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Fall 2006 - Spring 2007 Exhibitions
For more information about exhibitions, opening receptions, and related talks, please call
(610)-328-8488. All lectures will take place in the Lang Performing Arts Center Cinema.

Peneolpe Jencks
Beach Series II, 1998-2006
Cooper Foundation Event
September 6 —October 8, 2006

Open class and discussion:
September 7, 1:15-2:15 PM
Lecture: September 7, 4:30PM
Reception: September 7, 5:30-7:30PM

 

 

Penelope Jencks, plaster figures from the Beach Series II

This exhibition features the most recent work from Penelope Jencks' traveling retrospective organized by the Boston University School of Visual Arts. Her series of eight 10-foot-tall plaster figures-presented alongside her intimate bronze, plaster, and terracotta sculptures-are the culmination of a distinguished 40 year career. A member of the National Academy of Design and the Royal British Society of Sculptors, Jencks' numerous awards include a National Endowment of the Arts Commendation for Design Excellence. Her celebrated public commissions include her monumental sculpture of Eleanor Roosevelt for Riverside Park in New York. A 47-page color catalog accompanies the exhibition.

Ron Tarver, Shell Study #17, 2004, 40 x 39 inches, Giclee print

Ron Tarver
What the Eye Doesn't See: Images in Silver and Ink
2006 Donald Jay Gordon Visiting Artist
October 13 —November 12, 2006

Lecture:
October 26, 4:30 PM
Gallery Reception: October 26, 5:30-7:30 PM

 

Ron Tarver's photographs have been exhibited nationally and internationally and are in many distinguished collections including the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the National Museum of American Art in Washington, D.C., and the State Museum in Harrisburg, Pa. Tarver has earned numerous awards, grants, and fellowships, including a 2001 Pew Fellowship in the Arts and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, National Geographic Magazine, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. His work is represented by the Sande Webster Gallery, Philadelphia. Tarver has been a staff photographer at The Philadelphia Inquirer since 1983.

 

 

Bill Freeland
Seasons Traversed
2006 Marjorie Heilman Visiting Artist
November 17-December 17, 2006

Lecture: Friday, November 17, 4:30 PM
Gallery Reception: 5:30-7:30 PM

Bill Freeland, Inverted Yoke, 2005, 27 3/4 x 13 x 4 inches, wood, stone, & steel.

Bill Freeland's exhibition features recent sculptures and drawings together with signature works from his more than 50-year career. In his work, Freeland offers metaphors to reorient the viewer to nature, environment, and the basic rituals of living. His sculpture can be seen as a re-evaluation of the 19th century processes of bending wood and working with stone and steel. Freeland divides his time between Chester County, Pa., and County Mayo, Ireland. He has had numerous one-person exhibitions at distinguished venues including the Royal Hibernian Academy of Art, Dublin; Taylor Galleries, Dublin; the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; the Delaware Art Museum; Oscarsson-Siegeltuch Gallery, New York; Touchstone Gallery, New York; and Dolan/Maxwell Gallery, New York.


Sue Johnson
Cabinet of Wonders: Marvelous Transformations and Other Accidental Images
Cooper Foundation Event
January 25 —February 28, 2007

Lecture: "Wonder, Transformation and the Nature of Artifice", January 25, 4:30 PM
Gallery reception: 5:30—7 PM

Concurrent McCabe Library Exhibition by Sue Johnson:
Cabinet of Wonders: Sources and Resources
McCabe Library will present Johnson's artist's books and drawings together with selections from her personal collection of prints, books, and ephemera as well as archival materials from McCabe Library's collections.
Currently, the Steven Muller Distinguished Professor of the Arts and chair of the Art and Art History Department at St. Mary's College in Maryland, Johnson has mounted more than 30 solo exhibitions and garnered numerous awards including a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Painting and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Fellowship. A color catalog will accompany the exhibition.

 

 

In her mixed-media List Gallery installation, Sue Johnson examines the interrelationships between history, science, art, and identity. The exhibition presents highlights from her ongoing body of work: an The Alternative Encyclopedia. Through "reorganizing" our perception of the world, she explores the nature of picture making and the role of the artist in the production of knowledge and memory.

Michael Ananian, Getting Ready

Michael Ananian
Two Voices
March 8 —April 7, 2007

Lecture: March 8, 4:30 PM
Gallery reception: March 8, 5:30-7 PM

 

Two Voices features Ananian's narrative sequence of paintings in casein (a milk-based medium). A split-screen device is used within each painting to suggest separateness, isolation, and simultaneous endeavor. Seldom used in figurative painting today, narrative sequences investigate chronology and simultaneity while maintaining one of the most primary qualities of painting: the distillation of a moment for closer examination. In contrast to conventional painting methods where contrasts in value create the illusion of space, casein's limited value range tends to compress volume and depth. Such spatial tension contributes to his portrayal of psychologically intense characters and dilemmas. Ananian is an associate professor of painting and drawing at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and a frequent exhibitor in Philadelphia, having shown at Fan Gallery, Gross McCleaf Gallery, St. Joseph's University, and The Pennsylvania Academy Fine Arts Museum.


Last updated July 18, 2006 by Doru Gavril.
Send comments to Andrea Packard, List Gallery Director.
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