Jonathan Prull, Jamie Dillon, Nick Paparone, Janna Holmstedt, One Gray Grass in the Ball Field
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EXHIBITION DATES: September 5 – 28, 2008
OPENING RECEPTION: Friday, September 5 from 6-11 pm, hosted by Vox Populi’s board of directors with raffle, special refreshments, cake and pie (see below)
PIE EATING CONTEST: Friday, September 5 at 9pm (bring your pie to be judged)
GALLERY HOURS: Wednesday - Sunday 12 - 6pm
GALLERY TALK: With ICA Curatorial Assistant Kate Kraczon, Sunday, September 28 at 3pm
Vox Populi is pleased to announce the kick-off of the gallery’s
21st Anniversary season, which runs
from September 2008 through August 2009. We’ve had countless members, at least four homes,
hundreds of exhibitions, thousands of visitors, music shows, films, and talks. This is a celebration of
still being here, being relevant, taking risks and continuing to have fun. Check our website for up-todate
information on things we have planned to celebrate this important milestone….But, for now:
On exhibition in September are Vox artists Jonathan Prull, Jamie Dillon, and Nick Paparone; guest
artist, Janna Holmstedt and One Gray Grass in the Ball Field, with Vox alumni: Clint Takeda, David
Wickland, Joy Feasley, Jen Macdonald, Kait Midgett, Nancy Lewis, Nick Muellner, Paul Swenbeck,
Richard Harrod, Shannon Bowser, and Tristin Lowe.
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Jonathan Prull
We Carry What We Seek
We Carry What We Seek consists of a large sculptural installation. Athletic gestures outlined in steel contrast with Jonathan's fictional cardboard characters of last season. These playful pointed and leaning forms exude Jonathan's stylistic interests while maintaining an undertone of figurative influence.
Jonathan Prull is a multidisciplinary artist who received his BFA from the University of Rhode Island and his MFA from the University of Pennsylvania. His artwork integrates his interests in sculpture, film, and traditional storytelling.
Nick Paparone
Bacchanal-Tootsie Roll Whip
Nick Paparone presents a new exhibition of work titled
Bacchanal- Tootsie Roll Whip. The artist continues an ongoing survey of social
conventions, values and rituals. Using a showcase like display, typical within institutions, convention centers and subculture events, notions
of preservation, fantasy and memorial pervade.
Bacchanal-Tootsie Roll Whip immerses bikini tops, shiny silver, event parking, and candy coated wheels into a pit of achievement and failure.
Jamie Dillon
A Better Day is Coming
Jamie Dillon's first solo exhibition at Vox Populi, A
Better Day Is Coming, brings materials together in a culmination of sound and sculpture to produce objects with great potential. In this euphoric moment of togetherness, singing sculptures unite in a ceremonial
moment of display. Cultural trends and the notion of change slip into a candle-lit dialogue full of car stereo bass and melting brains.
Vox Alumni Present:
One Gray Grass in the Ball Field
For this September’s exhibition, Vox revives a great 90’s tradition: the group theme show.
One Gray Grass in the Ball Field assigns artists with a simple mission: to create the feeling of a county fair art exhibition. The idea for
One Gray Grass in the Ball Field was forged through the friendly bond between Shannon Bowser, Joy Feasley, Paul Swenbeck and Clint Takeda. An earlier Vox exhibition called Doohickey Lodge became the inspiration for this group to pitch in and buy a three-season cottage in Northport ME. 4-H clubs and country fairs like the Common Ground Fair in Liberty, Maine, serve as a model for the aesthetic view of the show. The artists involved are sampled from a group of artists that cut their teeth in the mid-nineties when John Cage was still around to be mortified by our tributes to his Yoda-like art practice. Invited artists include David Wickland, Jen Macdonald, Kait Midgett, Nick Muellner, Richard Harrod and Tristin Lowe. Following in the footsteps of past Vox exhibitions like Elf Portraits and New Nihilism Now, this show will be a chaotic melange of handicraft and poetry, “fine art” and pies.
The opening will feature a most yummy pie competition at 9pm (please bring your most delicious contribution) and a judging of the artworks for merit in multiple categories. Please come, don’t make us say: YOU JUST MISSED PIES
IN THE VIDEO LOUNGE
Janna Holmstedt
The Construction of Landscapes
In the photographic diptych, The Construction of Landscapes, we see a park-like area, which is
situated in the large residential district of LasnamŠe in Tallinn, Estonia. When the suburb was built, it
was a former dumpsite from Soviet times – a big open space with no name – a culture-nature-culture
takeover in the making. The diptych is accompanied by the video The Last Journey of the Wanderer.
In this documented intervention, as well as in the photographs, the famous Rźkenfigur of Caspar
David Friedrich’s Wanderer above the Sea of Fog (1818) is used.
Holmstedt lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden. She graduated 2004 with an M.F.A from UmeŚ
Academy of Fine Arts. Recent awards include Nordic Culture Point (2008), Artist-in-Residence at
Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Omaha, USA (2007), IASPIS International Exchange (2006),
Swedish Visual Arts Fund, project grant (2005), NIFCA, Nordic Artist-in-Residence, Tallinn, Estonia
(2005). She has exhibited internationally and writes articles for cultural magazines in Sweden and
abroad.
Together with Po Hagstrom she is part of the artist duo Trial and Error (www.trialerror.org). They work
with questions related to national identity, narrative monuments and the use of public space. The duo
was formed in 2005 when the project ”Monument for the Masses” was first conceived, this in response
to a huge monument which is going to be erected in Tallinn, Estonia. Holmstedt is also cofounder and
project manager of SQUID (www.squidproject.net), a continuously growing, online archive of texts
written by cultural producers. SQUID is represented in Collaborative Practice Archive hosted by
Shedhalle, Zurich and Traveling Magazine Table, initiated by Nomads & Residents, and has been
invited to Pro Arte Institute in St. Petersburg, Manifesta 6 in Nicosia, Cyprus and by the Russian work
group Chto delat? to contribute to their newspaper as part of the Documenta Magazine Project.
AT SCREENING
Michael Bell-Smith
On the Grid
Screening is proud to kick off its Fall exhibition schedule with Michael Bell-Smith’s On the Grid. Bell-
Smith’s minimal computer animation presents an endless cityscape scrolling continuously across the
screen like the backdrop of an early arcade game. Bringing to mind the expansive future-noir
cityscapes of Blade Runner, the crisp, glowing and perfect geometries of Tron and the microarchitecture
of circuit boards, On the Grid points towards a geography defined by technology. On the
Grid is Michael Bell-Smith’s first gallery exhibition in Philadelphia.
Michael Bell-Smith's work-in animation, video, web sites, pictures, and audio-explores the ways in
which technology mediates culture and personal experience. Recent exhibitions and screenings have
taken place at the MusŽe d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; the Museum of Modern Art, New York;
Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney; and Galeri F15, Moss, Norway. His work has been featured in the
New York Times, Time Out New York, and Artnet and was included in the recent exhibition The
Cinema Effect at The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington D.C.