Claudia Crisan-Calabria
Lin Cheung
Jennifer Crupi
Arielle de Pinto
Erica Duffy
Don Friedlich
Caroline Gore
Stephanie Hocker
Susan Hoge Kaganovich
Reka Lorincz
Jesse Mathes
Jieun Park
Damian O'Sullivan
Lucy Rowlands
Marjorie Schick
Courtney Starrett
April Wood
Regina Jose' Galindo
Tania Candiani
Kate Bonansinga
Rachelle Thiewes
Equilibrium: Body as Site features 58 works by 19 contemporary artists who use jewelry as a format and who engage the body as site, altering sensorial experience by impacting one or more of the five senses. Battleground presents recent work by Tania Candiani and Regina Jose' Galindo, both of whom respond to an unprecedented wave of violence in public and domestic environments throughout Latin America.
Equilibrium: Body as Site
January 22 – March 21, 2009
Equilibrium: Body as Site features fifty-eight works by nineteen contemporary
artists who use jewelry as a format and who engage the body as site, altering
sensorial experience by impacting one or more of the five senses. The art may
determine the actions of the wearer, the viewer, or both. Featured artists include
American Marjorie Schick, whose work is made from rigid materials that maneuver and
control the body; Hungarian Reka Lorincz who creates flat, acrylic circles that fit
around and over the ear; and British artist Lin Cheung, who presents Equanimous a
silver brooch that holds a carpenter's level that will never maintain true level
when worn.
The curators:
Kate Bonansinga, Director of the Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Center for the Visual
Arts, and Rachelle Thiewes, Professor of Art at the University of Texas at El Paso.
The artists:
Claudia Crisan-Calabria New York, USA | Lin Cheung Hampshire, UK | Jennifer Crupi
New Jersey, USA | Arielle de Pinto Quebec, Canada | Erica Duffy Iowa, USA | Don
Friedlich Wisconsin, USA | Caroline Gore Michigan, USA | Stephanie Hocker New
Jersey, USA | Susan Hoge Michigan, USA | Jiyeon Hyun Seoul, Korea | Yevgeniya
Kaganovich Wisconsin, USA | Reka Lorincz Budapest. Hungary | Jesse Mathes Illinois,
USA | Jieun Park Seoul, Korea | Damian O'Sullivan Rotterdam, The Netherlands | Lucy
Rowlands London, United Kingdom | Marjorie Schick Illinois, USA | Courtney Starrett
South Carolina, USA | April Wood Maryland, USA
Associated lectures:
6 pm, Rubin Center Auditorium
•January 21, 2009: Yevgeniya Kaganovich, associate professor of art, University of
Wisconsin, Milwaukee and artist featured in Equilibrium
•February 5, 2009: Cindi Strauss, curator of modern and contemporary decorative
arts and design, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
•March 5, 2009: Namita Wiggers, curator, Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland,
Oregon
The exhibition at UTEP is sponsored in part by the National Endowment for the Arts,
the Texas Commission on the Arts, and Patti Wetzel Partovi and Sirous Partovi.
...............................
Battleground: Regina José Galindo and Tania Candiani
January 22-May 2, 2009
Battleground presents recent work by Tania Candiani (Tijuana/Mexico City, Mexico)
and Regina José Galindo (Guatemala City, Guatemala), both of whom respond to an
unprecedented wave of violence in public and domestic environments throughout Latin
America. In this two-person exhibition, Tania Candiani and Regina José Galindo are
exhibited side by side in an intimate exploration of the feminine body preparing for
or engaged in battle with unseen forces. Candiani goes to war in the domestic
sphere, protecting her body using common kitchen implements as both weapons and
armor, in work that challenges the rules of engagement in the home. Regina José
Galindo uses her own body as a battleground, absorbing and reflecting the violence
that surrounds her. Both artists deflect the aggression that permeates contemporary
society and its resulting disempowerment. The show features photographs and an
installation by Tania Candiani and four videos of performances by Regina José Galin
do.
Opening Reception: Thursday, January 22, 5 – 8 pm
Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts
The University of Texas at El Paso
Hours: Tues., Wed., Fri. 10-5 Thurs. 10-7, Sat. 12 noon-5. Closed Sunday and Monday