Sheree Hovsepian

This is very nice works.

Sheree Hovsepian: Contact
Charest Weinberg is pleased to present, Contact, an exhibition of new works by New York City based artist, Sheree Hovsepian. This will be the first solo exhibition for the artist with Charest-Weinberg.

Sheree Hovsepian was born in Isfahan, Iran in 1974. She immigrated to the U.S in 1976 and was raised in Toledo, Ohio. She attended the University of Toledo and obtained her BFA and BA with a focus on Photography and Art History. In 2002, she received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Recent projects include Harlem Postcards at the Studio Museum in Harlem, a solo project at the Spertus Museum in Chicago, and a solo exhibition at Spare Room/West St. Gallery. Currently, she lives and works in New York City.

June 24th, 2011 – August 20th, 2011

http://www.shereehovsepian.com

 

open process @ moca

Opening Reception
Thursday, March 17, 2011 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

JESSICA LAUREL ARIAS
AUTUMN CASEY
DOMINGO CASTILLO
TATIANA VAHAN

Open Process features new work by four young Miami artists commissioned by MOCA. The artists were given access to museum resources, including its archives and permanent collection, and received professional guidance as they researched and created their projects. The exhibition provides the artists with an opportunity to develop previously unrealized ideas and reconsider their artistic practices within the context of the museum.

Open Process is curated by Ruba Katrib MOCA Associate Curator and organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami.

RSVP required: rsvp@mocanomi.org or 305 893 6211
Free for MOCA members, North Miami residents, $10 non-members

Exhibition on view through June 5, 2011

 

A Longer Shinbone

A Longer Shinbone
Francie BishopGood’s Studio at Girls’ Club
February 5, 2011 – March 5, 2011

Adler Guerrier
Chad Harris
Ross Harris
Thomas Nolan
Carlos Rigau
Bert Rodriguez
Leyden Rodriguez-Casanova
John Sanchez
Dervis Tena

The term man is derived from Old English mann, which refers to a person of unspecified gender and was used much as the Modern English “one”.

Masculinity has its roots in genetics. Humans undergo a set of biological processes that follow a default female route. The redirection of such processes is referred to as masculinization, more precisely called defeminization. Upon defemenization, humans exhibit sexual dimorphism in many characteristics. Most expressions of sexual dimorphism in humans are found in height, weight, and body structure, and are acquired as boys become men. Of all the subtlest: A longer Shinbone.

Do we as humans undergo a similar process of defeminization culturally?
Does every culture encourage the development of gender roles, through literature, costume and song? Are agents of socialization responsible for our immediate association of masculine identity, with physical
and/or moral strength, assertiveness, responsibility, selflessness, sincerity?

The works in A Longer Shinbone pose these questions.

Initially, many of the works in the exhibition seem to occupy a similar aesthetic with reference to gender. The female-specific characteristics of the works appear to be the common denominator. Upon close inspection, the minutiae of the works’ intentions and fabrication slowly reveal their intrinsic masculinity.
The gender identity assumptions are misleading. No female artists are involved.

The works together form a unifying space evocative of home, warmth and even motherhood. The homely environment they together create becomes a room where gender assumptions and social conditioning are suspended, much like when the term mann was originally coined.

Catalina Jaramillo
Jacqueline Falcone
curators

[MDPLS] Assembling an Era

An exhibition at the library.

Assembling an Era

The Miami-Dade Public Library System, 1971-1989

January 20 – March 27, 2011

Main Library, 1st and 2nd floor exhibition space, 101 W. Flagler Street, Miami, 305-375-2665

Reception and 40th anniversary kick-off event: January 20, 6:30 – 8:30pm

The 1970s and 80s represented a period of great progress, upheaval, and change in Miami-Dade County. Miami hosted both the Democratic and Republican National Conventions. The Mariel Boatlift and McDuffie Riots happened simultaneously. 1983 saw both Surrounded Islands and Scarface. In 1971, at the very beginning of this important and volatile period, city and county libraries joined forces and formed the Miami-Dade Public Library System. In 1972, the Decade of Progress Bond expanded it with thirteen new branches.

Assembling an Era celebrates MDPLS’s 40th anniversary, bringing together materials from the Library’s special and reference collections to document this fascinating time and build associations between its popular culture, Miami history, and library stories. The show tells these stories through works on paper by Miami artists, Purvis Young canvas banner pieces, books, newspaper articles, a snapshot timeline, a special installation of every 1971 reference volume in the Library’s collection, a slide installation by Kevin Arrow, a sound station, and more.

I am included in the “and more”.