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Showing posts with label Tahoe Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tahoe Gallery. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2013

First Exhibition of the New Year: Landscape Mythologies

David Semeniuk, Landscape Permutation 2 (2010)

Featuring FIELD, Oscar Lhermitte, Christine Nguyen, Mike Ruiz, David Semeniuk

Landscape Mythologies explores the interpretation of landscape by methods of fabrication and narration. It investigates if our view of the world can be unfolded through translations of physical, virtual and imagined spaces. Riddled with half-truths, the interpretations on display hold a fluid footing between imaginary or unverifiable existence and the real thing.

Exhibition Dates: January 17 - February 15

Reception: January 31, 5-7pm
Lecture by David Semeniuk: 5:45pm

Watch online: https://new.livestream.com/snc/landscape-mythologies/

David Semeniuk currently lives and works in Vancouver B.C., Canada. He is a formally trained scientist, and an autodidactic artist. David's art practice is an aesthetic extension of his scientific exploration, in which he uses the medium of photography to experiment with how we experience everyday spaces.

Facebook Event

Tahoe Gallery at Sierra Nevada College
Prim Library, 3rd Floor
999 Tahoe Boulevard
Incline Village, NV 89451

Gallery hours: 9am-5pm

Monday, December 3, 2012

Smell Like You Mean It

Here are some images from Karl Schwiesow's BFA show reception last week:


Karl himself, in piscatorial attire:


He walked up to one of his pieces, attached a small bellows, and began pumping with his foot.



Along the way to inflation, a few adjustments were made.



The crowd watched the emergence of a green silhouette.




Once the green silhouette was raised to its full stature, Karl produced a poem from his slicker, and read it (the title of this blog post is taken from the poem's concluding line).



The poem was returned to its pocket.


The performance's devolution was diligently recorded.


The bellows was used to deflate the inflatable.



Or perhaps the inflatable should simply be called the "deflatable" at this point.


And I'll leave you with a few more images from the show, both populated an abandoned.








Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Tahoe gallery: Katie Lewis

Here's a short interview with Katie Lewis – her artist's talk is tomorrow night (9/6) at the Tahoe Gallery. Come by to see the finished work – the reception is 5-7.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

A New Inhabitant of the Parking Lot


A 1958 Streamline trailer has made its home behind the art building recently. A joint purchase between the department, Tahoe Gallery and Student Gallery Club, the trailer is destined to become a mobile gallery. Work has already begun on the project and if you are in the area this summer and interested in lending a hand you can find us on Tuesday/Thursday afternoons out in the parking lot. The interior had previously been gutted, but there is a bit of cleaning to be done on the interior walls, buffing and polishing on the exterior, flooring to be laid and other little fun projects.







No new project is complete without a fiasco though, right? Luckily we got that one checked off the list early on. In transporting the trailer up from Reno, we had a small issue with some door hinges that sent a decently sized hunk of aluminum (yes, the door) flying through the air alongside Hwy 395. We were able to toss it into my car and to the amazement of all there was nearly no damage at all. Above is a nice shot of the doorless trailer parked in the meadows alongside Mt. Rose. Classy huh?

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Bill Gilbert - Physiocartographies Interview


Bill Gilbert's show Physiocartographies is hanging in the Tahe Gallery through October 14th. Here's a short description of the show: Using a GPS unit and a compass, New Mexico-based artist Bill Gilbert attempts to walk carefully pre-determined routes in both space and time across landscapes in the American West. His carefully-made plans are invariably disrupted by the realities of terrain and the limitations of the human body. In the tradition of British artists such as Richard Long and Chris Drury, Gilbert's "Physiocartography" performances chart the distance between the map and the terrain, and are documented in drawings, video, and audio recordings.

I had a chance to interview Bill the night of the reception -- click on the audio file below to give it a listen. You can see photos of the Physiocartographies in the slideshow below that. It was a real pleasure to talk to him -- he's a hyperarticulate person with a lot of fascinating things to say about our world, and the ways we orient ourselves to it.



Friday, September 16, 2011

Fake Rocks and Botox Redux

Here's a slideshow from the reception of the Fake Rocks and Botox II show last night, at the Tahoe Gallery, featuring work by SNC alumni.



Work by Nikki Ballare, Jonah Harjer, Rebecca Kerlin, Babs Laukat, Jeffrey James Mohr, Ya'el Pedroza, Samantha Shaw, Sierra Slentz, Bryan Stieger. That's Bryan, Rebecca, Ya'el and Babs in the last few shots.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Student Group Show 2011

Here's a slideshow with some pics of the end-of-the-year group student show, curated by Seth Curcio:

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Tethered



Logan's BFA show, "Connective Laboratory," was strung along a horizon line - actual and metaphorical. On one wall were three photos - waterscape, desertscape, and architecturescape - the horizon line in each aligned with the others, connecting them on a level across the blankness of the wall. The contrast between upper and lower spaces - water and sky, wood and floor - was sharply defined in the flanking photos, but the middle one (taken, I assume, on the playa at black rock) was smudged and ambiguous, the border erased by a scrim of airborne sand. At the other end of the gallery was another smeary horizon, a square light array with a diffusion material in front of the lights, the bottom and top halves changing color every now and again, in response to data being collected in the gallery.





And the data being collected itself? Noise and temperature levels, both given a spike when people interacted with the two pieces in the center of the room: a pair of miniature tetherball courts, which you could operate sort of like a foosball table or pinball machine, using paddles to whack the ball on its spiral gyre around the pole, clockwise or counterclockwise crossing the horizonline marking the side of Player A and Player B. One tetherball table was completely human-powered, each player given a thin, rotatable slat that could slide closer or further from the pole; the other table's sliding paddles were pneumatically powered, the press of a red joystick button thwacking them forward, both players' paddles drawing from a common tank of air. People were especially eager to try the pneumatic one, probably due to the allure of technology and power, but the other was more fun to play - more easy to manipulate, and not prone to breakdown (Logan has a screwdriver on hand, and had to fiddle with the pneumatic table a few times during the opening).




In two dimensions, a horizon can be cleanly cut - in three, it invites ambiguity - it's not really the point of contact between earth and sky, it's an appearance of contact, a contingent relationship between viewer and vanishing point. In a show called "Connective Laboratory," it begs the point of connection. What is a "genuine" connection? What gets exchanged at a point of contact? In connection, what is merely apparent, and what is actual? And how dependent is that distinction upon the way contact is mediated - through play, through competition, through observation (both spectatorial and scientific), through winding and unwinding spirals, through pneumatics?



If that seems like a long series of question marks, it's because there's a genuine open-endedness in Logan's enterprise- his "Laboratory" was truly (if not rigorously) an experiment, a set of parameters with a non-prescribed outcome. The one thing that was a prescribed outcome, I think, was linked to the obvious desire for people to have a good time - to participate, and not just ruminate.




In the Q&A, there was much discussion about the context and depth of the work, probably best summed up by someone asking Logan if the show would still work if it were installed at Rookie's (a local watering-hole). To which he replied absolutely not - for the work to function, it had to be in an atmosphere that encouraged awareness - perhaps even (I'm extrapolating here) a bit of self-consciousness. Part of the appeal was one of transposition - Logan was asked "Now that you've brought a party to a gallery, would it interest you to bring art to a party?" - but for Logan, the draw of "situational aesthetics" required more than place-swapping. He explained the art-apparatus in the gallery as an assertion of himself, extending his role and personality beyond that of a host. For me, the most fertile part of the work was the fraught and not entirely resolved interface between invitation and experimentation. The notion that the audience becomes the artwork is relatively old hat by now - not passe, but an accepted and respected modality, one that could even be said to have developed its own traditions. Logan invited us to be the work, and to have a good time being it besides - but I most enjoyed the itch of the asterisk he placed there - that being the artwork also entailed being a specimen. The figurative pedestal was also a figurative petri dish.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Verisimilitude


Just a reminder that Jenna Bache's BFA show has its opening reception tonight at the Tahoe Gallery, from 5-7pm -- I don't think I'm giving anything away with these few snapshots of the work being tweaked through its install process. Instead, I hope you wonder what the heck you're actually looking at in these pics, and it will further entice you to attend, to figure that out.