Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The City of Levallois - Epson Photography Award is now calling for entries for its 2011 edition

Palestinians return to the site where Al Damun once stood. The village was destroyed in 1948. The "event" is organised by the Israeli association Zochrot. © Virginie Terrasse/Hans Lucas 2007-2009.

The annual prize rewards the work of a photographer, regardless of nationality, aged 35 or under. "Photographers must present their own new work, which has not been previously published or exhibited," say the organisers. "The selection panel will pay particular attention to the consistency of the artistic approach in its form and content."

The winner receives a €10,000 cash prize, as well as a monographic exhibition at the Photo Levallois festival in France.
Last year, the award went to Virginie Terrase for her work Palestine how?, which addresses the complexities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and explores the territorial issue at its heart.
To enter the competition, photographers must send a selection of at least 15 photographs with a supporting letter of 1000 words and a resume. For more information on how to enter, visit www.photo-levallois.org.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Jennifer Karady, At Denver University Myhren Gallery

Jennifer Karady: Soldier’s Stories from Iraq and Afghanistan
March 31 – May 1, 2011
Reception: Thursday, March 31, 5 – 8 pm
NEW TIME! Artist talk by Jennifer Karady in the gallery at 5 pm, at the beginning of the reception. Free


Inactive Duty Sergeant First Class Mike Sprouse, Virginia Army National Guard, veteran of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, with wife Tammy and children, Peyton and Colin, Madison Heights, VA, August 2006
48”x 48” Chromogenic Color Print

Artist Jennifer Karady works with American veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to create images that tell their individual stories and address their difficulties in adjusting to civilian life.
In Country consists of twelve large-scale 48 x 48 inch color photographs accompanied by a short synopsis of the veteran’s story written in his or her own words. Each work is initiated by an extensive interview process with the soldier, followed by a collaboration in which the veteran reenacts a chosen moment from war within the safe space of his or her everyday environment, often surrounded by family and friends.
Unlike some photographers who use actors to stage narratives, Karady works with real veterans to dramatize their stories through metaphorical, narrative, and allegorical techniques. Through this process the artist makes visible the psychological impact of war—the nightmares and memories that soldiers continue to experience after returning home.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/06/arts/design/06veterans.html?ref=arts
http://www.npr.org/blogs/pictureshow/2010/07/02/128267052/jennifer-karady?print=1
http://jenniferkarady.com

Sunday, March 6, 2011

REJECTED, at Wazee Union!

It’s official – there’s two Wazee Union locations open for this Second Saturday!
Wazee Union
3501 Wazee Street
Denver, CO 80216
Walnut Workshop
3525 Walnut Street
Denver CO 80205
Both locations will be filled with art, artists, music and good times! Check out the art of our new community members at the Walnut Workshop and the Month of Photography show, REJECTED, at Wazee Union!
Tons of free parking at both locations. No cover if you’re a student or if you’ve gotten your hands on one of the many free tix. If not, it’s $5 to get in and all proceeds go directly towards putting on bigger and better shows in the future!
The after party will be at Jake’s Food & Spirits with live music, awesome people and NO cover!
RSVP for the event on Facebook by clicking here.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

“Double Diptych” Vertigo Art Space

Thursday, March 3, 6-9 pm: “Double Diptych” opens at Vertigo Art Space on Santa Fe Drive. The show, curated by yours truly, features eight of Denver’s very best artists, here working with photography in a diptych form. The show continues through April 15. Visit our blog or www.vertigoartspace.com for info.

SIGHT UNSEEN: International Photography by Blind Artists

SIGHT UNSEEN: International Photography by Blind Artists
March 3 – April 9, 2011
Opening reception: Thursday, March 3
Members and special guests 6-8pm
Public reception: 7-9pm

Live music by Eric Woods (guitar, mandolin, banjo) with Jeff Hooton (bass) from 6:30-8pm
Blind Photography Workshop
with Cinthea Fiss, MSCD Visiting Assistant Professor
Wednesday, March 23, 6pm
$20 ($15 MSCD students and CVA members)
Space is limited. Registration required.
DARK LIGHT: The Art of Blind Photographers
HBO Documentary
To be screened every First and Third Fridays during the exhibition at 4 and 6pm.
Sight Unseen, the first major exhibition of work by the world?s most accomplished blind photographers. The exhibition explores the idea that blind photographers can see in ways that sighted people cannot.

Many of us, with sight leading as our dominant sense, use images to build our world. Visual information is practical to our survival and yet it has become pervasive in our world. We respond to visual overload by shuttering and narrowing our perception, a form of self inflicted blindness, so as to rebalance our senses. But for the sight-impaired artists in this exhibition, making a photograph has provided new ways of
seeing.

These artists employ diverse strategies in their work. Some use the camera to
present their own inner visions. Some capture the outside world unfiltered with
a non-retinal photography of chance. And a number of the artists, legally blind
but retaining a limited, highly attenuated sight, photograph to capture the
outside world and bring it into their realm.

In his novel Blindness, José Saramago writes, "Perhaps only in a world of the
blind will things be what they truly are." Beethoven composed music without
the ability to hear, blind Milton and Homer conjured the landscapes of the
heavens and the underworld, and the artists of Sight Unseen further explore
our definitions of blindness and challenge us to reevaluate what it means to
see.

Artists:
Ralph Baker, New York, NY; Evgen Bavcar, Paris, France; Henry
Butler, New Orleans, LA; Pete Eckert, Sacramento, CA; Bruce Hall, Irvine, CA;
Annie Hesse, Paris, France; Rosita McKenzie, Edinburgh, Scotland; Gerardo
Nigenda, Oaxaca, México; Michael Richard, Los Angeles, CA; Seeing With
Photography Collective, New York, NY; Kurt Weston, Huntington Beach, CA;
Alice Wingwall, Berkeley, CA. Curated by Douglas McCulloh.

The CVA will be open until 8pm every First and Third Friday during the exhibition.
Exhibition Sponsor: Interstate Kitchen and Bar

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Metro Now 2011

Metro Now Student exhibition 2011, curated by Bobby Walker and Laura Merage. 
The opening reception is at Emmanuel Gallery Feb 24th from 4-7pm with the award ceremony at 5pm
Emmanuel Gallery on the Auraria Campus Denver, CO 80217-3364

Monday, February 7, 2011

Chien-Chi Chang, Escape from north Korea


Chien-Chi Chang and Magnum In Motion Selected for 2011 Anthropographia Award for Human Rights in the Category of Multimedia.
http://inmotion.magnumphotos.com/essay/escape-north-korea

Thursday, January 20, 2011


Andy Warhol brought people together in ways that fueled their enthusiasm for art. His prowess at networking and finding commonalities inspired us to partner with Colorado organizations, artists, and collectors to create a show enriched by the enduring connections Warhol made when visiting Colorado in the late 70s and early 80s.
Warhol’s use of photography was the central tool that enabled both his art and social relations. Warhol in Colorado features the collection of Warhol Polaroids and silver prints gifted to the University of Denver by the Andy Warhol Foundation in 2008. Images by Colorado photographers (John Bonath, Valere Harris Shane, and Mark Sink) who photographed the artist in New York and Colorado in the 1980s, turn the camera on Warhol himself. Complimenting the photography are iconic hand-finished works by Warhol drawn from Colorado collections, such as complete sets of the 1972 Mao series and 1982 Myths series.
Warhol’s prolific output of works relating to music is represented in screen prints of Mick Jagger, record album covers, and magazines. Posters, works on video, and assorted ephemera add further context to Warhol’s Colorado connections.
Opening Event: “Warhol Happening” at the Cable Center, University of Denver campus. Thursday January 20, 6 – 11 pm. Visit Colorado Blacktie to book your tickets (event code “Warhol.”)

Month of Photography Denver 2011

http://monthofphotography.blogspot.com/

Picture this : a month of photography
MOP Denver

REDLINE and the Colorado photographic community invite you to celebrate photography for the Month of March, 2011.

MOP - Month of Photography Denver is a celebration of fine art photography through over 80 collaborative public events throughout Denver and the region for the month of March 2011. We are joining multiple museums galleries and schools surrounding fine art photography creating an exciting artistic and educational event for the city of Denver and the region.

The REDLINE art space will serve as the nerve center for the Month Photography, with exhibitions, lectures, workshops. For student and professional photographers there will be intensive portfolio reviews with galleries and museum directors, curators, photography collectors, teachers, critics, editors. Experts who can influence and advise on current marketing and offer image world knowledge.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Colorado Photographic Arts Center Exhibition at Edge Gallery

http://www.cpacphoto.org/
http://edgeart.org/


Opening night of CPAC Show, 7 Jan 2011

Metro State Art Faculty Exhibition January 7 - Febuary 19, 2011

http://www.metrostatecva.org/ 

Collective Nouns: MSCD Art Faculty Biennial
January 7 – February 19, 2011




Meet-the-Artists Friday, January 7
Members and special guest reception: 6-7pm
Public reception: 7-9pm

Faculty Lecture Series
February 1-3, 2011.
Click here for complete schedule.
The reception and lecture series are free and open to the public.

Representing the state’s largest art department, the MSCD art faculty is made up of a diverse group of regional artists, working in an eclectic range of media. This exhibition features an ensemble of recent works from the faculty; artists from each area of the art department will be represented. Most works in the exhibition will be for sale.

In conjunction with the faculty exhibition, there will be a retrospective of work by former Metro State art professor E.C. Cunningham, held in two locations.

E.C. Cunningham: From Wichita to Nighthawk - A Retrospective in Two Parts

On October 1, 2010 the Department of Art lost long-term professor and renowned artist E.C. Cunningham. Professor Cunningham was the coordinator for the printmaking department at Metro State for 27 years. He will be greatly missed.

Part I: 1979 - 2008
Emmanuel Gallery, Auraria Campus
January 27 - February 10, 2011
Opening Reception:
Thursday, Jan. 27, 4-7pm

Part II: 2008 - 2010
Center for Visual Art
January 7 - February 19, 2011
Opening Reception:
Friday, Jan. 7, 7-9pm