LA CONSTRUCTION DE CE QUI EST POSSIBLE – XIII Biennale de la Havane, 2019.

Press Release, en french.

LA CONSTRUCTION DE CE QUI EST POSSIBLE XIII Biennale de la Havane – 12 AVRIL AU 12 MAI, 2019 Plasticiens, critiques et amateurs, nous attendons tous avec impatience l’ouverture des biennales de La Havane. C’est l’évènement phare de l’archipel caraïbe. La biennale de La Havane, créée en 1984 est programmée tous les trois ans. Cependant […]

via Treizième Biennale de La Havane en mai 2019 — Aica Caraïbe du Sud

Some images the XIIth edition.

Dust Specks on the Sea : Contemporary Sculpture from the French Caribbean & Haiti

Press Release from Hunter East Harlem Gallery,

 Photograph documenting the eruption of the volcano Mount Pelée in Martinique, 1902

Photograph documenting the eruption of the volcano Mount Pelée in Martinique, 1902

Dust Specks on the Sea: Contemporary Sculpture from the French Caribbean & Haiti
November 7, 2018 – March 2, 2019

Exhibiting artists: Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc, Julie Bessard, Hervé Beuze, Jean-François Boclé, Alex Burke, Vladimir Cybil Charlier, Gaëlle Choisne, Ronald Cyrille, Jean-Ulrick Désert, Kenny Dunkan, Edouard Duval-Carrié, Adler Guerrier, Jean-Marc Hunt, Fabiola Jean-Louis, Nathalie Leroy-Fiévée, Audry Liseron-Monfils, Louisa Marajo, Ricardo Ozier-Lafontaine, Jérémie Paul, Marielle Plaisir, Tabita Rezaire, Yoan Sorin

Hunter East Harlem Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition, Dust Specks on the Sea: Contemporary Sculpture from the French Caribbean & Haiti opening on November 7, 2018. Dust Specks on the Sea focuses on sculptural works by over a dozen contemporary artists from Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Guyana, and Haiti and addresses the various positionings of the postcolonial condition in this region. The exhibition’s title—Dust Specks on the Sea—is derived from a quote by former French President Charles de Gaulle, describing his view of the French Caribbean islands from an airplane in 1964. De Gaulle’s description speaks to the almost otherworldly mystery of an aerial view of the Caribbean archipelago, while at the same time calling into question a deep-seated hierarchical perspective stemming from France’s history as a powerful colonizing force in the Caribbean. In 1902 the eruption of the volcano Mount Pelée on the island of Martinique, destroyed the town of Saint-Pierre, killing approximately 30,000 people in a matter of minutes. Poignant photographic images of the “worst volcanic disaster of the early 20th century” show the volcano’s dusty plume looming above the sparkling waters of the Caribbean; these visual documents allude to the complex and loaded sentiments of de Gaulle’s quote—the duality of perspective. The French Caribbean cannot be defined solely by its beauty nor by its historical trauma; through this exhibition, we aim to contribute to a contemporary, multi-layered understanding of this region.

Our gallery is located in the New York City neighborhood of East Harlem, a place known for its Caribbean immigrants and its history as a home to displaced peoples, and yet the narrative of the French Caribbean is still little understood within this context. Additionally, HEHG is an institution dedicated to creating projects that build on the complicated circumstances of being a human in today’s world and bolstering the voices of creative people and thinkers. Through presenting a sculpture-based exhibition in a distinctive way—in many cases, the artworks will physically interact with one another, we hope to build a visual dialogue about how artwork can be one of the most powerful tools for personal and political expression.

The exhibition is curated by Arden Sherman. Assistant Curator is Katie Hood Morgan.

Support for the exhibition is generously provided by the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States and Hunter College.

Events

Opening Reception: Dust Specks on the Sea, November 7, 2018.
Afternoon Discussion & Artist Walk-Thru, November 8, 2018

Hunter East Harlem Gallery
The Silberman School of Social Work
2180 3rd Avenue at 119th Street
New York, NY 10035
+1 212 396 7819
hehg@hunter.cuny.edu
Wednesdays through Saturdays 12-5pm
HUNTER COLLEGE ART GALLERIES

NWSA – RETURNING PATHS 2018

New World School of the Arts Faculty Exhibition

         RETURNING PATHS 2018

         Opening Reception  Thursday, September 13  6-9pm

NWSA exhibiting faculty includes:

Luisa Basnuevo, Carol K. Brown, Oliver Casse, Hans Evers, Antonio Fernandez, Carlos Gallostra, Reinier Gamboa, Jenny Gifford, Kathleen Hudspeth, Donald Lambert, Maria Martinez-Cañas, Rosario Martinez-Cañas, Juana Meneses, Carlene Muñoz, Aramis O’Reilly, Annette Piskel, Alisa Pitchenik-Charles, Louise Romeo, Yasmine Samimy, Nabila Santa-Cristo, Lauren Shapiro, Fred Snitzer, Carol Todaro.

New World Gallery 25 NE 2 Street, Miami, Florida.

September 13 – October 19, 2018

Withstandley at Winslow Garage

Elizabeth Withstandley, “The Symphony of Names: No Man is an Island,” at Winslow Garage. In a collaboration with Icelandic composer Gunnar Másson, Withstandley has created a video installation that dwells on the nature of place and names: A boy travels through the Icelandic countryside as an audio track comprising all 4,129 names from the government names list serves as melodic backdrop.

Opens Sunday at 2 p.m. 3540 Winslow Dr., Silver Lake, Los Angeles, winslowgarage.com.

In the LATimes.

Between a view and a milestone

Between a view and a milestone

Dates: April 28 – July 8, 2018
Opening reception: May 10, 2018, 7-9pm

Participating artists: Adler Guerrier, Alba Triana, Anastasia Samoylova, Elite Kedan, GeoVanna Gonzalez, Jamilah Sabur, Jillian Mayer, Joshua Veasey, Juan Pablo Garza, Laura Marsh, Leo Castaneda, Morel Doucet, Terence Price II and Tom Scicluna.

Between a view and a milestone, curated by Angelica Arbelaez, presents works by ArtCenter/South Florida’s studio residents that offer contemplative meditations on place. While place can imply a certain level of geographic specificity, determining placehood can be difficult and requires certain physical and intangible elements to make it so. The exhibition’s title refers to a visual device used in landscape painting, in which the painter includes an object in the foreground as a means of framing the view of the landscape. Places call for this sort of demarcation, but they also call for a more emotive connection that is highly dependent upon the individual occupying it. Places are felt as much as they are physically constructed.

In this exhibition, perspective– both spatial and interpretive– plays an important role in framing the places these works address. A video game finds its protagonist navigating through an amorphous landscape that simultaneously inspires awe and dread. A set of sculptures comprised of materials native to Miami’s urban topography are used to further investigate ideas of mobility and labor. A lone figure in a grassy field desperately bobbing for apples to the sound of a mournful poem considers how recent events and contentious histories can oftentimes define the places we live in. The works in this exhibition attempt to understand the evocative nature of place and invite more nuanced explorations of time, memory and identity.

Leo Castaneda