Author Archives: jolanta

Poetic Catharsis

I began photography because I wanted to satisfy an urge I had to create visual stories. I began in December 2008 when I graduated from Temple University. I had just received two degrees in film and English, but my thirst had not been quenched. I wanted a faster and more efficient way of telling the […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Metanoia

Metanoia Group Exhibition, Metanoia, July 15, 7-10pm @ P.J.S. Exhibitions RSVP to pjs-exhibitions@pitchcontrolpr.com

Posted in Exhibits | Events

The Writing on the Wall

Anything is likely to be the subject of my drawings. I mix a conglomeration of different subject matter within the same space: global, local, political, cultural, swine flu, economic crisis, Europe, morning coffee, surveillance society, East-West, war on terror, universal health care. My art combines cartoons, graffiti, and art brut. Humor, irony, and cultural references […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Transexperiences

Zhu Xian: In recent years, some of the projects you did in Asia—such as Celebrating the World, Game Table, Fu Dao/Fu Dao—Upside-down Buddha/Arrival at Good Fortune—bear a strong relationship to your above-mentioned ideas. My feeling is that these projects are half joyful and half sorrowful, making people not know whether to laugh or to cry. […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Killer Little Paintings

London-based painter Ben Pritchard’s newest exhibition, Days, in Long Island City could easily be overlooked, considering the madness of New York Gallery Week, which took place in early May. While most of the focus was on Chelsea and the Lower East Side, I found myself on a Friday at Pritchard’s opening in Long Island City. […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Down the Romanian Path

I am interested in the areas where separate items are evident, and also areas that complicate into mush, personal/collective narratives, and exploring how these stories can be distilled into works. Every identity has a universal weight in its particularities; of course Romanian identity has its own spice and a very rich background that enlivens very […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Construing Non-Being

Zheng Lu’s art can be defined as “interpreting non-existence.” “Interpretation” refers to “reading or reading aloud.” The sculptures are composed of Chinese characters from poems or passages, so as to establish the connection between the artistic charm of the poem or the passage and the theme of the work. “Non-existence” derived from the hollowed-out works’ […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Documenting the Domestic Woe

My entire existence feels like a permanent vacation. Reality is photogenic in itself to me. I never find myself in search of a subject, as subjects never cease to come my way. There are only not enough photo films, not enough time, not enough space, and never enough funds to grasp it all. Funny enough, […]

Posted in Summer 2010

To Frighten Heaven and Earth and Make the Spirits Cry

In classical Chinese literature, the character represents many things: books, the written word, and the act of writing itself. Much of my work relates to shu (book) in its various permutations. Those whose culture embraces Chinese characters (i.e. people in Greater China, Korea, and Japan) have such respect for shu and consider it so sacred, […]

Posted in Summer 2010

Muted Acts

As a contemporary painter, Shelley Reed is in part a bricoleur. Her imagery is borrowed from art historical sources, sometimes wholesale, sometimes from details of other paintings, and sometimes cobbled together and re-contextualized. Reed deftly melds aspects of painting, theater, and cinema to create complex narratives rich with beauty, drenched in mystery, and fraught with […]

Posted in Summer 2010