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Bijoux Altamirano, Jennifer Bastian, Bridget Carron, Siri Kaur, Renée Martin, Julia Paull, Heather Rasmussen, Fay Ray and Carly Steward
Curated by Renée Martin and Heather Rasmussen
On view: January 15 - February 25, 2011
Reception: Saturday, January 15, 6-9 p.m.
Postcard
Photos from the Opening Reception
Glendale News Press Story
Return to Brand Library Art Galleries Schedule page
Silence remains, inescapably, a form of speech.
Susan Sontag, The Aesthetics of Silence, 1967
The Brand Library and curators Renée Martin and Heather Rasmussen are pleased to present Curious Silence, an exhibition that brings together a group of artists working in "silence," or letting something visual they've made speak on their behalf. The selection of artists is related by a shared investment in process and perception specifically—each participant is looking close, doing the time, making calculated and researched interpretations, and visually expressing that process in a compelling, poetic way.
The artists come from a generation influenced by the lives and accomplishments of artistic, critical and performance figures like Susan Sontag, Gloria Steinem, and Rosalind Kraus, Debbie Harry, Patti Smith, and Kim Gordon, Marina Abramovic, Sophie Calle and Eleanor Antin. Not only eloquently letting their practices speak for them, they also recognized the powerful and problematic nature of beauty and style in mainstream consciousness. They collectively helped shape public awareness of a new, post-modern femininity that the exhibition artists live and negotiate every day.
While the concept of the show grew out of ongoing conversations the curators shared about their recent re-visiting of Sontag's work, the title of the show was taken from Patrick Moore's Los Angeles Times editorial, written in criticism to Sontag's conservative obituaries that conspicuously omitted her relationship to the gay and lesbian community. Moore argues that Sontag's "lesbian relationships surely affected her work and our understanding of it," and further posited that "continued silence about lesbians in American culture amounts to bias" acutely felt by females living and working in the public sphere.
The idea of women in art and the perceived difference of struggle they may or may not encounter could be seen as cliché (the curators and artists continue to debate this issue.) The artists working here span multiple mediums and visual sensibilities—they address the acutely personal, the overtly commercial, the sublime and the grotesque. But all the work exemplifies a measured critical response to a lived experience of our hyper-visual, information and technology-saturated culture. Whether the work, which much like Sontag's draws from both research and pointed personal experience, can transcend the often pre-conceived or assigned perspective of working as a female, is yet to be seen.
In celebration of the exhibition a publication will be produced with a contributing text by A.S. Hamrah, further investigating both Sontag's writing and the "aesthetics of silence" in relationship to the works in the show. Hamrah lives in Brooklyn, New York and has written for Newsday, the Boston Phoenix and the Los Angeles Times. He is a contributing film critic for n+1, a thrice-yearly print journal of politics, literature, and culture.
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ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES
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Bijoux Altamirano, received her BFA from the Pratt Institute in 2009. Her influences are many, Kenneth Anger, Cedric Gibbons (MGM studios' art director during the 1930's), Cecil Beaton's art direction and costume design, Guy Bourdin, Helmut Newton, Karl Lagerfeld, Alejandro Jodorowsky, Tod Browning's Freaks and Dracula. She takes historical references and reconstructs them in her own way. Altamirano is closely associated with Kembra Pfahler and a member of her theatrical rock band The Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black since 2000. Altamirano lives and works in New York City. More information about Altamirano's work can be found on her Vimeo page.
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Bijoux Altamirano
Behind the Wall of Sleep
Parts 1-4, 2008
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Jennifer Bastian was born in Southeastern Wisconsin and received her MFA from University of Wisconsin in 2008. She recently had an exhibition through CANAL, using surveys to augment her endless photographic archive. Bastian explores shared notions of separation; giving a gift at the end of collective explorations of suffering. She has exhibited in many group exhibitions throughout the country, including the UCLA Wight Biennial in Los Angeles in 2007. While a graduate student, Bastian was an artist in residence at The Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles, CA, and at Spindleworks Artist's Center in Brunswick, ME. 2006. She currently lives in Los Angeles, and works as the Eric Gill Project Archivist at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. More information about Bastian's work can be found on her website.
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Jennifer Bastian My Father’s Office 2008
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Bridget Carron is currently attending The Art Institute of Chicago for her MFA in Art History and she received her BA from the University of Southern California in 2005. Carron explores estranged interior spaces combined with her current environment whose conflicting tensions form her identity. She creates a visually warped logic with architectural spaces articulated through abstraction. By manipulating these once familiar spaces in contrast to those of her daily routine, she visually represents her distrust of the substance, steadfastness, and dependability that these spaces once stood for. Her paintings juxtapose loud colors and thick oil paint with open areas of surface that escalate the odd serenity of the intangible environment. Carron Lives and works in Chicago.
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Bridget Carron Untitled 2009
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Siri Kaur received her MFA from CalArts, and her BA and her MA from Smith College. Her photographs have been exhibited in numerous group shows, including 401 Projects in New York, the Torrance Museum of Art, the UCLA Wight Biennial, and the Portland Museum of Art 2011 Biennial. She lives and works in Los Angeles, where she is currently an assistant professor at Otis College of Art and Design. More information about Kaur’s work can be found on her website.
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Siri Kaur
Black Hole (Darkroom Experiment #4) 2009
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Renée Martin received her BFA from the University of Southern California in 2005. In 2009 Martin had a one-person exhibition at the 3001 Gallery at USC's Roski School of Fine Arts. She is interested in ideas of preservation and functionality in nature and society, working within documentary photography. Martin lives and works in Los Angeles.
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Renée Martin Untitled (Harris Hawk) 2008
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Julia Paull earned her BA from the University of California, Santa Barbara and her MFA from the California Institute of the Arts. Working in both drawing and photography, Paull is concerned with physical manifestations of the human condition as experienced bodily and psychologically. Her current photographs examine the processes of growth and death in people, plants and animals. Both her drawing and photographs take into account an exploration of the possibilities of what it means to draw. Julia Paull teaches in the photography area of the USC Roski School of Fine Arts. Recent solo exhibitions include South La Brea Gallery, Intime Gallery, and Chapman University. Currently she has work up in Anonymous Drawings No 9, Berlin, Germany. She has been in group exhibitions at London Street Projects, Three day Weekend, the Democratic National Convention, Beyond Baroque and the Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies. She has received grants from the Durfee Foundation and The University of Southern California Lyon Fine Arts Faculty Research Fund. More information about Paull's work can be found on her website.
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Julia Paull I am me, You are you, N 4 2010
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Heather Rasmussen received her BA from UC Irvine in 2004 and her MFA from CalArts in 2007. She has recently exhibited in the show 31 Women in Art Photography, with Humble Arts Foundation. In September 2009, Rasmussen had her second solo exhibition in the Sandroni Rey Container, Los Angeles, a shipping container turned gallery space. In March 2009, Rasmussen had her first solo exhibition, ship happens, with Light & Wire Gallery in Los Angeles. Her work was recently published in the book Unfolded, Paper in Design, Art, Architecture and Industry, alongside artists such as Olafur Eliasson, Thomas Demand and Frank Gehry. Rasmussen lives and works in Los Angeles. More information about Rasmussen's work can be found on her website.
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Heather Rasmussen Untitled (South America, date unknown) 2010
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Fay Ray received her BFA from Otis College of Art and Design, Los Angeles in 2003 and an MFA from Columbia University in 2005. She recently has had her work featured by Gagosian Gallery, and LAXART. She has been in group shows throughout the world, including Inferno in Yautepec, Mexico City, Works on Paper at Anna Kustera Gallery in New York and Counter Intelligence at the Luckman Gallery in Los Angeles. Through collage and sculpture she seeks to expand beyond the mere coupling of the mechanical and corporeal but rather an exchange of parts and textures that facilitates a core transformation. Fay Ray lives and works in Los Angeles.
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Fay Ray Snow White In Her Grave 2010
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Carly Steward received a BFA from Otis College of Art and Design, Los Angeles in 2003 and an MFA from CalArts, Los Angeles in 2007. She is a recent recipient of the Artist's Studio Residency at One Colorado, where Steward has created an interactive exhibition called The Arrangement, on view through January 2011. Steward has exhibited in many group shows including: Interactions: Armory Artists and Their Art at The Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena; De Pasada Por Los Angeles at Atelier als Supermedium in The Hague, Netherlands; Photo Femmes at Caren Golden Fine Art in 2006 in New York; Speakeasy at Upspace, L.A. Design Center in 2005; Disquieted at 4-F Gallery in Los Angeles in 2004. She lives and works in Pasadena, where she is currently a teacher at the Armory Center for the Arts.
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Carly Steward Untitled Sculpture #1 2008
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Last modified: Thursday, February 09, 2012 12:39:53 PM
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