Roloff John Os37 Valec
Visiting Artist Lectures

John Roloff

09/11/17

DUE TO THE NAPA/SONOMA FIRES THIS EVENT IS CANCELLED.

Date: Tuesday, October 10, 2017 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM

Location: The CIA at Copia Vintners Theater, 500 First Street, Napa, CA

Artist Biography:

John Roloff / born 1947 / Portland, OR

John Roloff is a visual artist who works conceptually with site, process and natural systems. He is known primarily for his outdoor kiln/furnace projects done from the late 1970’s to the early 1990’s as well as other large-scale environmental projects, gallery installations and objects investigating geologic and natural phenomena. Based on an extensive background and ongoing research in the earth sciences, his work since the late 1960’s engages poetic and site-specific relationships between material, concept and performance in the domains of geology, ecology, architecture, ceramics, industry and mining, metabolic systems and history. The ship is a central image of his work, metaphorically evoking psychological and transformative processes of the sea and land in geologic and Anthropocentric time.

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Gallaccio Anya Thomas Dane Gallery 3 Web
Visiting Artist Lectures

Anya Gallaccio

09/11/17

Please join us for a lecture with artist Anya Gallaccio.

Date: Tuesday, September 26, 2017 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Location: The CIA at Copia Theater, 500 First Street, Napa, CA

Artist Biography:

Anya Gallaccio (born 1963) is a British artist, who creates site-specific, minimalist installations and often works with organic matter (including chocolate, sugar, flowers and ice).

Her use of organic materials results in natural processes of transformation and decay, meaning that Gallaccio is unable to predict the end result of her installations. Something which at the start of an exhibition may be pleasurable, such as the scent of flowers or chocolate, would inevitably become increasingly unpleasant over time. The timely and site-specific nature of her work make it notoriously difficult to document. Her work therefore challenges the traditional notion that an art object or sculpture should essentially be a monument within a museum or gallery. Instead her work often lives through the memory of those that saw and experienced it - or the concept of the artwork itself.

lehmannmaupin.com

Mitsukobrooks
Visiting Artist Lectures

Mitsuko Brooks

02/10/17

Mitsuko Brooks OS2 comes full-circle returning as Oxbow's Alumni Visiting Artist Lecturer.

Lecture: Tuesday, April 11, 2017 7:00 – 8:30pm
Location: The CIA at Copia Theater, 500 First Street, Napa, CA

Mitsuko Brooks was born during snowfall in Aomori Prefecture of Japan on Misawa Air Force Base, and grew up in Dover, Delaware; Albany, Oregon; Aviano, Italy; Gaithersburg, Maryland; and New York City. Her grandparents are from Ibaraki Prefecture in Japan and Virginia in the states, and parents born in Manchuria, China and Mount Joy, Pennsylvania. She graduated with a BFA from Cooper Union, is a current MFA candidate in UCLA's Painting & Drawing Department, and attended Oxbow. She resides in Los Angeles and works to manipulate, reorganize, and repurpose online texts, artifacts, and trash through assemblage and installations. Embedded in her family tree, with histories of colonialism; her life and work responds to acts of domination and exploitation. But more importantly, she is inspired to make work about the fragility of life and paradoxical human condition of suffering and happiness.

mitsukobrooks.com

Whislersabine
Visiting Artist Lectures

Stephen Whisler & Sabine Reckewell

02/10/17

Lecture: Tuesday, March 21, 2017 7:00 – 8:30pm
Location: The CIA at Copia Theater, 500 First Street, Napa, CA

Stephen Whisler

My current art practice consists of sculpture, drawings, performances and guerilla art actions. Investigating surveillance and military power has been the main focus of many of my recent projects. In my works on paper, watchtowers, military drones, atom bombs and rockets are drawn as iconic forms in large pastel renderings. My drone series depicts military drones as singular objects and in large groups, always drawn with fingerprints covering the surface.

My most recent preoccupation has been with atomic weapons. Intensely rendered with vermillion pastel fingerprints, these weapons have a sinister feeling. Ultimately the final image is composed of thousands of fingerprints, like thousands of bits of evidence.

Using photographs downloaded from the Internet as source material, I compose the drawings in Illustrator on my computer and print the images in large scale on typing paper with the pages tiled in a grid. The pages are then taped together and given a coat of pastel on the back, which is then used like carbon paper to transfer the image to the drawing paper. The drawings start as digital photographs on the computer and are then fleshed out with the most ancient "digital" technique, the fingerprint.

The sculptural works often have an interactive component, as in Observer, a surveillance tower sculpture based on prison watchtowers. When the viewer climbs into the tower, they become the watcher, making the viewer complicit in the act of surveillance. Walking the Bomb is a performance with a sculpture. Dressed in a dark grey suit with a white shirt, a kind of contemporary version of Buster Keaton's everyman, I walk the streets towing The Bomb. It is essentially an absurdist gesture, but one that points to the daily threat caused by nuclear bombs and bombs of all kinds. We are all towing our own bombs, every day, without realizing it, in our own Theater of the Absurd. We are all complicit in the creation of these objects of destruction: Creation and destruction made manifest in one object.

stephenwhisler.net

Sabine Reckewell

Since 2010 I have built two- and three-dimensional room-sized installations. I am interested in placing artwork in a given architectural context, and I am using linear materials, repetition and geometry to create actual or illusional volumes. I think of them as three-dimensional drawings.

From a distance these installations appear as distinct shapes. Up close they dissolve into linear patterns that shift and change as the viewer's position shifts. Shadows from light sources can create additional visual patterns.

My process is very straightforward and I am only using very simple tools and techniques. These installations look precise, but also have a deliberate hand-made quality to them.

My first consideration is the space I have to work with and how I can take advantage of its dimensions and specific properties, walls, floor, ceiling, lighting, etc.

The second consideration is a concept for the placement of the lines. I have been exploring simple geometric shapes. Angles, triangles, curves, and straight lines are mapped out, and the linear materials are stretched across space from repetitious, evenly spaced corresponding points. Repetition gives the work a meditative quality.

Finally, the materials I choose are crucial. I have been using soft and pliable linear materials of varying widths such as yarns ribbons, ropes and webbing. These are nailed or otherwise affixed to the walls, suspended, or tied to metal channels. It's the materials that give these installations their personality.

My installations usually are not meant to be permanent, movable sculptures. Drawings and notes allow me to recreate some of them in similar spaces. But most of them are site specific. They exist in a particular space for a limited amount of time and then get rolled up and put away.

sabinereckewell.com

Mc Nair Evans
Visiting Artist Lectures

McNair Evans

02/09/17

Lecture: Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Location: The CIA at Copia Theater, 500 Third Street, Napa, CA

McNair Evans is a 2016 Guggenheim Fellow whose photographs appear in numerous exhibition settings and publications. His first monograph, Confessions for a Son, was pre-released at the 2014 New York Art Book Fair and sold out within months. Work from this series was acquired by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. His recent SF Arts Commission exhibit In Search of Great Men was on display at San Francisco’s City Hall and EUQINOMprojects.

MONOGRAPH
– Confessions for a Son, Owl & Tiger Books. San Francisco, 2014

SELECT SOLO EXHIBITIONS
– In Search of Great Men, San Francisco Arts Commission, San Francisco, CA, March, 2016

– Confessions for a Son, Sasha Wolf Gallery, New York, NY, February, 2015
– Confessions for a Son, Rayko Gallery, San Francisco, CA, January, 2014
– heritage 780700, The Window Gallery, San Francisco, CA, August, 2014

SELECT CLIENTS
AFAR Magazine, Bloomberg Business Week, CA Sunday Magazine, Esquire Russia, Fast Company, Good Magazine, The Guardian, Harper’s Magazine, Le Monde, Oxford American, PDN, Random House Inc., Surfer, San Francisco Magazine, Stella Magazine, and VICE.

mcnairevans.com


Strainer 1
Visiting Artist Lectures

Chris Finley

02/09/17

Lecture: Tuesday, March 7, 2017 7:00 – 8:30pm
Location: The CIA at Copia Theater, 500 First Street, Napa, CA

Chris Finley’s idiosyncratic sculptures often solicit viewers to perform prescriptive rituals that unearth hidden layers of narrative content within stacks and groupings of everyday objects.

His disfigured and distorted paintings of world record holders, politicians, and celebrity entrepreneurs paradoxically recall the Futurists’ glorification of speed and technology while ultimately critiquing our current mediated experience.

Finley’s exhibitions have been reviewed in Artforum, Art in America, Flash Art, Frieze, Teme Celeste, Art Issues, Forbes, Art and Auction, The New York Times, and The Los Angeles Times.

His work is included in the book “Painting Abstraction: New Elements in Abstract Painting”, by Bob Nikas. PHAIDON publishing.

His work has been included in national and international Museum exhibitions including, 01.01.01: Art in Technological Times, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco; Game Show, MASS MOCA, North Adams, MA; 2002 Orange County Museum of Art Biennial, Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, CA; Twisted. Urban and Visionary Landscapes in Contemporary Painting, Van Abbe Museum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands; Just Past: The Contemporary in MOCAʼs Permanent Collection, 1975-1996, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA; and Defining The Nineties, Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL.

His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum in Los Angeles, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco, the Orange County Museum of Art in Newport Beach, the Columbus Museum of Art in Columbus Ohio, and the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art in Madison Wisconsin.

He received a Pollock/ Krasner Foundation Grant in 2010 and was awarded a Eureka Fellowship from the Fleishhacker Foundation in 2003. He received the SECA award from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 1999.

Chris Finley was born in 1971, in Carmel, California
He lives and works in Petaluma, California.
He is a Professor of Art at San Francisco State University.

chimentocontemporary.net/finley

5219499
Visiting Artist Lectures

Hung Liu & Jeff Kelley

02/09/17

Lecture: Tuesday, February 21, 2017 7:00 – 8:30pm
Location: The CIA at Copia Theater, 500 First Street, Napa CA

Hung Liu was born in Changchun, China in 1948, growing up under the Maoist regime. Initially trained in the Socialist Realist style, Liu studied mural painting as a graduate student at the Central Academy of Fine Art in Beijing, before immigrating to the US in 1984 to attend the University of California, San Diego, where she studied under Allan Kaprow, the American originator of Happenings.

Known for paintings based on historical Chinese photographs, Hung Liu’s subjects over the years have been prostitutes, refugees, street performers, soldiers, laborers, and prisoners, among others. As a painter, Liu challenges the documentary authority of historical Chinese photographs by subjecting them to the more reflective process of painting. Much of the meaning of Liu’s painting comes from the way the washes and drips dissolve the documentary images, suggesting the passage of memory into history, while working to uncover the cultural and personal narratives fixed – but often concealed – in the photographic instant. Washing her subjects in veils of dripping linseed oil, she both "preserves and destroys the image.” Liu has invented a kind of weeping realism that surrenders to the erosion of memory and the passage of time, while also bringing faded photographic images vividly to life as rich, facile paintings. She summons the ghosts of history to the present. In effect, Liu turns old photographs into new paintings.

A two time recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in painting, Liu also received a Lifetime Achievement Award in Printmaking from the Southern Graphics Council International in 2011. A retrospective of Liu’s work, “Summoning Ghosts: The Art and Life of Hung Liu,” was recently organized by the Oakland Museum of California, and is scheduled to tour nationally through 2015. In a review of that show, the Wall Street Journal called Liu “the greatest Chinese painter in the US.” Liu’s works have been exhibited extensively and collected by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, and the Los Angeles County Museum, among others. Liu currently lives in Oakland, California. She is Professor Emerita at Mills College, where she has taught since 1990.

Jeff Kelley lives in Oakland, California. A practicing art critic since 1977, he has written reviews and essays for such publications as Artforum, Art in America, and the Los Angeles Times. From 1993 – 2005 he taught Art Theory and Criticism at the University of California, Berkeley, and edited/authored two books on Allan Kaprow published by the University of California Press. Kelley was also the Consulting Curator of Contemporary Art at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco from 1998 – 2008, where he developed the museum’s contemporary exhibitions and publications programs, organizing exhibitions by Chinese artists Sui Jianguo (“The Sleep of Reason,” 2005), Liu Xiaodong (“The Three Gorges Project,” 2006), and Zhan Wang (“On Gold Mountain: Sculpture from the Sierra,” 2008). In addition, Kelley curated the popular and critically acclaimed "Half-Life of a Dream: Chinese Contemporary Art from the Logan Collection" for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2008), and currently functions as an advisor on Chinese art to the Logan Collection. He is presently editing a book, for the University of California Press, of the writings of internationally known Chinese artist and architect Ai Weiwei.

hungliu.com


Workshops

Etching Workshop with Stephen Thomas

12/13/16

etching1.jpg

January 2 - 7, 2017
Limited to 12 Participants

Stephen will introduce intaglio printing to beginners and provide advanced printmakers the opportunity to refine their skills. Participants work on copper plates in all the traditional techniques: drypoint, hard and soft ground etching, aquatint, and multi-plate color printing. Class is conducted through demonstrations and one-on-one instruction.

Email info@oxbowschool.org for details on the workshop and registration information.

A School Like No Other

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