Transformers: Coiled Potentials
Transcription
Transformers: Coiled Potentials
TRANSFORMERS COILED POTENTIALS TRANSFORMERS COILED POTENTIALS CURATED BY ANETTE SCHÄFER AND MILES CHALCRAFT AT E L I E R H O F K R E U Z B E R G, B E R L I N J U LY 2 1 – A U G U S T 1 0 , 2 0 1 2 A TRANSART INSTITUTE MFA EXHIBITION Atelierhof Kreuzberg Schleiermacherstraße 31-37 10961 Berlin Germany www.atelierhof-kreuzberg.com www.trampoline-berlin.de ______________________________ Copyright © 2012 Transart Institute All rights reserved All artwork and photographs copyrighted by each artist / photographer unless otherwise noted ______________________________ A print version of this catalogue can be ordered at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/jcriscola 4 Essay by Miles Chalcraft 11 ARTISTS 12 Sonia E Barrett 14 Paula Billups 16 Livia Daza-Paris 18 Lark Gilmer-Smothermon 20 Daniel Marchwinski 22 Eto Otitigbe 24 Alessandro Sau 26 Dianne Smith 28 Stephan Takkides 30 Andrew Teheran 32 Andrew Telichan 34 ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES 39 2010 – 2012 Credits 40 About Transart Institute CONTENTS TRANSFORMERS COILED POTENTIALS W E A R E T R A N S F O R M E R S, alchemists at play, steeped in the fumes of our reflections, turning base experience into something more desirable. We are the arbiters of potential, conjurers of resistance, stepping up the VOLTAGE from one set of coiled emotions to another, spinning up just enough power to transmit our story across the globe. We are hard-wired components straddling our past and our future, turning our personal histories, mythologies, cultural genetics and ethnic dynasties into the future stories we want to tell about ourselves. We are Metal Monsters, adaptable and contractable, expandable and expendable. Iron courses through the pipes which run through our bodies and when we give birth our young are plugged into our insides through sockets in their bellies. We are wired from head to foot; electric pulses leap the myriad sparking gaps to charge the pump that draws the oxygen in to feed the power-plants which reside in every tiny part of us. When we fall to the ground, the contacts finally corroded, the motion frozen, the plants cooling, we are recycled, pitilessly. We are survivors. When our body breaks, we can take from our environment a facsimile of the damaged part, and in its substitution, find a new voice or a new way of moving. We are wilful. We take up the things we have made and smash them; no one will stop us. Not ire or anguish, but it’s explosive. We find novel ways of putting the pieces back together, drawing on help from unexpected quarters, using new adhesives that even to us are untraditional, and it works. A thing reborn, embedded in the body of a new thing, with all the traces of its journey revealed. We are shape shifters. We choose a people and copy them. They have something we recognize and we desire to become like them, learning their ways, their skills, sharing their food and their stories. At some point, we are no longer outsiders, transformed into an individual that 6 T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 G R A D U AT E M FA E X H I B I T I O N is part of the tribe. It’s important that we remember, though, that we evolved into this. Painstakingly, we capture the rituals and individuals for another time, perhaps for when we have forgotten a transformation ever took place. We are nomads. We can’t settle because there is an empty space ahead of us where no foot has trodden. There are questions that need answering and perhaps the answer lies here. As nomads, we have carried our histories of tragedies and comedies with us and unless we exchange these stories they will be lost and all those mistakes will be made again in the place where no Transformer foot has set down. Like those green plants, we have transformed our world. We have transformed our world for others. We have tried to change the world. We have tried to change it for others. We were confused when all our efforts were ignored, but later we saw this was a strength. So we created myths that exaggerated our triumph, and when the lie was swallowed we were resplendent in our Transformer scorn. We are weavers. We found a raw filament snagged on a bush. Idly, we twisted it, stretched it, joined it and discovered Technology. Then, with eyes glazed in automatic zeal, we shuttled back and forth T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 G R A D U AT E M FA E X H I B I T I O N 7 at ever increasing speeds, the thread stitching words together with the broken-off pieces of our surroundings, rendering an entirely new story for ourselves. We are levellers, the crushers of mountains. With cable-veined limbs, we have hewn the things from a childish past now bereft of mystery and fashioned the fragments afresh, building piles to waymark a path back from the unfamiliar landscape left in our turbulent wake. Imperfect, we are chrysalids, still becoming, our colours not yet fast. Stumbling, we have mirrored our indistinct faces in stock photographs, our loath hands too numbed to fashion butterfly scales, and mumbling, the words too thick on our bloated tongues to flow easily into lazy ears. If we emerge, we will be beautiful but fragile, the faintest touch springing our metalled plates in a mineburst. This is our time of change. Here, in this moment of revelation, this patch of clarity, something has frozen and gelled and can be examined. A slurry of material, collecting in the depths of our lives, has been condensed through a lens of subjective filtering, intellectual reasoning and technical endeavour into this residue. This small nugget of something glistening we can now stand back from, setting it aside from the detritus that once obscured 8 T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 G R A D U AT E M FA E X H I B I T I O N it, pulling it apart from the rhizome that once fed it. There is just enough breathing space to take a considered look and contemplate what it might mean and whether we have indeed found ‘gold,’ before the murk of experience rekindles our doubts and awakens our thirst for truth or poetry once again. We invite you to look through our loupe. M I L E S C H A L C R A F T, 2 0 1 2 T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 G R A D U AT E M FA E X H I B I T I O N 9 ARTISTS 12 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS SONIA E BARRETT F U R N I S H E D I S A S E R I E S of sculptures constructed using 18th and 19th Century wooden dining table and chair limbs. This “HerrenZimmer” furniture or “Queen Anne style” is typified by the inclusion of the depiction of lion’s feet. The furniture had been disassembled and re-arranged. The work is concerned with how ingrained nonrelationships are in the structure of our lives and the historical and political context that enabled whole nations to start to enter into servitude or receive service. It considers what we might see if we started to look at those relationships, and what it might be like to exist in a crucial but marginal role. This series of work explores this ability to overlook others whilst simultaneously allowing them to facilitate our lives. The artist’s intention is to symbolise the complexity and conflict of such a relationship through her work, and evoke a sense unease and mindfulness concerning the bond between the user and the used. above Table Number One, 2012 Metal table top, antique wooden wheeled table legs, rope, sheeps intestines, styrofoam 59 cm x 50 cm x 89 cm Table Number Seven, 2012 Antique wooden table legs and top, metal hooks, fasteners and sliding mechanisms 163 cm x 90 cm x 73 cm opposite page left Detail Table Number Seven T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 13 PAULA BILLUPS I H A V E F O U N D that connecting to human predicaments in human terms is the most powerful way to explore art and meaning. Smoke in the Mask investigates the unbridgeable gap of experience that exists between the audience and the performer, and their reliance on that gap as a catalyst for the essential experience of Show. I highlighted this gap by working with friends who are fire performers because their elemental medium simultaneously attracts and warns away. Held apart and bound together in a mysterious exchange, audience and artist share in performance a kind of existential healing. The beauty and primacy of the medium of fire informed my approach in creating the paintings. The simplicity of a fire performance, its elemental basis and its ancient origins, and the mastery of the Chauvet painters influenced me to work in the most essential terms. Having long favored a limited “dead” palette, I limited it further to colors available 20,000 years ago. I eliminated other things. I found that if I worked in oil bars I could paint with a direct gesture, so the palette, brushes, turpentine, and oil went away. I stopped working with canvas and easels, and used brown paper, working directly on the wall. These reductions never hindered my vision or productivity. On the contrary, they enhanced it. Leaving the canvas for paper restored my ability to work at a proper size. Leaving the brushes gave me a fast-curing pigment I could transport easily in a shorter time. In giving up most of what I had, I received everything I needed. My tribe is the fire spinning community in and around Boston. These are my fire family, who helped me see this project to fruition with their generous participation. My heartfelt thanks to my fire family and to the Transart community for being there when it counts and for letting me be there for you. Burn bright! 14 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS opposite page Laa, 2012 Oil on paper 61cm x 132cm Terrence 2.0, 2012 Oil on paper 78cm x 119cm left T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 15 LIVIA DAZA-PARIS AT THE EDGE OF THE (FAR-) END investigates the autobiographical embedded within the larger context of human-rights themes. Working with my body and a camera as witness, I search for the body of my father, disappeared by the state. Guided by the feminist premise that "the personal is political," “I” becomes evidence and “self” is where the story resides--indeed I am the only irrevocable proof of my father's existence. Aesthetically, this work plays with visual pacing, spatial relatedness, cadence of movement and cadence of thought. Conceptually, it explores how something deep and elusive in the body, such as complicated grief, might be made visible. Poetic devices became an essential aid to investigate a fragmented story embedded in a larger context of historical events omitted from official records. The fundamental question is: in the absence of a mourning ritual when a loved one is disappeared by the state, how do those left behind cope with their own grief under conditions of silence and clandestinity and how does it shape their lives? The work is formed by a series of physical and written poems during my search for the remains of my father. They are not only a documentation of my quest, but were guidance along my journey’s path, whether through the landscapes of land, society or memory. In this sense, the poetics have been a compass on my quest for truth and evidence. At the edge of the (far-) End is an investigative document of poetics that delves into notions of love and courage, to give tribute to an ideological humanist integrity of the Venezuelan resistance 16 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS movement of the 1960s. Underlying the project are universal inquiries of inter-subjectivity in apparently isolated human experiences of geopolitical events. At the Edge of the (far-) End: Investigative Poetic Documentary, Venezuela, May 2012 T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 17 LARK GILMER-SMOTHERMON LIP-SYNCHING WITH MOTHER NATURE I T S E E M S , of late, that I am always looking in the rear view mirror — moving, nomadic. The one constant is the land — remaining connected to and grounded. The work is more about a dialogue the land has with me — than what I have to say about it. It is more about what it wants to tell me — what is important to know. Some are simply hopeful whispers while others need tending to now. Now, this minute. Just like you can tell when animals need attention — the land also speaks. And, this dialogue seems to translate itself into the words woven into it’s landscape. This work comes from a very primitive, instinctive, intuitive place. It reflects the language of the community in which I live. It is temporal. It is vital. 18 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS opposite page Grass Text: GENUG O, Laurin, 2011 Hand-tied pasture grass and fishing line with Margie approx. 18" x 6' Wool Text 6: Every Blade Of Grass, Laurin, 2011 Handwoven Icelandic ewe wool script on pasture fence approx. 10" x 16' left top left middle Grass Text 1: LOVE (Fall), Laurin, 2010 Handwoven grass text approx. 8' x 30' left bottom Wool Text 7: And With Each New Discovery, They Came To Know Themselves, Laurin, 2012 Handwoven Icelandic ewe wool script on pasture fence approx. 4' x 16' above Reed Text 2: SILENCE, Jasper Farm, Chattaroy, 2012 Handwoven Cattail Reeds approx. 4' x 25' T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 19 DANIEL MARCHWINSKI I N A N E F F O R T to bridge the gap between the city government and its creative community, Qronicle, an experiential data collection system was installed to gather user information about spaces that have been affected by the efforts of the creative community. As Detroit continually struggles to regain its footing, groups of creative people and individuals have been reinvigorating spaces through their own, often secluded, efforts. Avalon International Bread Company has spearheaded pockets of successful and unique commerce, making a small section of the city “more livable.” The Russell Industrial Center has fostered growing artistic communities that are resulting in collectives, galleries, and traffic. These initiatives, and the others chosen for the project, demonstrate the power and determination that the creative community has to thrive and create growth. This city is being transformed from the bottom up. 20 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS QRonicle is aimed at creating an argument to convince key figures in the Detroit city government to begin to work with this energy, in order to reimagine the current and future state of the city; to promote a partnership that is mutually beneficial; and to update the urban regeneration practices within the city of Detroit beyond the “drop-off-at-the-door” entertainment based initiatives of sports stadiums and casinos. Qronicle is, simply, a series of six signs placed in key locations within the city of Detroit. Each location has been affected in a unique way by efforts driven by creativity and community. A unique QR code on each sign brings the user to a web page where they can answer questions about that site and view answers left by others. The data was compiled into an online database, analyzed in order to draw conclusions, about the city, from the data. This site will be passed on to the City of Detroit. T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 21 ETO OTITIGBE I A M a polymedia artist. I create work in many mediums to explore my curiosities, voice my frustrations, and expose people to new experiences. For me art making is a form of self-discovery, exercise, and ritual. By sharing my work I open a forum to discuss sensitive issues and promote the exchange of ideas. Throughout my life I have learned to negotiate the various poles of my identity: Nigerian-American-Artist-Inventor-DesignerDJ-Musician to name a few. I found that sculpture and new media are the best way for me to share this ongoing journey with people. I use these archetypes to generate work that is polytextural and fresh. At times my work is charged with political subject matter in response to current events. On other occasions, I find the creative process to be invigorating and I enjoy the challenge of creating something new and innovative. My work is aligned with the tradition of artists who use digital technology to create and manipulate their work. I often employ tools reserved for engineers and architects to create art. I use bespoke software applications to manipulate video in realtime and rapidly alter the visual references in my work. I combine original photographs and video footage with archival video from the interwebs to create mediascapes. In many ways, my creative practice is a form of post-modern pastiche. 22 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS Detail of Becoming Visible – Eyes on Me, 2012 Photorealistic carving in ultralight fiberboard with enamel paint 22" x 30" opposite page above Victory! Welcome to the Sidewalk Sucka, 2011 T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 23 ALESSANDRO SAU M Y A R T W O R K takes a critical view of aesthetic issues in relation to anthropology. Most of my work is based on a dialectical technique of taking a set of visual premises and working with them until they are transformed. I am fascinated by the seductive power of the image, which I consider to be something that is always beyond our understanding. I am attracted by the process of construction and destruction of things, and this leads me to conceive of the image as always being in a state of becoming. Often, my work consists of multiple fragments of an idea: every work is a fragment, a relic of a process. I always attempt to make this fragment universal: the work should always embody the entire process. Most of my work relates in one way or another to philosophy, and I often write a brief essay to reflect on those concepts I feel to be fundamental to my art practice. I like to think of myself as a person who knows one thing — that he knows nothing. Scio me nihil scire — I know one thing, that I know nothing. Relic, 2012 Still from video 00:01:50 above Dwarf, 2012 clay, tempera, wax, honey, bees' intervention 29 x 14 x 18 cm opposite page Mandala, 2012 Tempera on paper and snails' intervention 30 x 33 cm left 24 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 25 DIANNE SMITH M Y W O R K deals with trash, class consumption and the politics of race. I create assemblages constructed out of everyday materials or items that would ordinarily be thrown away. I find ways to bridge conventional material and my trash. Or, I may deconstruct an existing piece and repurpose it into another work of art. One day, while cleaning my kitchen I began to pay attention to the size of my trashcan. For the first time I noticed how large it was. The next day I swapped it out for a much smaller one. However, that did not satisfy my preoccupation with waste. I became consumed with what I threw away. Suddenly, I began saving things like: junk mail, bottles, cans, old clothes, painting rags, files, newspapers, packaging, etc. These discarded materials became part of my inner dialogue — a metaphor for how I view the world. Identity: race, gender, religion, inequity and consumption in a global climate filled with economic despair are all interrelated. Yet, my personhood defines my relationship with each one. Just as it defines the relationship I have with the items I use in my sculptures. Most often, a force that is beyond me informs and guides my creative expression. I am called upon to create my art in response to the events, circumstances and times of the world around me. Whether it is the plight of women and children around the world or the tragedy of a natural disaster or a conversation with a friend or some historical context, I use my work as a way to share information by connecting it to socio economic and political issues. I often donate to charities that deal with the social and economic development of women and families globally. As such, my art has a purpose beyond the surface and the eye. opposite page , detail above Within Shadows Cast, 2012 Site specific installation, brown butcher paper, staples, and red gel light filters Dimension variable mfa exhibition Afro Syllogisms, 2012 Site specific installation, brown paper rolls, nails, staples, and gel light filters Dimensions variable 26 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 27 STEPHAN TAKKIDES UMLAND U M L A N D I S A S H O R T F I L M that looks at the periphery of a city, combining elements of fiction with documentary. Although the film is shot around Berlin, the city’s name is never mentioned. Still landscape shots are narrated by an amateur botanist who ventures out beyond the city limits in search of the first flowers of spring. Frustrated with urban life, he heads off on three trips to explore the wilds at the end of the suburban railway. These lead him to the remnants of a sewage farm, a former landfill site and along an overgrown rail track to a vast cemetery in the city’s outskirts. 28 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS Umland, 2012 Stills from video T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 29 ANDREW TEHERAN I E X P E R I E N C E T H E P A S S A G E of time when working with stone. A boulder is split horizontally by a tree growing from within it. Crumbling fragile pieces of slate cascade from the exposed rock by the side of the road. I see them decay in front of me, slowly falling apart, like timelapse photography within the scale of centuries. In my work I try to find the lyrical and weightless aspects of the stone’s form. Line and shape reveal aspirations of a more fluid, vertical existence. The process is a transformative one, for both the stone and myself, bringing forth balance and silence. Untitled (11 stacks), 2012 Natural stone with industrial materials 60' x 6.5' 30 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 31 ANDREW TELICHAN UNTITLED A S A N O P E R A T I C S I N G E R who temporarily lost (but has since regained) his voice, I spent the past year exploring the complex notion of voice, what it means to have and lose one, and its positive and negative relations to language and convention — particularly since voice is typically associated with communication. The problem with this common notion of voice is that it is based on arbitrary man-made conventions of language that constrain our interpretation of the world and ourselves to the conceptual and normative viewpoint of the masses, leaving us with no voice of our own. I contend, however, that we do have a personal voice, which is the pre-symbolic, bodily voice we used in a meaningful way in infancy not only to express our personal needs and acoustically explore our surroundings (e.g., through babble) but also to recognize our “selves” through innate organic means as the source of this voice. What is fundamental to this voice is that it basically arises from a state of uncertainty. To be human is to live without the kind of certainty about the world, ourselves and even our voice that conventions often reflect. The challenge of finding one’s own voice requires not only understanding the important role conventions play but also recognizing they are not fixed absolutes and that all interpretation is a choice that occurs first within ourselves — prior to “voicing” through signs and symbols. Based on this deeper concept of voice – and as one aspect of the studio work created for my thesis project — I created an installation based around a patch I developed in Max/MSP which isolates the sounds of the human voice from linguistic meaning by fragmenting it into isolated phonemic and incidental sounds emitted during speaking or singing. By focusing on these sounds alone, as well as how voice can be translated into other types of sounds, I have sought to highlight how the purely sonic dimensions of voice have the power to reveal and communicate various states of mind and body that otherwise go unnoticed in everyday linguistic exchange. opposite page Sections of the Max/MSP patch used in this installation overlaid with visualizations of sonic data derived from a recording of the artist’s voice. 32 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 33 ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES Sonia E Barrett, of German and Jamaican parentage was raised in England, China and Cyprus. As a result she draws upon a range of cultural influences in her work. She is a graduate of St Andrews University where she studied Philosophy, Literature and International Relations. She has exhibited works on paper, installation pieces and digital art internationally; most recently at the NGBK show “Making Mirrors” in Berlin, WOMA in Grenada, “Nothing to Declare” in Manila and at the Santorini Biennale in Greece. Her works have been featured in a number of publications including the Interkultur, Zeitschrift des Deutschen Kulturrates and the International Review of African American Art. Her work is concerned with exploring the relationship between empathy and subordination. www.sebarrett.net Paula Billups is a painter based in Boston. She received her BFA in 2005 from the Lyme Academy in Connecticut, subsequently pursuing further study at the Grand Central Academy in New York. She has exhibited widely in the United States, particularly in New England and New York and has won several awards. She came to Transart Institute to develop working relationships with a global community of artists. Ms. Billups is one of the charter members of the American branch of the Tunisian Collaborative Painters, directed by Fulbright Fellow David Black, and she participated in its first United States action in 2010. Her published articles were instrumental in building the group’s visibility to officials in Tunisia and art programs in the United States. Most recently she was the inaugural Artist in Residence at the Siena Art Institute’s residency program in Siena, Italy. Livia Daza-Paris is a Venezuelan-born artist that incorporates video, performance and storytelling as platforms to integrate themes of locality, memory and the social to reflect her humanist approach to art creation. Her work is greatly influenced by her practice of the dance and poetics of Skinner Releasing Technique and the aesthetics of Grotowsky’s theater. Daza-Paris has postgraduate degrees in Digital Technologies Design Arts and in Community Economic Development, both from Concordia University, Canada. She is certified in the Skinner Releasing Technique. Daza-Paris has been presented at Festival International de Nouvelle Danse, Vancouver Dance Festival, Tangente, Montreal Arts Interculturel, du Maurier Theatre, Canada and at Dance Theater Workshop, P.S. 122 and The Knitting Factory in NYC and internationally at Blanc Compound in Manila, Ateneo de Caracas in Venezuela, and “Los Talleres” in DF Mexico. Daza-Paris is an awards recipient from: Conseil des Arts et de letters du Quebec, Canada Arts Council, Ontario Arts Council, City of Montreal, Venezuelan Arts Council, Fundacion Jose Angel Lamas, Laidlaw Foundation; and DTW Suitcase Fund for the Arts, with funds from the Rockefeller T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 G R A D UAT E M FA E X H I B I T I O N 35 Foundation. In 1991 and 1994 she won the Excellence Award by American Illustration, USA, as Artistic Director of the international project ‘CAONABO’ New Performance in the Americas. The Festival had part of its residency in "Los Barrios" of Caracas and in towns of the Venezuelan African East Coast, presenting a new model in the country for arts and community collaborations. Born in a folly, abandoned by her mother, and eventually brought up by wolves, Lark Gilmer-Smothermon has never known a day without the unconditional love of wild animals. She survives in that fragile space between life and death, honed by the sun, and molded by an honest days labor on the land. It is this un-tweetable life of fiction where she resides, clothed by the land, curled up in the arms of a 100-year-old cottonwood, and warmed by the love of her woolly beasties. There is no better way to give an account of her life than to say, she is doing what she loves. The computer has taken over Daniel Marchwinski’s life. He programs for work; he programs for Art; sometimes, he programs for fun. He goes to school online. He teaches online. He keeps up with his friends, online. This box hurts my back. He shops online; he makes appointments online; sometimes, he even orders food online. Convenience. He met his girlfriend online; when she goes on tour, they spend hours online : skype, gmail, gchat, facebook. I no longer use a pen. He draws on a tablet; he writes in Google Drive, 36 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS yet he is — right now — surrounded by piles of unused art supplies. Yesterday, this was his bio. Tomorrow it will change. http://theproject.qronicle.org Eto Otitigbe is a polymedia artist who combines sculpture, video, installation, and performance to create illusions, actions and sensitive spaces. His work deals with themes such as movement and transitions, cultural hybridity and the embodiment of loss prevention as ritual and cultural artifact. Since 2003 Eto has been exhibiting his own work and participating in collaborative projects internationally. His performances have been staged in venues such as Monkey Town, The Tank, Grace Exhibition Space and his own alternative venue, The BricoLodge in Williamsburg. Eto holds a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from MIT and an M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the Joint Program in Design at Stanford. He is an M.F.A. candidate at the Transart Institute. Eto was born in Buffalo, New York in 1977. He lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. www.etosoro.com Alessandro Sau was born in Cagliari in 1981, and lives and works in Cagliari and Milan. He studied painting in Rome at Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma (BA), then moved to Milan where he received a degree in Art and Anthropology of the Sacred (MA) at Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera. He worked in Berlin as studio assistant for the photographer Attilio Maranzano. Currently he is studying at Transart Institute. Stephan Takkides is an artist from England and Cyprus. www.alessandrosau.it http://vokzal.info For over a decade Dianne Smith has been exhibiting in New York’s Chelsea and Soho art districts, she is an installation artist, sculptor and painter. She is an educator in the field of Aesthetic Education at Lincoln Center Institute and The Center For Arts Education in New York City. Smith has CO-produced an online radio show the New Palette, for MoMA WPS1 Art Radio, and was one of the artists featured in the Boondoggle Film Documentary Colored Frames. Her most recent exhibitions include solo shows: Syllogisms at RFA Gallery in Harlem, New York and Surface and Soul, in Martinsville, Virginia. Andrew Teheran is a New Jersey based sculptor, filmmaker, educator and new media artist. He was born in New York City to parents of South American and Scandinavian descent. He holds a degree in Art History from Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Under the auspices of Temple University, he spent a semester of study in Rome, Italy. He went on to post-baccalaureate work in sculpture and art education at Montclair State University in Upper Montclair, New Jersey. Mr. Teheran has been teaching at East Side High School in New Jersey’s Newark Public School district for over fourteen years. Within the district and throughout the state, he has been celebrated and decorated for his distinguished work in arts education. In 2009 Andrew received the Apple Computer Distinguished Educator Award, a prestigious honor which only fifty teachers in the United States are picked bi-annually to receive. His pedagogical career continues at East Side High School where he has developed and is leading its awardwinning, internationally recognized New Media Studies Smith a Bronx native of Belizean Descent, attended the Otis Parsons School of Design and the Fashion Institute of Technology. She currently lives and works in Harlem. www.diannesmithart.com He graduated from Chelsea College in London and now lives and works in Berlin. His work engages with places and landscapes and includes web projects, computer games, photography and video. T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 37 Magnet Program. Andrew Teheran is currently a Filmmaker in Residence at New Jersey’s Essex County College, where he teaches film and animation part-time as an adjunct professor, and is an Artist in Residence at Newark’s City Without Walls Gallery, where he is involved in many of its educational outreach programs. This summer, Mr. Teheran is scheduled to complete his Master of Fine Arts degree with Transart Institute in Berlin, Germany. In the years prior to and following his time as a student of Slavic Languages and Literature, Andrew Telichan has worked independently and professionally as a bassist, electronic music producer, sound designer for theater and dance, and opera singer. Telichan has produced several recordings in collaboration with his earlier improvisational and songwriting ensembles, 38 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS such as Zvook and Musíme (Saint Louis and New York City, USA, respectively), and released his first solo extended player, Pliant Seeds, in 2009. In addition to composing and sound design, in recent years his personal research has covered areas such as sound and music computing and embodied music cognition. In his first year at Transart Institute, Telichan focused his research on the psychoacoustic principles and cognitive processes involved in the brain’s interpretation of the auditory world. In response to medical issues leading to the loss of his singing voice over a two year period, he spent his second year investigating the complex phenomenon of voice, its many possible interpretations and the implications surrounding its loss at various levels of lived experience. He is currently living in Chicago, USA. He will be living elsewhere come October, 2012. 2 010 – 20 12 CREDITS E X H I B I T I O N C U R AT O R S FA C U LT Y A N D A D V I S O R S Deborah Aschheim Tatiana Bazzichelli Myron Beasley Sarah Bennett Sanford Biggers Lynn Book Michael Bowdidge Jean Marie Casbarian Colin Chase Paolo Chiasera Ofri Cnaani Geoffrey Cox Dorit Cypis David Dunn Nicolás Dumit Estévez Simon Faithfull Laura Gonzalez Victoria Hindley Stanya Kahn Caroline Koebl Lisa Mezzacappa Nils Norman Dread Scott Radhika Subramaniam Wolfgang Suetzl Mary Ting Anette Schäfer and Miles Chalcraft Trampoline – Agency for Art and Media www.trampoline-berlin.de EXHIBITION ADVISORY BOARD Jean Marie Casbarian, MFA Nicolás Dumit Estévez, MA, MFA PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGERY Page 10 and 11: Bruno Weiss Page 18 and 19: Jenni Cappella Page 20: Dooley Images ACADEMIC DIRECTORS Page 21: Lewis Meyer Cella, MFA and Klaus Knoll, PhD Page 31: Robbie “Bert” Brown | freebertbrown.com Transart Institute | The Unschool Art School (Thanks to the artist/designer for helping to create the images) ACADEMIC LIAISON C ATA L O G U E D E S I G N Sarah Bennett, PhD Jeanne Criscola | Criscola Design Associate Professor in Fine Art Programme Leader MA Contemporary Art Practice Subject Leader Fine Art Plymouth University Special thanks to Klaus, Cella and Transart faculty. T R A N S A R T I N S T I T U T E 2 0 1 2 M FA E X H I B I T I O N 39 A B OU T TR ANSART INSTITUT E Transart Institute offers an international low-residency MFA and a practice-based PhD program for working artists in a highly individualized format. The innovative MFA program consists of three intensive summer residencies with lectures, workshops, critiques, seminars, performances and exhibitions in Europe and two fall or spring residencies in New York. In the four semesters between residencies, students create their own course of study realizing individual art and research projects with the support of faculty and self-chosen artist mentors wherever they work and live. The MPhil/PhD is a three to four year full time degree program with an average work commitment of 30 hours per week. The Degree is only offered for practice-based research (creative work) accompanied by a written thesis that contextualizes the work. The Institute’s programs are geared towards the development of a sustainable artistic praxis rather than training in certain media or genres, challenging students to think conceptually and work creatively in new ways. Current students work with animation, curating, digital media, film, gaming, graphic design, installation, painting, performance, photography, robotics, sculpture, sound, text, video, virtual reality. MFA Creative Practice + practice-based PhD validated by Plymouth University. 40 TRANSFORMERS | COILED POTENTIALS www.transart.org