Project Type: EXHIBITION

SERGEI ISUPOV: Hidden Messages

SERGEI ISUPOV: Hidden Messages

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

December 2, 2016–April 2, 2017
Erie Art Museum, Erie, PA

“Sergei Isupov: Hidden Messages” introduces larger-than-life figural sculptures shown in the context of a career survey presented as a multi-room installation. The exhibition, featuring 40 selected works, was designed and built by the artist and co-curated by Erie Art Museum director John Vanco. Spanning the 20 years Isupov has lived and worked in America, the show forms a semi-autobiographical wunderkammer — a collection of curiosities.

“By morphing together humans and animals, creating dimensionally illusionistic works, and embedding secret scenes within them, Isupov creates multi-layered artworks that challenge viewers’ perception of reality. An erotic surrealist and protective family man, Isupov blends images drawn from experience and imagination that invite viewers to complete the work through their personal interpretations.” — John Vanco
The exhibition features three large standing figures at its entrance, a 25-foot plinth of marching figures, a room of intimate romance and family, and an expanse dominated by 10 by 14 foot painted female head blowing a gust of smaller works across a 40-foot wall.

ABOUT SERGEI ISUPOV

Sergei Isupov is an Estonian-American sculptor internationally known for his highly detailed, narrative works. Isupov explores painterly figure-ground relationships, creating surreal sculptures with a complex artistic vocabulary that combines two- and three-dimensional narratives and animal/human hybrids. He works in ceramic using traditional hand building and sculpting techniques to combine surface and form with narrative painting using stains and clear glaze.

“Everything that surrounds and excites me is automatically processed and transformed into an artwork. The essence of my work is not in the medium or the creative process, but in the human beings and their incredible diversity. When I think of myself and my works, I’m not sure I create them, perhaps they create me.”

Isupov has a long international resume with work included in numerous collections and exhibitions, including the National Gallery of Australia, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (TX), Museum of Arts and Design (NY), Racine Art Museum (WI), Museum of Fine Arts Boston (MA), and the Erie Art Museum (PA), at which he presented selected works in a 20-year career survey Hidden Messages in 2017 and Surreal Promenade in 2019 at the Russian Museum of Art (MN).

Sergei Isupov: Hidden Messages

Sergei Isupov: Hidden Messages is available for exhibition at other museums and galleries.

Contact us for more information •

COILLE HOOVEN : Tell It By Heart at the Museum of Arts and Design

COILLE HOOVEN : Tell It By Heart at the Museum of Arts and Design

COILLE HOOVEN : Tell It By Heart

Museum of Art and Design

September 22, 2016 – February 5, 2017

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


Curated by William and Mildred Lasdon Chief Curator Shannon R. Stratton, with the support of Curatorial Assistant and Project Manager Angelik Vizcarrondo-Laboy.

The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) presents Coille Hooven: Tell It By Heart, the artist’s first solo exhibition in over two decades and her first-ever solo museum exhibition in New York. The exhibition spans more than 30 years of Hooven’s 50-year career working in porcelain to create psychologically charged sculpture that explores domestic-centered narratives. One of the first ceramists to bring feminist content to clay, Hooven uses porcelain to honor the history of women’s work, confront gender inequality, and depict the pleasure, fears, and failures of partnering and parenting.

“For Coille, the raw clay becomes a manifestation of the unconscious out of which she coaxes characters, objects, and vignettes with a tender urgency,” said MAD’s William and Mildred Lasdon Chief Curator Shannon R. Stratton. “Mining fairy tales, fables, myths, and religious parables, Hooven often takes universal symbols—everything from Eve to a security pillow—and recasts them into a personal and feminist narrative. Coille’s delicate, diminutive work boldly embraces a subject and style historically marginalized in art for being too personal, trivial, or even vulgar.”

“I liken my work to dream interpretation,” explained Hooven. “It is both literal and symbolic, intended to invoke a feeling that lingers. The shoe is a shoe, but also it is an animal, a vehicle, and a stage for the play within.”

Hooven’s 55 sculptures on view range from teapots and vessels to figurative busts and dioramas, and they mine the domestic psyche to produce vignettes that resonate with familiarity despite an undisguised use of the fantastical. Developing her own vocabulary of archetypes, she regularly revisits certain creatures and forms: a domestic palette of aprons, pillows, shoes, and pies, as well as a cast of characters that includes mermaids, fish, snakes, and anthropomorphic beasts that appear part-dog, part-horse, and part-human. While these creatures may appear familiar and amiable at first, tension lurks underneath. Inspired by Jungian psychology, Hooven’s sculptures conjure a vision of the unconscious—both the joy and buoyancy of dreams, as well as the discomfort and despair of anxiety and doubt.

Coille Hooven studied at the University of Illinois under David Shaner and graduated in 1962. That same year, at the age of 23, Hooven submitted a piece to the Museum of Arts and Design (then the Museum of Contemporary Crafts) for the Young Americans exhibition. From there, she built up the ceramics program at the Maryland Institute College of Art before moving west to Berkeley, California, with her two small children. At the time, Berkeley was the stronghold for experimental work in clay, and Hooven joined an artistic community that included Peter Voulkos and Robert Arneson. Unlike many of her peers, Hooven worked independently of academia and made a maverick career in California as both a studio potter, designing and making functional wares, and an artist working in porcelain sculpture to create the figurative work on display in Coille Hooven: Tell It By Heart. In 1979, Hooven became the second woman to be in residence at the Kohler Co. plant in Kohler, Wisconsin, as part of its renowned Arts/Industry residency program.

Coille Hooven: Tell It By Heart is part of MAD Transformations, a series of six exhibitions presented this fall that address artists who have transformed and continue to transform our perceptions of traditional craft mediums. Building upon the exhibition Voulkos: The Breakthrough Years, which celebrates the work of an artist known for drastically changing the way clay is categorized as an art material and as a discipline, the MAD Transformations exhibitions consider fiber, clay, and jewelry and metals—disciplines (along with glass and wood) that form the bedrock of the Museum of Arts and Design’s founding mission and collection, and that continue to morph in the hands of contemporary artists today.

INSTALLATION


Museum of Arts And Design | New York, NY

Coille Hooven: Tell It By Heart is curated by William and Mildred Lasdon Chief Curator Shannon R. Stratton, with the support of Curatorial Assistant and Project Manager Angelik Vizcarrondo-Laboy.

Support for Coille Hooven: Tell It By Heart is generously provided by Michele and Marty Cohen, Marge Levy, and Friends of Coille Hooven.

The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) champions contemporary makers across creative fields and presents the work of artists, designers, and artisans who apply the highest level of ingenuity and skill. Since the Museum’s founding in 1956 by philanthropist and visionary Aileen Osborn Webb, MAD has celebrated all facets of making and the creative processes by which materials are transformed, from traditional techniques to cutting-edge technologies. Today, the Museum’s curatorial program builds upon a rich history of exhibitions that emphasize a cross-disciplinary approach to art and design, and reveals the workmanship behind the objects and environments that shape our everyday lives. MAD provides an international platform for practitioners who are influencing the direction of cultural production and driving twenty-first-century innovation, and fosters a participatory setting for visitors to have direct encounters with skilled making and compelling works of art and design. The Museum will be celebrating its Diamond Jubilee 60th Anniversary this year.

20th SAN ANGELO NATIONAL CERAMIC COMPETITION

20th SAN ANGELO NATIONAL CERAMIC COMPETITION

20th San Angelo National Ceramic Competition

April 11–September 29, 2014
San Angelo Museum of Fine Art

Jason Walker of Bellingham, Washington, will be the featured Invited Artist. Walker will also participate in a panel discussion and present a workshop at the symposium.

EVENTS

Friday, April 11, 6–9pm
Opening Reception

Thursday, April 10–Monday, April 14
San Angelo’s Ceramics Weekend

Gallery exhibits, workshop presentations, tours, Texas barbecue dinner, and other events will be held throughout San Angelo over the long weekend.

Friday, April 11, 1:30–4:30
Twenty-Eighth Annual Ceramic Symposium
Carr Education-Fine Arts building, Angelo State University

Panelists for the Symposium will be Competition Juror Léopold Foulem and Invited Artist Jason Walker. The Ceramic Symposium is co-sponsored by Angelo State University, the San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts, and The Old Chicken Farm Art Center.

Saturday, April 12, 9–4
Demonstration Workshop with Jason Walker
Old Chicken Farm Art Center, 2505 Martin Luther King Boulevard

This all-day workshop will be presented by Invited Artist Jason Walker. Click here to download registration.

This juried exhibition features work from leading ceramic artists as well as new talent from across the nation, Canada and Mexico. Léopold Foulem of Montréal, Canada, an internationally-recognized ceramic artist, instructor, and scholar will jury the competition.

Jason Walker is represented by Ferrin Contemporary.
Read more, see more… 

THE NEW YORK CERAMICS AND GLASS FAIR 2014

THE NEW YORK CERAMICS AND GLASS FAIR 2014

January 22–26, 2014
Bohemian National Hall, NYC, NY
321 East 73rd Street (Between 1st & 2nd Avenues)

The Bacchanalistas:  Passions + Pleasure

This entertaining on site exhibition curated by Leslie Ferrin spotlights the seductive side of historic and modern ceramics and glass objects curated from selected objects from contemporary and antique dealers participating at the fair.

On Saturday, January 25 at 4pm, Leslie Ferrin will present an overview of The Bacchanalistas: Passions + Pleasure. Her lecture will explore contemporary ceramics by living artists whose art practice draws inspiration from ceramic history.  Themes of passion, eroticism, sexuality, abundance and excess of food and wine will be shown through figural sculpture, animated painted vessels and still life. Earlier, at 2pm, Robert Hunter, editor or Ceramics in America, will present Angels and Demons: The Pleasures of Pottery and Porcelain. Click here for full lecture schedule.

Paul Scott: New American Scenery
During his recent residencies, lecture tour, and travels in the US, Scott gathered and created a new series, American Scenery, inspired by his travels, observation, and research into American landscape painting, prints, and the subsequent use of those images on ceramic transfer ware. Knowledge drawn from behind-the-scenes tours at museums and collections throughout the North East influences this new work where Scott has applied prints he produced in the USA onto rescued, cast off ceramic plates from the 19th and early 20th centuries. His work tells stories that explore the unexpected movement of images through materials, media, cultures, politics, histories, and geographies,  inviting us to see a whole group of objects in a new way.

Contemporary Ceramics
On exhibit will be new work by contemporary ceramic artists Robin Best, Guy Michael Davis, Leopold Foulem, Giselle Hicks, Sergei Isupov, Katie Parker, Mara Superior, and Kurt Weiser.

Teapots
From utilitarian to conceptual, selected teapots by contemporary artists from studios and private collections, circa 1900 to the present.

EVENTS
New York Ceramics Fair | 2014 LECTURE SERIES
The lecture program, free with show admission, is sponsored by the Chipstone FoundationClick here for full lecture schedule.

Click here to download and print your free admission ticket to New York Ceramics Fair | 2014.

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