Sunday, March 1

Seriously... Art at Stony Brook - Entertainment

Seriously... Art at Stony Brook - Entertainment

Seriously... Art at Stony Brook

By: Kayla Rose

Posted: 2/23/09

For as long as there has been human life there has been art. From cave drawings to the pyramids, the Renaissance to Impressionism, artists have created visual images of their ideas and the ideas of the world around them. Artists have been revered for their visionary genius and persecuted for their dangerous beliefs. However, there is no clear definition for what makes someone an artist. Whether it is the ability to paint, or the way in which one views the world, it is clear that artists are found everywhere. Here at Stony Brook, we have some of our own. There are artists here who acknowledge the playfulness of art; however, they take themselves, and their work, very seriously.

This year's "MFA Thesis Exhibition" includes photographs, paintings, drawings, and mixed media and electronic installations by Austin Furtak-Cole, Alan Goodrich, Shannan Lee Hayes, Jin-kang Park, Verónica Peña, and Nalani L. Williams.

These six artists are degree candidates in the Stony Brook University Department of Art's Master of Fine Arts program. This program is currently in its twenty-fourth year, and attracts its talented artists from all over the United States, Latin America, Europe and Asia. The program focuses on contact between not only professors and artists within the Art department, but also encourages interaction with other university departments, in order to create a more well rounded and diverse individual. This thesis exhibition is the culmination of three years of this immersion and interaction.

A reception honoring the artists was held on Saturday, Feb. 14. They experienced a successful turn out of well over 300 people. I was lucky enough to meet the artists and experience their exhibitions firsthand. Each artist brings something different and exciting to the table.

Situated on the floor near the entrance is a compass by Jin-kang Park. Called "The Compass of Desire" (2006), it is made of fabric collected from family and friends. Around the edge of the compass are different phrases, such as "Good Person" and "Good Artist." With these, Park explores the possibility of being many things at once. She is interested in "human networks, interactive art and the strangeness which is hard to explain with language."

Indeed language cannot begin to explain Verónica Peña's performance installation, "Each Time I see Tables" (2009). Her installation protrudes into the gallery space in a seemingly chaotic fashion. Her performance, coupled with her charcoal drawing "In My Bedroom" (2009), evoke emotion and allow the viewer a glimpse into the soul of the artist.

This glimpse continues with Shannan Lee Hayes' "Pocket Pal" piece. There is pain, anger, anxiety, compassion, jealousy, and love. Hayes' work has focused "on the relationship between language and emotion in the cultural surface of social exchange."

Her individual show at the library gallery in September featured a neon sign with the words, "Everything Will Be Okay." Currently on display in the University Art Gallery is an acrylic and papier-mâché collection of roses and her "Pocket Pal" piece, which deals with rationalization and empathy. A work in progress of ways to cope with life. Looking at her work, I cannot help but feel as if the artist has reached into my own head, and drawn out my deepest feelings for the world to see. With this interaction, the viewer can truly identify with the artist's work.

Interaction within oneself and society is indeed a driving theme of the exhibition. The four paintings on display by Austin Furtak-Cole are but a small sample of his work, however, they successfully "explore the conflicts that inevitably occur within our interactive human experience."

As an artist, he deals with such themes as the relationships between people and within the individual, while exploring how paint can be used to reach the viewer. "Cradled," "Idle Hands," "Restless," and "Tough Love" were popular topics of conversation throughout the reception and definitely worth a look. While the paintings themselves may seem abstract, the abstraction created by the artist aptly expresses the "uncertainty of life."

Abstraction of some kind or another is often inevitable in art. Nalani L. Williams' installation focuses on the use of space in the gallery, "turning the gallery itself into an organic body that is raw, wounded or decaying." Her "Welcome" (2008) is a highlighted space which begins as a brand new stretch of white wall and eventually dissolves into a gaping hole. There are often arguments asking what makes something a work of art. Williams' work is not a conventional painting or sculpture, however it is still an artistic manipulation of space, a vision forced into being.

So what makes an artist? Alan Goodrich describes the artist as "one with a God complex." Perhaps this is true in a sense. An artist is a creator of ideas and images. Two of the most popular exhibitions of the evening were Goodrich's video installations. "That's Entertainment" (2008) and "The Obscure Object of Desire" (2008) are multimedia works that combine images and sound. His works focus on the ways in which "modern forms of mysticism rely on speed and collision" to achieve "self (and hence universal) understanding." It is fascinating to watch modern media manipulated in the space of a gallery.

The 2009 MFA Thesis Exhibition is running until Saturday, Feb. 28. University Art Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday, from noon to 4 p.m., and Saturday, from 7 to 9 p.m. Admission is free, so take the time to enjoy the artwork of Stony Brook's own.

You can also visit the artists' individual websites: www.austinfurtakcole.com, alangoodrich.net, www.shannanleehayes.com, emedia.art.sunysb.edu/jinkangpark and www.veronicapena.com. For further information, please call the University Art Gallery at 631-632-7240.
© Copyright 2009 Statesman



Friday, January 23

Stony Brook University MFA Thesis Exhibition 2009

paintings, drawings and photographs plus mixed media and electronic installations by graduate students Austin Furtak-Cole, Alan Goodrich, Shannan Lee Hayes, Jin-kang Park, Veronica Pena and Nalani L. Williams, reception 7-9 p.m. Feb. 14

Saturday, January 17

Artful Inaugural Ball



if you are in the NYC on Jan 19th check stop by and check out my interactive piece entitled "Change". It is going to be a fun event and a great way to start the new year.

January 19, 2009 is the eve of President Barack Obama's Inauguration and Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
Let us join together to express our Vision for the Future. With an artful Inaugural Ball, we will ring in a new era and establish a direct conversation with the Obama Administration on how art and culture can help strengthen the country.

This is part of a national network of events which are an official part of the Inauguration. This event will receive media and web promotion from the Obama transition team. Coordinated by Arts for Art, Action Arts League and Theater for the New City, the celebration brings together arts and community, and encourages participation in New York's vibrant cultural scene.

The event encourages participants to create music, art or costumes that reflect a "Vision" for a better America. It will include performances and activities early with a dance party breaking out later.

The event will take place at Theater for the New City, 155 1st Avenue between 9th and 10th streets. The admission for the latter portion of the evening is an affordable ($5 or $10). There will also be an inexpensive bar.

Between 7pm and 9pm, THEATER FOR THE NEW CITY will present its part of the Pre-inaugural Celebration. This portion of the evening will be FREE to the Public. Theater, Dance and Song by some of the Community's Finest Performers, Choreographers, and Theater Companies. Curated by MARY TIERNEY, it will include performances by:
ROD RODGERS DANCE COMPANY
CRYSTAL FIELD, ELIZABETH RUF and CLARA MALDONADO
PATRICK FENTON
JUAN RULFO

and MORE

Come and Enjoy! It is a New Era! Bring your Dreams with you!

ArtsPolicyNow
presents
A Day of Dreams

A series of arts-led participatory community visioning events
to celebrate the inauguration of Barack Obama
as the 44th President of the United States

1. Dancing to Harmony Workshop SOLD OUT
Venue: Dance New Amsterdam – 280 Chambers Street
January 19th 2:00pm – 5:00pm FREE
The Pillar: Racial harmony, diversity, community
Participating Community Groups: Afro-Brazil Arts, Dance New Amsterdam, Dance Parade, Grand Street Settlement, Society for the Educational Arts

A diverse group of 25 kids from New York’s Lower East Side will participate in a facilitated group discussion to tell President Obama their dreams for racial harmony, diversity and community and how dancing together can help realize those dreams. The discussion will be interspersed with short performance pieces by 4 dance groups: African, Capoeira, Korean, and Turkish/Kurdish.. A choreographer will create a short dance piece based on themes from the discussion. The kids, the dancers and life sized puppets will all learn the dance and perform it to live music. The dance will be videotaped and a 5 minute video piece on the entire event will be broadcast on our website.

2. Urban Empathy: Living with Compassion in the Big Apple
Venue: Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art, 594 Broadway, Room 401
January 19th 2:00pm – 3:30pm FREE
The Pillar: Communication and Social Cohesion
Participating Community Groups: Brooklyn Nonviolent Communication, Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art

What do you do in challenging situations where someone says something you don't like, find offensive, or disagree with? In this fun, interactive workshop you'll get to explore challenging situations you've found yourself in and see how the outcome can be different when we listen for what really matters to the other person---and yourself. This workshop will be led by Dian Killian, co-author of the new graphic novel, URBAN EMPATHY: TRUE LIFE ADVENTURES OF COMPASSION ON THE STREETS OF NY.
Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art (212) 254-3511 www.moccany.org

3. The Rage of Nature: Water Under Attack – A Teach In
Venue: Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural & Educational Center/Milagro Theater, 107 Suffolk St.
January 19 7:30pm FREE
The Pillar: Art and Community Environmental Activism

Participating Community Groups: International WOW Company, Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, The Partnership for a Global New York,WATERUNDERATTACK.COM, The Catskill Mountainkeepers and the National Resources Defense Council

The Hydraulic Fracturing drilling process uses millions of gallons of water infused with a mix of 275 toxic chemicals called “Fracking Fluid” to blast holes into a deep bed of shale, fracturing the strata and releasing gas. Although Halliburton and other companies that created the process will not disclose the chemicals used in “Fracking Fluid,” environmental scientists and health experts have discovered that the chemical mixture in the fluid, which very easily contaminates ground and surface water as well as underground aquifers, contains chemicals that cause severe health problems such as brain damage, cancer, breathing and internal organ failure and a long list of chronic effects

The event will feature a program of speakers, film clips from “The Rage of Nature” by Josh Fox/International WOW , a discussion to raise awareness about the threat of drilling in NY’s watershed and to further the activist network working on the issue. Q and A will follow the main presentation
International WOW Company (917) 913-9610 www.waterunderattack.com

4. Inauguration - Hip Hip Hooray! Poetry for America
Venue: FusionArts Museum, 57 Stanton Street, NYC
January 19th 8:00pm-10:00pm FREE
Pillar: Poetry and Community Visioning and Expression
Participating Community Groups: FusionArts Museum

The community will enjoy live performances by poets Steve Dalachinsky, Eliot Katz, Big Mike, Tsaurah Litzky, Nancy Mercado , Elizabeth Smith, Nathan Versace. Community Participation will be encouraged with an Open Mic - "Give a shout out to Barack about your dreams for the future"
FusionArts Museum 57 Stanton St. (Forsythe & Eldridge) (212) 995-5290 www.fusionartsmuseum.org

5. FREEDOM’S RING - DREAMS FOR A NEW ERA
Venue: Theater for the New City, 155 1st Avenue, (between 9th & 10th) NYC
(212) 254-1109 www.theaterforthenewcity.net
January 19th 5:00pm – 1:30am (various events)

MAKING DREAM ART & HIP HOP (Kids & Youth) 5pm – 7pm (FREE to All)
Curated by LES Girls Club, LES Power of Peace Anti-Violence Youth Coalition, Arts for Art & Vision Festival

PERFORMANCES – DANCE, SONG, THEATER 7pm – 9pm (FREE to All)
Curated by Mary Tierney with Crystal Field, TNC

ADMISSION AFTER 9pm: $5 or $10

JAZZ CONDUCTIONS 9pm – 10pm
music * dance * voice
Arts for Art & Vision Festival (212) 254-5420 www.visionfestival.org

DREAM COSTUME INAUGURAL BALL 10pm and on
$5 Dream Costume $10 Without Cheap beer & wine
Participating Community Groups: Action Arts League, Kostume Kult, Dance Parade, Disorient DJ's, Arts for Art/ Vision Festival, Groove Hoops, ANIMUS, Metal Tiger, Tribes, plus more being added daily. Participatory Costume Party – Dancing - Art Installations – Live roaming video collectives
For much more info on how to participate go to http://www.actionartsleague.org/inauguration/

For more information on ArtsPolicyNow and our campaign to bring about a cogent national arts policy, please visit www.artspolicynow.com

MFA thesis exhibition

MFA Thesis Exhibition
February 7-28, 2009
Reception: February 14, 2009

Event Calendar