AOS Galerie and CURATORIAL PROJECTS
INSITE, Governors Island, Curator: Jerelyn Hanrahan
65 International artists
NYARTS Magazine, Beyond the Shore , by Max Blagg
65 International artists
NYARTS Magazine, Beyond the Shore , by Max Blagg
Originally purchased from the Native Americans of Manhattan for two ax heads, a string of beads, and a handful of nails. Governors Island was bought by a Dutchman who wanted the island for his own private use. His possession didn’t last, however, and it served as a military base for the next 200 years. In 1903 earth and rubble from the excavation of the Lexington Avenue subway added 103 acres of flat land to the island, so it really is part of New York. After the military left, the Coast Guard moved in, and they too finally departed in 1996. The remaining grounds and residences, still well maintained, have the air of an abandoned suburb, perhaps after a neutron bomb has been detonated. This slightly sinister ambience echoes with the ghostly presence of military families, spit-shined husbands and sexy young wives trying to beat discipline into their army brats. It was in this atmosphere that curator Jerelyn Hanrahan inserted an eclectic group of sculptures, on the lawns, open spaces, and on three floors of an empty house. The works were all by members of the Sculptors’ Guild, of which Hanrahan was the president for the past three years. In these three years, she gave a rather obscure but estimable New York institution some well deserved recognition.
Upon arrival, strolling visitors soon encountered artworks on the road from the ferry, including a large “root” made of twigs and string by Kathleen Vance, realistically girdling a massive old chestnut tree, and further along, on a slope facing the city, a wrecked ship that looked like it might have sailed out of Joe Zucker’s current show of Pirates at Nyehaus in Manhattan. Tom Broadbent’s beautifully crafted Ship of State had been partially dismasted by a recent storm, which only enhanced the wreck in its setting. A hint of our own wrecked state, and of Prospero’s ship in The Tempest, Governors Island seemed like the magic place he had fetched up. Caliban was lurking somewhere among the wealth of hickory, chestnut, and maple trees that offered shade on a steamy August afternoon. Proceeding to the main square of the “village,” visitors could see that Hanrahan had placed works among the trees on the wide lawn, including three slender sculptures from her own studio, mythical figures based on Munch’s Dance of Life. Each ten-foot figure (cast from a shapely human leg,) stood on a hoof-like base. Mythical yet human unipeds facing East, toward the rising sun. Nearby, Anti Liu’s triangular cluster of childlike figures cast in concrete gazed around, as if expecting parents to materialize from the empty houses. Other sculptures dotted the long lawn, notably Lucy Hodgson’s undulating wooden pieces that used old roofing tiles in their construction, like pieces stripped from dwellings hit by the same storm that fetched Broadbent’s ship ashore.
An entire house was taken up with three more floors of sculptures, varying widely in style and content. On the veranda was an exquisitely minimal piece by John Fekner and Steven Ceraso, an old diving board salvaged from one of the communal swimming pools. The piece simply evoked the absurdity and waste of the war in Iraq. Inside the house, laid out in surprising juxtapositions, were the classic female figures of Lloyd Glasson, unexpectedly sitting by a fireplace and on the mantel above it, and an orange sunburst that lighted up another room, fashioned in Plexiglas by Shari Mendelson. Upstairs in a bedroom two massive lions were mating, artfully constructed from masking tape by Rune Olsen. Also present were an ominous map of the world made from toothpicks by Ugar Kunst, and a tiny but very beautiful bronze by Barbara Lekberg, which looked like a maquette for an extraordinary urban colonnade. This diverse and entertaining show proved itself to be well worth the boat trip.
Upon arrival, strolling visitors soon encountered artworks on the road from the ferry, including a large “root” made of twigs and string by Kathleen Vance, realistically girdling a massive old chestnut tree, and further along, on a slope facing the city, a wrecked ship that looked like it might have sailed out of Joe Zucker’s current show of Pirates at Nyehaus in Manhattan. Tom Broadbent’s beautifully crafted Ship of State had been partially dismasted by a recent storm, which only enhanced the wreck in its setting. A hint of our own wrecked state, and of Prospero’s ship in The Tempest, Governors Island seemed like the magic place he had fetched up. Caliban was lurking somewhere among the wealth of hickory, chestnut, and maple trees that offered shade on a steamy August afternoon. Proceeding to the main square of the “village,” visitors could see that Hanrahan had placed works among the trees on the wide lawn, including three slender sculptures from her own studio, mythical figures based on Munch’s Dance of Life. Each ten-foot figure (cast from a shapely human leg,) stood on a hoof-like base. Mythical yet human unipeds facing East, toward the rising sun. Nearby, Anti Liu’s triangular cluster of childlike figures cast in concrete gazed around, as if expecting parents to materialize from the empty houses. Other sculptures dotted the long lawn, notably Lucy Hodgson’s undulating wooden pieces that used old roofing tiles in their construction, like pieces stripped from dwellings hit by the same storm that fetched Broadbent’s ship ashore.
An entire house was taken up with three more floors of sculptures, varying widely in style and content. On the veranda was an exquisitely minimal piece by John Fekner and Steven Ceraso, an old diving board salvaged from one of the communal swimming pools. The piece simply evoked the absurdity and waste of the war in Iraq. Inside the house, laid out in surprising juxtapositions, were the classic female figures of Lloyd Glasson, unexpectedly sitting by a fireplace and on the mantel above it, and an orange sunburst that lighted up another room, fashioned in Plexiglas by Shari Mendelson. Upstairs in a bedroom two massive lions were mating, artfully constructed from masking tape by Rune Olsen. Also present were an ominous map of the world made from toothpicks by Ugar Kunst, and a tiny but very beautiful bronze by Barbara Lekberg, which looked like a maquette for an extraordinary urban colonnade. This diverse and entertaining show proved itself to be well worth the boat trip.
Archival to Contemporary, Survey of 20th Century Sculpture
Hillwood Art Museum
Guest Curator: Jerelyn Hanrahan
Hillwood Art Museum
Guest Curator: Jerelyn Hanrahan
Sculptors in this photograph
Louise Bourgeous
Peter Dudek
Rob Loebel
Archival to Contemporary is a celebration of trends investigated in 20th century sculpture. These trends are exhibited in the works of renown artists such as Louise Bourgeois, David Smith, Jose de Creeft, Chaim Gross, Louise Nevelson, Clement Meadmore, George Rickey, and Mark DiSuvero, to the more contemporary, and assimilated sculptures of contemporary sculptors integrating installation and technological elements into their work.
Archival to Contemporary, is an exhilarating frenzy of sculpture ranging from the luminary works of Louise Bourgeous and David Smith, to the acrobatic wood carved figures of Chaim Gross, to the erotic masking tape sculptures of Rune Olsen expressionistic, All this while Eric Guzman’s wall sculptures redefine kinetic, and the engineered light sensitive installation BION of Adam Brown ignites the Tilles Center for the Performing Arts. The history of sculpture is evident throughout the exhibition. Content is addressed and references to the ready-made are visable in the steel covered Bible of James Greco, as Peter Dudek’s installation Monument to my Love-life combines Art de Povera (found objects) fused with a Mondrian sensibility, and Kim Kimball presents a radical renewal of Brancusi’s Endless Tower, in his 16’ construction made of pipe cleaners.
My exhibition criteria is to celebrate the past, the present, and the future of3- Dimensional works, , exhibiting the evolution and consistent re-definition of the third dimension. Through visits to foundations and the studios of contemporary sculptors I recognized an inspired ebb and flow of influences ranging from traditional, contextual, conceptual and technological approaches that continue to redefine sculpture in the 20th Century.
Jerelyn Hanrahan
PDF Catelogue available upon request
Louise Bourgeous
Peter Dudek
Rob Loebel
Archival to Contemporary is a celebration of trends investigated in 20th century sculpture. These trends are exhibited in the works of renown artists such as Louise Bourgeois, David Smith, Jose de Creeft, Chaim Gross, Louise Nevelson, Clement Meadmore, George Rickey, and Mark DiSuvero, to the more contemporary, and assimilated sculptures of contemporary sculptors integrating installation and technological elements into their work.
Archival to Contemporary, is an exhilarating frenzy of sculpture ranging from the luminary works of Louise Bourgeous and David Smith, to the acrobatic wood carved figures of Chaim Gross, to the erotic masking tape sculptures of Rune Olsen expressionistic, All this while Eric Guzman’s wall sculptures redefine kinetic, and the engineered light sensitive installation BION of Adam Brown ignites the Tilles Center for the Performing Arts. The history of sculpture is evident throughout the exhibition. Content is addressed and references to the ready-made are visable in the steel covered Bible of James Greco, as Peter Dudek’s installation Monument to my Love-life combines Art de Povera (found objects) fused with a Mondrian sensibility, and Kim Kimball presents a radical renewal of Brancusi’s Endless Tower, in his 16’ construction made of pipe cleaners.
My exhibition criteria is to celebrate the past, the present, and the future of3- Dimensional works, , exhibiting the evolution and consistent re-definition of the third dimension. Through visits to foundations and the studios of contemporary sculptors I recognized an inspired ebb and flow of influences ranging from traditional, contextual, conceptual and technological approaches that continue to redefine sculpture in the 20th Century.
Jerelyn Hanrahan
PDF Catelogue available upon request
These are a few of my favorite things
An exhibition of contemporary art
Curated by Jerelyn Hanrahan
Exhibtion site: the end ...
6,000 square foot Cultural Center
13 Greenpoint Avenue,
Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Artists:
Marina Adams, Jimbo Blachly,Chuck Connelly,Peter Dudek, Peter Fox, James Greco, Stacy Greene, Jerelyn Hanrahan, Alexa Hoyer, Yuliya Lanina, Christopher Lee, Kim Keever, Loren Munk, Paul Pagk, Gary Ryan, Ted Victoria
Curated by Jerelyn Hanrahan
Exhibtion site: the end ...
6,000 square foot Cultural Center
13 Greenpoint Avenue,
Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Artists:
Marina Adams, Jimbo Blachly,Chuck Connelly,Peter Dudek, Peter Fox, James Greco, Stacy Greene, Jerelyn Hanrahan, Alexa Hoyer, Yuliya Lanina, Christopher Lee, Kim Keever, Loren Munk, Paul Pagk, Gary Ryan, Ted Victoria
Curators and Artists
2016
This panel will explore the relationship between curators and artists. Discussion topics will include what curators look for, how artists can best work with curators, and successful ways for artists to seek opportunities to further their career and exposure. Created and moderated by Mitchel Pilnick, ATOA board member, visual arts advisor, and arts advocate whose informative and educational panels continue to focus on the importance of professional practices. The Esteemed Panelists Bill Carroll: Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Studio Program Director, Curator & Artist Jerelyn Hanrahan: Sculpture Guild NY President 2006-2008/Established Int’l Artist & Professor Jennie Lamensdorf: Director, Time Equities Inc. Art-in-Buildings Dexter Wimberly: Independent Curator/Former ICI Director of Strategic Planning National Arts Club 15 Gramercy Park South NYC 10003 (20th St. 1/2 block South of Park Ave.) Doors open at 6:00 PM / Panel begins at 6:30 PM
2016
This panel will explore the relationship between curators and artists. Discussion topics will include what curators look for, how artists can best work with curators, and successful ways for artists to seek opportunities to further their career and exposure. Created and moderated by Mitchel Pilnick, ATOA board member, visual arts advisor, and arts advocate whose informative and educational panels continue to focus on the importance of professional practices. The Esteemed Panelists Bill Carroll: Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Studio Program Director, Curator & Artist Jerelyn Hanrahan: Sculpture Guild NY President 2006-2008/Established Int’l Artist & Professor Jennie Lamensdorf: Director, Time Equities Inc. Art-in-Buildings Dexter Wimberly: Independent Curator/Former ICI Director of Strategic Planning National Arts Club 15 Gramercy Park South NYC 10003 (20th St. 1/2 block South of Park Ave.) Doors open at 6:00 PM / Panel begins at 6:30 PM
National Arts Club
15 Gramercy Park
New York, 10003
15 Gramercy Park
New York, 10003
Supermarket Art -Fair
Co-ordinated International representation of 40 artists
Art-fair booth
Co-ordinated International representation of 40 artists
Art-fair booth
As President of the Sculptors Guild 06 - 08. Co-ordinated Supermarket Art-fair booth and participated on an International Panel addressing the fundamentals of running an artist run organization within a global community.