Astroturf, rubber, grass, and moss and will transform Kidspace at MASS MOCA MoCA into a lush landscaped park. Nature Park, part one of the two-part series of exhibitions in Kidspace collectively titled Earth, Wind, and Desire, will combine feature the engaging and provocative the nature art of Victoria Palermo and Rob De de Mar.
Nature Park in Kidspace at MASS MoCA
Featuring Sculpture by Victoria Palermo and Rob de Mar
(North Adams, Massachusetts) Astroturf, rubber, grass, and moss and will
transform Kidspace at MASS MOCA MoCA into a lush, landscaped park for its
next exhibition, Nature Park, opening October 2, 2003. Nature Park, part one
of the two-part series of exhibitions in Kidspace collectively titled Earth,
Wind, and Desire, will combine feature the engaging and provocative the
nature art of Victoria Palermo and Rob De de Mar. These two artists will
share an outlet of fun and educational scientific and artistic ideas.
For this first part of the Earth, Wind, and Desire, the Kidspace gallery
will be transformed into an indoor, human-made park. An Astroturf path will
gently lead visitors through an exhibit of sculpture by Palermo and de Mar,
who share an interest in the relationship between the built and the natural
environments.
Victoria Palermo, a Queensbury, New York,, artist, creates sculptures in
grass, moss, and natural rubber using these natural materials to produce
furniture and abstract sculpture. On the other hand, Palermo also also uses
an artificial material - synthetic rubber - to create a forest that has been
cast from actual birch trees. The contrast in Palermo's choice of materials
and subject matter encourages viewers to think about dualities that exist in
natural and human-made surroundings.
Brooklyn-based artist Rob de Mar uses clay, stone, steel, flock, wire, and
miniature model trees to create whimsical 3-D landscapes. He presents
fantastic built environments that seamlessly integrate human-made elements
(i.e., roads and cell phone towers) with rolling green fields and forests.
De Mar's work might features a green mountainsides pierced by a stark,
seemingly endless blacktop roads, or a and futuristic lush landscapes with
bulbous hills and fluffy white clouds that grow strangely from metal poles.
Visitors to Nature Park will be invited to consider the similarities between
ways to viewing art and nature in similar ways. Questions will be posted
throughout the gallery to help analyze the sculptures as the way a scientist
might examine something from nature. Art-making activities in the gallery
that relate to the exhibit will enable visitors to create their own
three-dimensional landscapes and abstract sculptures using clay, moss, and
other natural materials.
A public opening reception for Nature Park is scheduled for Thursday,
October 2,nd from 3:30 to 6:00 pm. Refreshments will be served, and
visitors will have the opportunity to meet the artists, Victoria Palermo and
Rob de Mar.
Victoria Palermo , sculptor residing in Queensbury, NY, holds a Bachelor of
Science (degree?)degree in Art art from Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs,
N.Y. and a Master of Fine Arts degree from Bennington College, Bennington,
VTVt.T. In addition to her work as a professional artist, she is an
assistant professor of art at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
Previously she was a scenic scene painter and art department director for
Adirondack Scenic, Inc., in Glens Falls, N.Y.. She has been awarded artist
fellowship grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the New York
State Council on the Arts, and completed an artist's residency in residence
at YADDO in Saratoga Springs, NY. Victoria Palermo has had her work in solo
and group shows in such galleries and museums as: The Arts Center at Troy,
N.Y.; Pierogi 2000, Williamsburg, Brooklyn; ART/OMI Sculpture Park, Ghent,
N.Y.; Galerie Du Tableau, Marseilles, France; One Mellon Bank Center,
Pittsburgh, PAPenn.; the Schenectady Museum, Schenectady, N.Y.; and the Rice
Gallery, Albany, N.Y.; and White Columns and Art General, New YorkY in New
York.
Brooklyn-based sculptor Rob de Mar holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from New
York's School of Visual Arts, and has been an artist- in- residence at the
Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, as well as the Vermont Studio
Center. In addition to his work as a professional artist, he is a set
dresser for movies and television commercials. He has created furniture,
gates, and various settings for such movies as Tthe Royal Tenenbaums
starring Ben Stiller and Gene Hackman, and Birth, starring Nicole Kidman.
He is currently represented by the Clementine Gallery, in New York. De Mar
New York, NY. Rob had solo and group exhibitions in such galleries and
museums as: White Columns, New YorkNew York;; PS 1 Contemporary Art Center,
Long Island City, N.Y.; Whitney Museum of American Art at Philip Morris, New
York.Y., NY; Portland Museum of Art in Maine, Portland, ME; Wave Hill
Glyndor Gallery, Bronx, N.Y.; Nylon Gallery, London, England; Inman Gallery,
Houston;, TX; Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, CTConn.; and
Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, Pittsburgh, PAPenn. Reviews of his work have
appeared in Art in America, Flash Art, The New Art Examiner, and The New
York Times.
__________
Part II of Earth, Wind, and Desire is entitled Wind Farm and will open March
4, 2004. A sea of metallic and colorful kinetic sculptures juxtaposed with
large photos of wind turbines will transform the Kidspace gallery into an
indoor "wind farm". The exhibition will include photographs by Carrie Baker,
and kinetic sculptures by artists Tim Prentice and Pedro S. De Movellan.
The two Earth, Wind and Desire exhibitions and their related programming
Through two exhibitions and related programming, Earth, Wind, and Desire
will encourage students, teachers, and families to reconsider how humans
harness and control the natural environment. Art will be a catalyst for
lively discussions and the foundation for a rich array of environmental and
aesthetic investigations. such as: deforestation, urban development and the
interaction of technology and nature in rural settings; land use; renewable
energy strategies; and the aesthetics of technology in nature. The art will
encourage new interpretations of ecological preservation and design
intervention as humans find new ways to engage, alter and preserve their
surroundings.
This fall school year Kidspace will continue its partnership with the North
Adams School District (Greylock, Sullivan, and Brayton Elementary Schools)
and North Berkshire School Union (Clarksburg, Gabriel Abbott Memorial, and
Savoy Elementary Schools.). A full-scale study on the arts and the
environment will take place with these schools. In addition to their visit
to Kidspace, students will have the opportunity to work with the artists and
to explore environmental topics with with Williams College staff and
students during in visits to Hopkins Forest. They will may also be able
visit the Searsburg Wind Farm, and to visit the three museums (the Clark
Art Institute, the Williams College Museum of Art, or MASS MoCA) to further
explore the arts and the environment. Curriculum materials, educational
resources, and programs have been developed by Kidspace staff to complement
the exhibition.
Kidspace at MASS MoCA is a joint program of the Williams College Museum of
Art, the Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute, and MASS MoCA. Additional
funding has been provided in part by the Massachusetts Cultural Council (a
state agency), the National Endowment for the Arts (a federal agency), the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant to Williams College, and the Brownrigg
Charitable Trust in memory of Lynn Laitman.
After Thursday, October 2, Kidspace's public hours will be Saturdays and
Sundays, noon to 4 P.M., and Thursdays, 3 to 5 P.M., plus additional hours
aont holidays (add holiday hours). Please call Kidspace at (413) 664-4481
x8131 for more details on hours, programs, and exhibitions. Admission to
Kidspace is free.
MASS MoCA, housed on a 13-acre campus of restored 19th-century factory
buildings, is the largest center for contemporary art in the country. During
the winter, MASS MoCA's galleries are open every day except Tuesdays, from
11 A.M. to 5 P.M. Admission is $9 for adults, $3 for children 6-16, free for
children under 6 and free for members at all times. For additional
information, call (413) 662-2111 or visit the website.
Melissa writes th at the section that begins with "this school year Kidspace
will continue" needs to be clarified. She thinks that some stuents will go
to Hopkins, other to Searsburg but none to both.
Image: Rob de Mar, Air (detail), 2002, mixed media
MASS MoCA
1040 MASS MoCA Way
North Adams, MA 01247
413.664.4481 ext. 8111
FX 413.663.8548