworkingwhichare less rigidly symmetrical or made from a generic pattern. Hercollage-styleprocessisfluid,andmostoftenbeginswithsketchesforcompositionandpattern.Ruffinencouragesworkshopparticipantsto experiment with patterns and fabrics beginning with whatevermaterialstheyhaveonhand.Hergoalintheworkshopsistoallowpersonalexperiencesand stories to take shapeorganically.Ruffindraws inspiration from artists such as Romare Bearden, FaithRinggold,PhoebeBeasleyandJohnT.Scott.Quiltmakingasartisticself-expressioniscrucialtoRuffinandthecontentofherworkisshared.Assherelayedtomeduringastudiovisit, it is important“togetthestoriesrightsothat[people]cantouch,feelandholdthestoriesandpatternsandrecreatethemforthemselves.”
Ari Fish, speak and spell performance, 2010. Velvet and nylon, video still.
Ari Fish, true loved collection, 2009. Cotton, feathers, man-made materials.
Sonié Ruffin, Home Run, 2009. Quilted with Pima cotton, fabric designed by the artist, 53” x 53”.
Sonié Ruffin, On the Mound with Hilton Smith, 2009. Quilted with Pima cotton, Kente, 34” x 44”.
Ari Fish, speak and spell, show and tell project robe, 2010. Cotton, silk, nylon, video still.
Caleb Taylor, White Window VIV (A quick motion; a deliberate gesture), 2010. Acrylic, gouache, collage, pencil on paper, 22”x30”.
Awards CircleSpecial thanks to our 2010 Gold AwardsCircle: Dallas + Scott Pioli, David Hughes,Sr.,MargaretSilva;and2009BronzeAwardsCircle:J.ScottFrancis;Nancy+RickGreen;Julie+MikeKirk,Susan+JimMoore,Jeanne+ Charlie Sosland, Meg + Bill Zahner - fortheirspecialindividualsupportofourVisual+ Generative Performing Artist Awards andArt Omi. Extra special thanks to the HallFamily Foundation for its support of ourVisualArtistAwards.
SupportContributionsaretax-deductibleandmaybesentto:Box10263,KansasCity,MO64171www.charlottestreet.org
Board of DirectorsKirkGastinger,PresidentChadwickBrooksMaryLouBrousOliviaDorseyTeriAnnDrakeLisaLattanDanMaginnJoettePelsterRaechellSmithCharlesSoslandJamesTomlinsonAlexWendel
National Advisory CouncilElisabethAkkerman,
FrancisGreenburgerCollectionSterlingAllen,OKAYMountainRichardArmstrong,GuggenheimMuseumJennyDixon,NoguchiMuseumChrisDoyle,artistElizabethDunbar,ArthouseRussellFerguson,UCLADepartmentofArtAlexanderGray,AlexGrayAssociatesSaralynReeceHardy,SpencerMuseumBruceHartman,NermanMuseumAaronLandsman,theatreartistRubyLerner,CreativeCapitalValerieCasselOliver,
ContemporaryArtsMuseum,HoustonLarryRinder,BerkeleyMuseumEricRosen,KCRepertoryTheatrePattersonSims,curator+writerGregoryVolk,independentcritic+curatorSixtoWagon,DiverseWorksHamzaWalker,RenaissanceSocietyPhilipYenawine,VUE
2010 Visual Award AdvisorsMariaElenaBuszek,AssociateProfessor,
ArtHistory,UCDenverDeptofVisualArtRussellFerguson,UCLADepartmentofArtJamesMartin,independentcuratorStacySwitzer,GrandArtsGregoryVolk,independentcritic+curator
2010 NominatorsJuliaColeChristopherCookGregoryGloreAdolfoMartinezEGSchempfKellySewardFrankUryaszJaimieWarren
CALEB TAYLOR
Caleb Taylor is a self-described process artist. Assessing Taylor’sabstractpaintingsanddrawingsasaviewer,itisdifficulttodiscernwhatispremeditatedandwhatispurelyexpressionistic.Mystudioconversationswiththeartistconfirmthatit’ssomeofboth.Taylor’sapproach vacillates between the deliberately intuitive and themeticulouslyplanned.Workinginpainting,drawing,andmixed-mediacollage,Taylorusesexpressionisticlinesandformstocreatefixedmomentsthatvibrategesturallywithinacomposedframeorwindow. Forms are rendered spontaneously and then stenciled,cutoutorcovered scrupulously(thelattertermisTaylor’spreference).Taylor combines three-dimensional suggestions of architecturalformsorskylinesketches,whichhuminabackgroundlayer,withaflatframingdeviceorobstructiveformintheforegroundlayer.Thisflatframehoversbetweenourgazeandthestaccatounder-painting,revealingonlypartsofit,andsuggestingthattheunder-paintingistherealmeatofTaylor’swork.Itisthisundulatingtensionbetweenthesurfaceplaneandtheunder-paintingthatkeepsmeengaged.Whenweareinthemiddleoftheselayers,literallyinbetween,arelevant or pleasurable transformation of perspective can occur.Movingfromchaostoorderandbackagain,weareremindedofhowoneextremecannotexistwithouttheother.
Taylorisalwaysconsciousofthisparadoxicalplaybetweenmomentsofactionandreposeinhiswork.HenavigatesfromalineagethatincludesEllsworthKelly’searlygridpaintingsturnedwallsculpturesand Al Held’s transitional works, such as The Big N from 1964.Taylor’s larger, life-size paintings have a figurative/anatomicalsubtext, however, that serves to further underscore the theme ofbodiesatrestandinmotion.Whilethesurfaceplanecoversmostoftheunder-paintingwithvoluptuouslycurvededges,theoiloncanvasbuild-upinthesesubstantialstrokesalsomimicstheartist’sbodyinrealspaceasitbendsandstretchesoverandagaintocreateasmooth,regularsurface.Thesecoveredworksrecall,asTaylorsays,“theskinningoverofpaint,”asonadiscardedpalette.
ScanningTaylor’s studio,Iamparticularlyattractedtohiscollageworks on paper and to his carefully arranged piles of sourcematerials.Iamdrawntocutbitsofpaper,foundantiquedprints,storybooks,andcoloringbookpagesbecauseIknowtheywilllikelyfindtheirwayintoacollageorotherwork—andsoonerratherthanlater,sinceTaylorprogressessoquicklyfromonephasetoanother.It is achallenge tokeepupwithTaylor’sevolvingpractice,as it isto follow his formal twists and turns. Recently, Taylor has beenresearchinglocalcompaniestoconsultabouthowtoturntheformalelementsofhispaintingsintosomethingmoresculptural.HeplanstoincorporateoneoftheseinitialexplorationsinhisinstallationatGrandArts.
InhisongoingGesture series,begunearlier this year,Taylor tracesandcutswhatappearstobeaknottedlineoutofpaper.Thesedrawnknotscouldbepaths,strings,streamsofmoreorlessconsciousness,roads,trails,entrails,endtrails.Indeed,thesepieceshavegutsandhere again it isTaylor’spersistence toward the tensionof abstractformsbreakingandpeekingthroughacontrolledsurfaceplanethatsticks.
LaceyWoznyAssistantDirectorGrandArtsJuly2010
StaffDavidH.Hughes,Jr.,Founder/DirectorKateHackman,AssociateDirectorPatAlexander,Preparator,FacilitiesManagerKathyAshenbrenner,AdministrativeManager
Star BenefactorsBankofAmericaCharitableFoundation,Inc.HallFamilyFoundationRichardJ.SternFoundationfortheArts
(CommerceBank,Trustee)AndyWarholFoundationfortheVisualArts
BenefactorsAmericanCenturyFoundationCarterCommunityMemorialTrust
(UMBBank,n.a.,CorporateTrustee)DavidT.BealsIIICharitableTrust,
(BankofAmerica,Trustee)FrancisFamilyFoundationGrandArtsHallmarkCards,Inc.HelixArchitecture+DesignDavidH.Hughes,Sr.MissouriArtsCouncilMurielMcBrienKauffmanFoundationMid-AmericaArtsAllianceDallas+ScottPioli
Director’s CircleBernstein-ReinAdvertisingH+RBlockFoundationCopakenWhite&BlittDSTSystemsInc.J.ScottFrancisNancy+RickGreenWilliamT.KemperFoundation
(CommerceBank,Trustee)KirkFamilyFoundationLeveragingInvestmentsinCreativity(LINC)LynnAdkins+LindaLightonNeighborhoodTouristDevelopmentFundVirginia+MichaelRobinsonJeanne+CharlieSoslandSoslandFoundationSpencerFaneFoundationUMBBank,n.a.Meg+BillZahner
Super LeadersArtsKCFundJoan+KirkGastingerEllen+IrvHockadayKansasCityChiefsKansasCityPower+LightLeggFamilyFoundationFundOldTownLoftsTimeEquities,Inc.WilloughbyDesign,Inc.Annie+RickZander
LeadersAvidCommunicationsAnnBarhoumBoulevardBreweryMaryLou+TomBrousNicola+WaltCoferTeriAnnDrakeCoxGregoryGlorePam+GaryGradingerGrubb&Ellis|TheWinburyGroupShirley+BarnettHelzbergFoundationDennis+CarolHudsonDavidHughes,Jr.KissickConstructionCompany,Inc.Peggy+BillLyons
BarbaraMarshallHarold+MarilynMelcherFoundationM+IWealthManagementJanet+MarshallMillerMissouriBankSusan+JimMooreMPressRichardNadeau+VirginiaJenningsBradleyW.+LindaJ.Nicholson
FoundationAnnRobertson,CPAEstelle+MortonSoslandStinsonMorrisonHeckerMichele+JimStowersJoAnn+BillSullivanGeorgeTerbovichAnn+FrankUryaszJaneVoorheesDawn+BenWilliamsWhiteGossBowers
MarchSchulte&Weisenfels
InvestorsSuzanneAron+JosephLevinBunni+PaulCopakenTerri+DougCurranOliviaY.DorseyDunnFamilyFoundationGastingerWalkerHardenArchitectsSandi+LarryHackmanJoanie+PaulHamiltonCharlesM.Helzberg+SandraBaerPam+MarkJohnsonLisa+PaulLattanLynneMelcherPatricia+JamesMillerMorganStanleySmithBarneyJeanetteNicholsNancy+MikeThiessenAbby+AlexWendel
SponsorsChristine+DonAlexanderAndrewsMcMeelUniversalFoundationBartlett+CompanyGrainCharitable
FoundationBruceBettingerIreneBettingerRita+IrwinBlittLaura+MarkBluhmChadwickBrooksBobD.CampbellCo.Brenda+WIlliamConnerAdele+DonHallSharonandJohnHoffmanMr.+Mrs.DavidKrietC.StephenMetzlerSue+LewisE.NermanMargaret+JerryNermanTonyaWitmer+BenHansenPam+MarkWoodard
PartnersBarbara+StephenAbendKathrynAshenbrenner+BobCarlsonDeVette+LillardAshleyMikiBairdLibby+BobBerkebileLennie+JerryBerkowitzMaureen+BillBerkleyDonBlackMeridithBradfordMarcusCainDeannaDikemanLauren+TomDowlingeldoradoarchitects
Sue+BrianFrieszScottGobberSaralynReeceHardyJeanne+KarlHayesLeslie+CharlesHermanAveryHughesLinda+TopperJohntzPinky+ArthurKaseLynn+AndrewKaufmanHerbKohnJan-Marie+BradKrohCynthia+StephenKunzLoringLeifer+PaulTemmeBabetteMacyKeri+DanMaginnPeggy+MarkMcDowellWhitneyMillerRalphMylieMartha+ClydeNicholsMaryGresham+DavidOliverMarilynPattersonJoettePelsterJaneRatcliffePatty+JerryReeceWarren+YvonneRosserLisa+CharlieSchellhornMichaelSiglerBethSmithMary+CurtWatkinsKatie+ClydeWendelHelen+FrankWewersDonWilkison
FriendsKathleenCollins+JeffreyLoveDavidDavisRohtashavDhirKatherineDisonJean+MoultonGreenKateHackmanReesa+JohnHelzbergRitchieKayeJessicaKincaidSarahKnightSherry+JamesLacyPaula+RussellLeffelJanetMossGloriaPhenixRaechellSmithIngridStozelLarryThomas
COVER IMAGE:Sonié Ruffin, Wynton Marsalis’ Conversation with Jazz, 2007. Triptych, quilted with Pima cotton, hand-dyed fabric, 8’ x 7’.
Grand Arts Gallery Hours:Thu & Fri 10Am – 5pm
Sat 11Am – 5pm or by appointment
Caleb Taylor, White Window VIII, 2010. Acrylic, gouache, pencil on paper, 22”x30”. Caleb Taylor, Gesture Knot I, 2010. Acrylic, gouache, collage, pencil on paper, 15”x17”.
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