SFAI Lecture Hall
San Francisco
800 Chestnut Street
WEB
Gail Wight
dal 16/9/2003 al 11/10/2003
(415) 749-4563
WEB
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Gail Wight
Marcia Tanner



 
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16/9/2003

Gail Wight

SFAI Lecture Hall, San Francisco

The conceptual artist will take a lecture about her work during a current personal exhibition. Using different media and techniques she gives a new interpretaton of art and nature


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2003 Adaline Kent Award winner, Berkeley resident, and SFAI alumna Gail Wight spent the past six years creating a program in intermedia and electronic arts at Mills College. She joins the Art Department faculty at Stanford University this fall. Wight will speak about her Walter and McBean Galleries exhibition The Evolution of Disarticulation, on view through October 11.

Wight's work examines human thought in a manner that questions the forms imposed on it by the habits of science. Her art is about science, notes critic Marcia Tanner in her essay in the full color catalogue accompanying the exhibition––"Or more accurately, about how science is thought: about the ways in which scientific concepts construe the world, and the alternative perspectives which science may exclude or overlook." Including new work in video, photography, and sculptural assemblage, The Evolution of Disarticulation presents Wight's technically ingenious, formally elegant exploration in work that often jars the viewer into new perception.

September 17, 2003 at 7:30 pm

Gail Wight: The Evolution of Disarticulation

The San Francisco Art Institute Walter and McBean Galleries is proud to open the Fall 2003 school year with an exhibition of works by an alumna of its MFA program, Berkeley-based conceptual artist Gail Wight, the 2003 recipient of the prestigious Adaline Kent Award. Titled The Evolution of Disarticulation, the exhibition is on view August 29 - October 11, with a special preview reception Thursday, August 28, from 5:30 – 7:30 pm. It will include over 20 pieces of work from the artist's most recent production, noted for its uncanny blending of pseudoscientific methodology and contemporary technology. Until October 11, 2003

Walter and McBean Galleries
and
SFAI Lecture Hall
800 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA
(415)749-4563

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Judy Pfaff
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