Artist Insights: Interview with Angee Lennard of Spudnik Press

by laura 22. April 2013 16:29

• From the May-August 2013 print edition of Chicago Gallery News

 

 

BY LAURA MILLER

Chicago artist Angee Lennard wears many hats.  When she’s not creating her own work, you might find her teaching art classes or getting involved in various collaborative projects and residencies – both locally and abroad. Additionally, Lennard founded Spudnik Press Cooperative in 2007 and continues to oversee a wide range of community programs that are offered at the vibrant West Side space. 

What’s your Chicago story – why and when did you move here?

I grew up in Michigan on a potato farm and moved to Chicago to attend The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) in 2001. Even though I was raised close to Toledo and Detroit, living in a huge city required a lot of adjustment, but I’ve gotten quite used to the quantity and quality of cultural events here and don’t see myself moving anytime soon.

You graduated from SAIC in 2005 with a BFA with emphasis in print media. Are you still connected to SAIC now?

Very much so. I’ve worked with interns from my alma mater, and I’m in regular contact with the staff and faculty in the Print Media Department, since they send students to Spudnik Press and donate work to our annual silent auction.  I’ve been a guest artist in classes and at a few career-focused events. It’s rewarding transitioning to a peer of my former instructors.

How did you start teaching?

Marwen and Spudnik Press are the two organizations I consistently teach with. My desire to teach developed out of a frustration that contemporary art is often inaccessible to much of the general public. Art can often be very self-referential and hard to engage with without some education (formal or otherwise) in visual communication/thinking. I felt a big disconnect between my peers at SAIC and my neighbors in Little Village. My teaching works toward shortening this divide. 

Spudnik Press is a community print shop that offers open studio time, classes, residencies and exhibitions; it has evolved to be an impressive space with many offerings. How is Spudnik today different than how you first imagined it to be in 2007?

I opened Spudnik Press with the intent to do exactly what we still do: offer affordable and approachable access to printmaking. However, the scale of what the shop is today was unimaginable to me in 2007. When I started out I knew the communal aspect of a print shop was the most important factor. Through running the studio for 6 years, I have a much more holistic understanding of what it means to run a community space. We bridge a variety of communities, i.e., youth programming overlapping with residency programs; writing classes alongside printmaking classes. 

Spudnik Press is associated with Chicago Area Artists Residency Programs (CAARP), and you’ve also been an artist in residence at AS220 in Providence, RI as well as Ragdale in Lake Forest, IL. Please share the impact of residency programs to you and other artists. 

CAARP began very organically about two years ago. Based on shared member experiences we set some goals, such as cross-promotion, collective advertising, and hosting collaborative exhibitions. While many residencies take artists away from the distractions of everyday life, urban residencies ask artists to interact with the community and often host local artists. CAARP has allowed me to be better connected to similar residency programs - residencies that are parallel to what we offer, and are therefore more relevant. 

The two residencies that I have completed have instigated substantial shifts in my work and allowed me the focus to develop new lingering ideas. I’ve also done “self-imposed” residencies, which I find useful. Last year, I spent a week in a cabin on the Mississippi River and created my first animation. 

What’s your favorite method of printmaking for your own work?  

My favorite process is intaglio (etching.) It offers just the right amount of control and unpredictability, and makes me feel a little like an alchemist. My technical skills are strongest for screenprinting, simply because I have had more opportunities to teach and print professional jobs and consignments.

How do you balance your own studio practice and how is your work impacted? 

It is very difficult to maintain a studio practice while running Spudnik Press and teaching, but my students definitely inspire me. Young artists often approach art with such fresh perspectives and eagerness that I often leave class ready to take more risks myself. My newest body of work investigates the relationship between emotional thinking and logical/rational thinking that I believe stems from the tension between the work I do as an art administrator and as an artist. Honestly, the only way I make new work is through residencies and through participating in projects with strict deadlines. Otherwise, my art would always get pushed to the back burner. 

Are you in the middle of any big projects at the moment?

This summer I will head to South Africa as a volunteer teaching artist with Dramatic Need, and I suspect I’ll be working on my own projects while I’m there. I’ll spend three weeks in a town called Viljoenskroon teaching animation with my partner, Colin Palombi. I’m also working on a collaborative project called Ten by Ten, a unique opportunity for visual artists and music composers to collaborate in a meaningful, shared creation. I’m working with composer Randall West to create a print and original score investigating synesthesia to be released this fall.

How would you describe Chicago’s art scene?

I don’t feel qualified to summarize the whole scene, but where I interact it seems to be tangible, good-humored and relevant. Chicagoans seem to make work that has craftsmanship, and is physical or tactile, often ironic or lighthearted, sometimes even silly. What I love about this city is that so many people make work that has importance beyond the gallery setting - work that speaks to social and political issues, or work that is digestible even by those without a degree in art.

www.angeelennard.com

www.spudnikpress.com

 

 

Tags:

Artists | Printmaking

Chicago Six at Chicago Art Source Gallery

by Tamara T. 4. April 2013 08:51

Coming up at the Chicago Art Source Gallery in Lincoln Park is an exhibition titled Chicago Six, opening Thursday, April 4 and featuring diverse works from the following Chicago artists: Mark Phillips, Eric Holubow, Sheila Ganch, Lynn Basa, Kristin Komar and Michelle Gordon. The focus of the group show is to allow each artist to represent what they find inspiring, challenging and rewarding about living in Chicago. Though these Chicago-based artists are not all originally from Chicago, they have all made the city their home.

The six artists I will be discussing cover a wide range of mediums such as printmaking, photography, sculpture and painting, while still representing the theme of Chicago life found in the buildings, the people and the busy streets in each work.

Mark Phillips works with metal, printmaking and paint to represent the gritty El stations, the graffiti-clad walls and the busy streets that have become visual embodiments of his urban life in Chicago.

 

Eric Holubow photographs abandoned churches, theatres and warehouses in an effort to capture the beauty in these dilapidated structures, revealing a different side of Chicago architecture.

Sheila Ganch shapes abstract sculptures portraying the people that grab her attention in the city, such as the form of a couple bent over a table in thought, maybe waiting for their food at a local restaurant or playing a game of chess in the park. By creating different bodies in varied positions, Chicago becomes their common denominator. 

The three painters in the exhibition see the city in more abstract, color-filled ways. 

Lynn Basa creates tableaus of color springing forth from city lights and buildings.

Kristin Komar pairs unnatural shapes and colors on a background of dripping paint that represents the man-made buildings placed up against natural parks and lake and river.

Finally, Michelle Gordon piles color upon color to portray the diverse spectrum of people and places that life in Chicago has to offer.

Chicago Six

April 5-June 22

Chicago Art Source Gallery

1871 N. Clybourn Avenue, Chicago, IL 60614

 

 

Día de los Muertos 2012

by Joanna A. 26. October 2012 15:27

Día de los Muertos (Day Of the Dead) is one of Mexico’s most important celebrations.  Taking place on November 1st, friends and family gather to pray for and remember loved ones who have passed.  The celebration includes paying homage to the dead through the construction of altars, which traditionally include flowers, sugar skulls, candles, food, and drink.    

The National Museum of Mexican Art celebrates Dia de los Muertos with its 26th annual exhibition, featuring works of art by both Mexican and Mexican-American artists, four of whom are Chicago locals (James Larralde, Salvador Vega, María Villarreal, and Román Villarrea).  This year’s theme--curated by Dolores Mercado--is titled Hanal Pixán: Food For the Souls, inspired by the Maya regions of Yucatan, Quintana Roo and Campeche.  Visitors have the opportunity to celebrate life by glimpsing death through vibrant works of art.  The exhibition runs through Dec. 5; more details here.  

Fernando Castro Pacheco, The Offering-Hanal Pixán / La Ofrenda-Hanal Pixán, 1975, oil on canvas, 50 1/8” x 70 1/2”, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Ateneo de Yucatán, photo: Edgardo Arredondo, Courtesy of MACAY

For those of us who are more hands-on, Self-Help Graphics & Art is hosting a Día de los Muertos Community Art Workshop this Saturday, October 27 from 12 PM – 3pm.  The workshop includes Flores de Papel/Paper Flower Making, Papel Picado/Mexican Cut Paper, Dia de los Muertos Mascara Decorating/ Paper Mache Mask, Paper Mache Procession Calaveras and Calacas.  Supplies and teachers are included; more details here.   

Self-Help will also be hosting its 39th Annual Dia De Los Muerto celebration on Friday November 2 from 5-11pm.  Through the leadership and initiation of local artists, Self-Help graphics’ celebration is unique to the East Side artistic community it represents.  It will include a traditional ceremonial blessing, musical performances, food and craft vendors, face painting, and children’s workshops.

 

Ricardo Linares G., A Dream / Un sueño, 1989, polychrome papier-mâché, 23 ½” x 11” x 9”, National Museum of Mexican Art Permanent Collection, 2006.69, Gift of John D. Meeks, photo: Michael Tropea

Tags: , ,

Free Event | Printmaking

ABOUT FACE! Closing Reception at Zhou B Art Center

by Alexandria 9. April 2012 16:12

This Saturday, April 14th at noon, Zhou B. Art Center invites you to the closing reception of About Face, a solo exhibition of British painter and printmaker, Corinna Button, curated by Sergio Gomez. The remarkable show, illustrates Button’s excavation of beauty and female performance, presenting for the first time ever, separate points of view: masqueraded reality and idol. 

 

 

Referencing the work of her predecessors, such as Picasso, Munch, and Nolde, Button calls these painted works, her “giants” as they are literally huge works of art spanning from nearly six feet wide to ten feet tall. These layered figures are not only giant in their size however. They are also colossal in their presence, as every character reveals a different narrative and persona, creating a magnificent allure and aura. Their stories branch from Button’s thesis that “groupings of girls and women in threes provide a window into the intimate thoughts and secrets that shape the narrative of ulterior sentiment.” Each painting provokes you to unveil the several complex layers surrounding the conversation about beauty and examine a deeper dialogue that includes human perception.

The labor that is put into these paintings is also quite remarkable. Much like an archaeologist would, Button identifies her work to be about “digging and excavating” as she continues to build upon material and content, scraping and peeling back surfaces, she moreover reveals bit and pieces on the canvas and through the manifested image as well. 

You can learn more about Corinna's process at: http://www.corinnabutton.com/ She frequently updates her blog with works in progress and upcoming events. 


 

Zhou B Art Center

1029 West 35th Street, Chicago, IL 60609

(773) 523-0200

http://www.zbcenter.org/

 

News: Jeanette Pasin Sloan at the Brauer Museum of Art in Valparaiso, IN

by CGN Ginny 24. January 2012 14:59

Museums are always working to build their permanent collections - supporting their curators, raising money for acquisitions, cultivating relationships with collectors, as well as artists.  All of these relationships go a long way towards crafting a museum's identity and to making it a unique resource for scholars, researcher, members of the community, and of course the visiting public.  A key relationship between a donor, a museum, and an artist is reason for some big news at the Brauer Museum in Indiana.  Recently the artist Jeanette Pasin Sloan (b. 1946) donated her complete archives to Valparaiso University’s Brauer Museum of Art in Valparaiso, with the help of an additional donation by the Byron Lee and Josephine Luecke Ferguson Donated Fund. The museum will now be recognized as an essential resource for continued study of Pasin Sloan's art. To celebrate the arrival of the new works at the museum and their inclusion in the permanent collection, there is a show on view through March 18.  The exhibiton cannot display all of Pasin Sloan's works, but it will offer visitors some key highlights from the peak of her career.  Because of the volume of work now owned by the museum, there will be future shows devoted to many points and aspects of Pasin Sloan's career. 

From left to right: works by Jeanette Pasin Sloan (b. 1946). All works are the Gift of the Byron Lee and Josephine Luecke Ferguson Donated Fund and the Artist

Alignment, 2000, Color lithograph on paper, 24/30, image: 28 3/4 x 21", paper: 34 1/8 x 26", 2011.01.004

Club, 1996, Color lithograph on paper, 25/60, image: 22 1/2 x 24", paper: 28 1/2 x 30", 2011.01.001

Silver Bowls, 1978, Color lithograph on paper, AP 7/10 (edition size: 50), image: 28 3/8 x 38 ½", paper: 32 3/8 x 42 5/8", 2011.01.005

 

Pasin Sloan is an artist and educator whose pieces are in major museums nationally and internationally.  In addition to showcasing the technical virtuosity of this important American artist, the works on view represent the Brauer Museum’s long relationship with the artist, showcasing numerous examples of her work (paintings, drawings, original prints) from all periods, as well as key documents from throughout her life and career.   She is well-known for her still-lifes, which she began to explore in depth in the 1970s while living in Chicago with her family.  The home was her subject.  Pasin Sloan's long-time partner is Jack Lemon of Landfall Press, once a celebrated press in Chicago but now operating in Santa Fe. Many of the original prints at the Brauer Museum were produced at Landfall. 

According to the museum's press release: "Whatever the type of print—lithographs, etchings, woodcuts, or screenprints—the artist working collaboratively with Lemon has made works of awesome complexity, dramatically demonstrating the expressive capabilities of the media.  Her prints glow with rich color and present surfaces and textures different from and truly unattainable by paintings and drawings."

 

Thru March 18, 2012

In the Ferguson Galleries: The Art of Jeanette Pasin Sloan

Curators: Gregg Hertzlieb and Gloria Ruff, Brauer Museum of Art

 

Brauer Museum of Art

Valparaiso University Center for the Arts, 1709 Chapel Drive, Valparaiso, Indiana 46383

219-464-5761 (For group tours, please call 219-465-7926)

Hours: Tu, Th, F 10–5; W 10–8:30; Sa, Su. 12–5.  All exhibitions + events are free (donations welcome) + open to the public.

Gregg.Hertzlieb@valpo.edu

www.valpo.edu/artmuseum

Tags:

Artists | Museums | Printmaking

Calendar

<<  May 2013  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112
3456789

View posts in large calendar

About Chicago Gallery News

Founded in 1983, Chicago Gallery News is the central source for information about the city’s art galleries, museums, events, and resources. CGN aims to be a clear, accessible link to the city's creative world, as well as an advocate on behalf of Chicago's art community.

Chicago Gallery News
213 W. Institute Place, Suite 407
Chicago, IL 60610
info@chicagogallerynews.com
tel. 312-649-0064

Editor and Publisher:
Virginia B. Van Alyea