Calendar
Events List
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06/01/2013 - 06/02/2013
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06/07/2013 - 06/08/2013
Past Events
Art School Gallery Exhibitions
D300 Gallery: PHOTO FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
D301 Gallery: PHOTO FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
L-SHAPE Gallery: ART FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
MAIN Gallery Perimeter: ART FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
A402 Gallery: ART FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
LIME Gallery:ART FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
MINT Gallery: ART FOUNDATION EXHIBTION
Paul Brach Lecture Series: Connie Butler
F200
ART: “Since 2006 Connie Butler has been Chief Curator of Drawings at MOMA, New York where she has organized major exhibitions including, "On Line: Drawing Through the Twentieth Century" (2011); "Greater New York" (2010) at MOMA PS1; 'Paul Sietsema: Figure 3" (2008); and "Marlene Dumas: Measuring Your Own Grave" (2008). She is currently researching the first North American retrospective exhibition of Brazilian artist Lygia Clark which she will co-organize for MOMA in 2014. Prior to her work at MOMA, Butler was Curator at The Museum Contemporary Art, Los Angeles where she organized the critically acclaimed international exhibitions, "WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution," (2006) and "Afterimage: Drawing Through Process," (1998) as well as numerous one person exhibitions with artists including Amy Adler, Jessica Bronson, Lewis Baltz, Rodney Graham, Kay Rosen, Robert Smithson (co-curator) and Eric Wesley. Butler has published widely on the subject of contemporary art including, most recently, "From Conceptualism to Feminism: Lucy Lippard's Numbers Shows 1969-1974," (Afterall, 2012) and "Defining Contemporary Art in 200 Pivotal Artworks," (Phaidon, 2012) and was the editor of "Modern Women: Women Artists and the Museum of Modern Art," (MOMA, 2010).”
Art School Gallery Exhibitions
D300 Gallery: Graphic Design Program Exhibtion
D301 Gallery: Graphic Design Program Exhibtion
L-SHAPE Gallery: Art Pilot's Exhibition
MAIN Gallery Perimeter: Theater Portfolio Review
A402 Gallery: Art & Technology MFA 1 Exhibition
LIME Gallery: Art & Technology MFA 1 Exhibition
MINT Gallery: Art & Technology MFA 1 Exhibition
Paul Brach Visiting Artist Lecture Series Presents John Divola
"My acts, my painting, my photographing, my considering, are part of, not separate from, this process of evolution and change. These photographs are not so much about this process as they are remnants from it. My participation was not so much one of intellectual consideration as one of visceral involvement." John Divola, 1980.
Divola received a B.A. from California State University in 1971 and later received an M.F.A. from University of California, Los Angeles in 1974. He has held residencies at many institutions including California Institute of the Arts. He has held the position of Professor in the art department at U.C. Riverside since 1988. His work has been featured in many solo exhibitions across United States, Europe, Japan and Australia. He participated in 1978, 1989, 2000 the Museum of Modern Art group exhibitions and in 1981 Whitney Biennial. Divola received many awards as Individual Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1973, 1976, 1979, 1990 and a Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in 1986. He published four books: Continuity, Isolated Houses, Dogs Chasing My Car In The Desert, and Three Acts. Divola works in photography, describing himself as exploring the landscape by looking for the edge between the abstract and the specific. He currently lives and works in Los Angeles.
Interview with John Divola on American Suburb: http://www.americansuburbx.com/2010/06/interview-interview-with-john-div...
Paul Brach Lecture Series: Jessica Rath
F200
ART: “Jessica’s sculptures, photographs and installations investigate intimate points at which human intervention has changed the course of the natural world. She questions the naturalist’s, artist’s and scientist’s drive to contain and beget beauty within the landscape, whether in the cultivated ground of agriculture and in our own backyards. Sublime and haunting, the work evokes a kind of grace found within survival and diversity at a molecular level. Recent solo exhibitions include Jack Hanley Gallery, NY; Pasadena Museum of California Art; Ben Maltz Gallery, Otis College of Art and Design; and the Torrance Art Museum. She has received many awards including a Center for Cultural Innovation Investing in Artists grant, Durfee Foundation ARC (Artist Resource for Completion) grants, a Metrolab Commission Grant, and the Bridge Residency Award from Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito, CA.
Jessica was born in Charleston, West Virginia and grew up in the southern Missouri Ozarks and Vermont. She received a BA (1990) in Sociology from University of Missouri, MFA (1996) from California Institute for the Arts and studied at School of the Art Institute in Chicago. Jessica works in Los Angeles, where she has resided for 18 years.”
Art School Gallery Exhibitions
D300 Gallery: Graphic Design Program Exhibtion
D301 Gallery: Graphic Design Program Exhibtion
L-SHAPE Gallery: Class Exhibition
MAIN Gallery Perimeter: Class Exhibition
A402 Gallery: Class Exhibition
LIME Gallery: Class Exhibition
MINT Gallery: Class Exhibition
CultureHub Presents Control-Alt-Pixel: Reboot Your Approach to Design
CalArts, XBOX (Main Gallery Conference Room)
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: Scott Hutchinson and Pete Hawkes will conduct a design workshop with students at The Seoul Institute of the Arts via Telepresence.
CalArts students of all disciplines are welcome to join the workshop. Interested students are required to RSVP with Annie Kim at annie@culturehub.org.
CultureHub: http://www.culturehub.org
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, GRAPHIC DESIGN: New tools provide artists and designers added control over the inputs and outputs of interactive systems. Participants will work together in groups to connect a capacitive-sensing microcontroller, a webcam, and a simple Java program. The process will help them explore new ideas in physical interface and environmental reinterpretation using color, density, and texture.
Makey-Makey
This consumer-grade microcontroller connects everyday objects to computer interfaces. Any conductive material (fruit, play dough, water, graphite on paper) can serve as a trigger within a coded system.
Webcam
Interactive interfaces rely more and more on live video feeds to gather information and sense changes in the environment.
Processing
This Java IDE was built specifically for artists and designers as a creative tool for learning and leveraging programming. Its intuitive interface will allow students to tinker with the logic behind the interactive system.
*No previous electronics experience is required but some camera knowledge is helpful. Basic electronics and basic coding is also helpful but again not required. One of the goals of the workshop is to introduce designers to electronics as a tool to add to their design process. Students need to bring a digital camera, webcam or phone camera and Mac laptop if available.
Scott Hutchinson, designer, is the program director of the Visual Arts at UCLA Extension where he oversees the design, studio, photography, art history and user experience programs. He has an MFA from UCLA's Design Media Arts program and specializes in usability, branding, social media and web development. Scott is also the user experience and strategic advisor for the UCLA Volunteer Center, and the producer of TEDxUCLA. Scott has been on the board of the nation design group AIGA Los Angeles under three presidents, and is currently on the AIGA National Design Educators Committee.
Website: http://scotthutchinson.com
Pete Hawkes has over 12 years of interaction design and motion experience working with a wide range of clients including Ogilvy Interactive, KFC, Liz Claiborne, JWT, and the Sci-Fi Channel. Pete holds an MFA in Design Media Arts from UCLA and a BFA in Graphic Design from Brigham Young University. He has taught at Utah Valley University and the Maryland Institute College of Art.



