Current Exhibition
Thoughts and Prayers from the Glowing Rectangle by Bahareh Khoshooee
Drew University Fall 2024 Artist in Residence
Curated by: Ryan Woodring
October 14 – November 26th, 2024
Reception and Talk: Wednesday November 13th 2024, from 5-7 pm
Previous Exhibitions
Suspicion: Recent Work by Shayna Miller
Suspicion: Recent Work by Shayna Miller
Curated by: Kimberly Rhodes
August 27 – October 4, 2024
Opening Reception: September 6, 2024 from 5-7 pm
Senior Exhibition 2024
2024 Senior Exhibition
Selena Adrianzen, Megan Andrew, Isabella Blanco, Michael Clark, Grace Hezel, Kyla Koslov,
Hannah Lee, Maxine Lloyd, Cat Maida, Maddie Ortiz, Linwood Riddick
Curated by: Jason Karolak
April 26 – May 10, 2024
Opening Reception:Friday April 26th, 5-7 pm
Gabriela Salazar: Whether Break or Shape
Gabriela Salazar: Whether Break or Shape
Curated by: Jason Karolak
April 1-19, 2024
Reception and Q&A: April 16th, 4-6 pm
Andrew Brehm: Nightcrawlers
Andrew Brehm: Nightcrawlers
Curated by: Nicholas des Cognets
January 18 – February 23, 2024
Artist Reception and Q&A: January 25, 4-6 pm
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition, Nightcrawlers, by artist Andrew Brehm, on view January 18th through February 23rd, 2023. The Gallery is located in the Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University and is open Tuesday through Friday 12:00-4pm, and by appointment. The exhibition, curated by Nicholas des Cognets, consists of a series of new and existing sculptures spanning 10 years of production.
Andrew Brehm is a sculptor whose work incorporates video, design objects, and performance, often using craft techniques to make objects that belong more to the world of domestic furniture than that of the art world. His exhibitions are eerily humorous and sometimes surreal while addressing themes such as family and childhood, manufacturing, and the mechanisms of body and magic.
Nightcrawlers comprises several new works alongside objects created over the last decade. Many of the sculptures on display are interactive. To reveal each object’s function or method of fabrication, visitors to the exhibition must move from passive viewers to active participants. The sculptures act like tools of ambiguous function, familiar and meant to interact with the body, but also mysterious and unknown. The work feels both ordinary and mystical, like furniture in a cartoon wizard’s dungeon. It looks like a chair but is it enchanted with some strange property?
Many of Brehm’s materials are salvaged and recycled, a way to address issues of reuse and recycling, and a generative refusal to allow trash to remain trash. One of Brehm’s major sculptural materials is pulped residential waste paper, often mixed with hair and sculpted like clay. Other works incorporate a discarded rug, foam collected on the bank of the Hudson river, and metal parts salvaged from a local dump. The show shares its name with the first sculpture you encounter when entering the gallery. This piece of solid aluminum was cut with a waterjet into the shape of a worm considering its own tail. This curious Ouroboros hints at the loftier concepts of the exhibition and Brehm’s belief in the unity of all things both physical and spiritual, never disappearing but perpetually changing form.
Smita Sen – Grief Body Semiotics
Smita Sen – Grief Body Semiotics
Curated by: Ryan Woodring
October 16th – December 1st
Artist Reception: Friday November 3rd, 5 – 7pm
First Pieces - Board Games in Translation
First Pieces – Board Games in Translation
Curated by: Alex de Voogt
August 29th – October 6th
Closing Reception:Friday October 6th, 5 – 7pm
Sylvie Harris
Zachary Fabri
Student Exhibition 22
Student Exhibition 22
Mark Holmes
Mark Holmes: The Thing of It
Rosalie Yu
Rosalie Yu
Candy-Glazed Eyes of Haunted Machines
Senior Thesis Exhibition 2022
Senior Thesis Exhibition
- Gabriel de la Torre
- Paula V. Guzman
- Rachel Kim]
- Sanghyoun (Charlie) Lee
- Gabrielle Lugbauer
- Elizabeth (Lizzie) Mignano
- Edouard Thormann
Carrie Gundersdorf
Carrie Gundersdorf
Rare Finds
March 16 – April 22nd
WORK!
WORK!
Art Department Faculty Show
Isak Applin, Lee Arnold, Richard Choi, Nicholas des Cognets, Brian Galderisi, Carrie Gundersdorf, Sacha Ingber, Jason Karolak, James Mercer, Rory Mulligan, Pierre Obando, Claire Sherman, Rebecca Solderholm, Raymond Stein, Ryan Woodring
February 2nd – March 4th, 2022
YDC
YDC
Young’s Distanced Collective
Kiyah Colson – Jessica Corujo – Vanessa Crespi – Angle Dougherty – Weronika Teresa Klisiewicz – Maria José Navas Espinal – Kristina Olsen – Lydia Segal – Elizabeth Schafer – Méa Rose St Amour – Sami Strathem – Kirstin Waldmann – Yue Wang
November 4th – November 24th, 2021
Cheryl Harper
Senior Exhibition 2021
Senior Exhibition 2021
April 30 – May 15, 2021
Curated by Jason Karolak
Artists:
Abby Brickner
Eli Jasper Frey Davis
Enrique Jasso
Ally Karpiak
Alison Kipe
Feride Masaci
Gabby Mendoza
Ciara Murphy-Anderson
Caroline Polich
Rebecca Schuman
Bree Scotti
Evelyn Grace Vivieros
Oren Williams
the stuff the world is made of
March 17, 2020-April 2nd, 2021
the stuff the world is made of
Curated by Kim Rhodes
Artists: Martha Clippinger, Jeffrey Haddorff, Valerie Hegarty, Leah Wolff
For more information please call 973-408-3758
Email [email protected].
Online starting: May 8th, 2020
urated by Kim Rhodes
Artists: Martha Clippinger, Jeffrey Haddorff, Valerie Hegarty, Leah Wolff
For more information please call 973-408-3758
Email [email protected].
Recombinant Nature
Recombinant Nature
Curated by Sylvie Harris & Rebecca Soderholm
January 21 – February 21, 2020
Closing Reception: February 21 2020 | 5 – 7pm
Artists:
Lee Arnold
Brian Galderisi
Kate Greene
Daniel Gordon
Tanya Marcuse
Susan Morelock
Tom Birkner
The Rain Paintings
Curated by Michael Peglau
September 3 – October 4 2019
Opening Reception: September 13 2019 | 5 – 7pm
Artist Talk: September 13 2019 | 2pm | Doyo 201
Isak Applin
Tower of Romance
Curated by Claire Sherman
October 11 – November 15 2019|
Opening Reception: October 18 2019 | 5 – 7pm
Artist Talk: TBD
Student Show
December 6 – December 13 2019
Opening Reception: December 6 2019
Steven Gilbert
Steven Gilbert
Shelter
Curator: Raymond Saá Stein
March 20 – April 24, 2019
Reception: March 22, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Artist Talk: March 26, 1:00 p.m.
This photographic portfolio reverently depicts a simple eighteenth-century farmhouse as a cozy shelter for mind as well as body.
Senior Exhibition 2019
Curator: Raymond Saá Stein
May 3 – May 8, 2019
Reception: May 3, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Jack Ryan
Jack Ryan
Sound and Suspicion
Curator: Lee Arnold
January 24 – February 22, 2019
Artist Talk: February 22, 2:00 p.m. / ARTS 106
Reception: February 22, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Sound and Suspicion by artist Jack Ryan. Ryan is an interdisciplinary artist who explores trance and contemporary culture through the conduits of sonic theory, sculpture, and optics. He is a Professor of Art at the University of Oregon.
Ryan’s exhibition at Drew University will consist of sculpture and works on paper that begins with research for an article into the nebulously dark history of Avant-guard sound production as a starting point. The works are loosely based on a deep historical suspicion of early Avant-guard sound production and its ties to governmental agencies interested in the emerging practice for covert purposes. Rumors concerning sound artist’s sinister roles covertly influencing history persist. In the 60’s and 70s titans of early experimental sound production may have knowingly, or unknowingly, cooperated with the CIA in their earliest explorations of no touch torture principles. Rumors of the French government broadcasting the brown tone to break up May 1968 riots continue to circulate. Musician Leon Theremin’s invention of a passive microphone installed in the American embassy in Moscow changed the landscape of Cold War surveillance for 7 years. Today, sound’s nefarious history cast a shroud of uncertainty on American-Cuban relations in the wake of American diplomats being evacuated under suspicions of sonic attacks at the American Embassy in Havana. This research will creatively consider the complex relationship between sound, sculptural space, and political landscapes.
Ryan’s work has been exhibited at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington, DC); La Maison Laurentine (France); Ausstellungsraum Klingental (Basel, Switzerland); the Palace of Fine Arts, Ministry of Culture (Cairo, Egypt); the Dublin Electronic Arts Festival (Ireland); the American University Museum (Washington, DC); Maryland Institute College of Art (Baltimore); the Phillips Collection (Washington, DC); and Syracuse University (New York). Ryan has twice received fellowships to attended the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity (Alberta, Canada), and has attended a residency at the Djerassi Resident Artists Program (California), supported by the Ford Family Foundation.
Michael Peglau
Paintings: 2008 – 2018
September 7 – October 5, 2018
Reception: September 7, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Artist Talk: September 28, 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. / ARTS 106
Andrew Zimmerman
Under/Cut
Curator: Raymond Stein
October 16 – November 16, 2018
Reception: November 2, 5:00- 7:00 p.m.
Student Show 2018
December 7 – December 13, 2018
Reception: December 7, 5:00 – 7:00PM
James Fiorentino
Rare Wildlife Revealed
May 22 – June 19, 2018
Reception: June 1, 4 – 7 p.m.
The artist will talk about his work during the reception.
Free Admission
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Rare Wildlife Revealed by artist James Fiorentino.
This exhibit depicts some of New Jersey’s most endangered and vulnerable wildlife species. James Fiorentino’s evocative watercolors educate and engage viewers about the precipitous declines that many of these species have undergone. By putting a spotlight on these charismatic yet often-overlooked wildlife species, Mr. Fiorentino’s partnership with Conserve Wildlife Foundation seeks to bring attention to the very tangible steps that people can take to save and strengthen these wildlife populations.
The James Fiorentino, C’99, Traveling Art Exhibition in Partnership with Conserve Wildlife Foundation of NJ.
Rare Wildlife Revealed: The James Fiorentino Traveling Art Exhibition is sponsored by Omni Distribution, LLC, Flying Fish Brewing Company, Merrill G. & Emita Hastings Foundation, Studio 7 Fine Art Gallery, and Somerset Patriots.
The Korn Gallery is located in the Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University and is open Tuesday through Friday 12:30-4:00 PM, selected weekends and by appointment.
For more information please call: (973) 408 – 3758
Senior Exhibition 2018
May 4 – May 9, 2018
Curator: Jason Karolak
Reception: May 4, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
The Art Department proudly presents Senior Exhibition, in the Korn Gallery and Room 207.
Artists: Than Chapman, Anna Scott King, Z. M. LaChance, Jamie Larissa Pierre, Anna Scheckel, Adam Tenorio, Smantha Valkos, Christina C. Wallace and Tanirah N. Watson.
Gallery Hours: 9.30 am – 5.00pm.
For more information please call 973-408-3758
Email [email protected].
Group Exhibition - Primary
Primary
An exhibition that explores the use of color within contemporary art, and includes a range of artists who consider color as a core concern of their work
March 22 – April 25, 2018
Curator: Jason Karolak
Reception: April 13, 5:00- 7:00 p.m.
Artists: Lee Arnold, Robert Burnier, Torkwase Dyson, Gabriele Evertz, Beverly Fishman, Clare Grill, Adam Henry, Gina Hunt, John Opera, Armita Raafat, Cary Smith, Arjan Zazueta
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the group exhibition PRIMARY, curated by Jason Karolak.
This exhibition explores the use of color within contemporary art, and includes a range of artistic practices that employ color as a core concern. Gabriele Evertz makes abstract paintings, composed of vertical bands, that investigate how color areas situate in space and project forward (or backward) in relation to neighboring areas. Also interested in the phenomenal workings of color, Gina Hunt uses hand-dyed scrim constructions to filter natural light into interior environments. Through process-based formats that engage both photography and painting, John Opera examines how light functions perceptually and philosophically. Lee Arnold’s videos consider similar questions while speaking to the spheres of science and the natural world. Torkwase Dyson, who almost exclusively uses various blacks in her drawings and paintings, examines bodily relationships to materiality and liquidity, with subtle references to cultural and environmental issues. Beverly Fishman, Robert Burnier, and Armita Raafat make dimensional objects that function between painting and sculpture. Fishman’s minimal works are composed of saturated, often fluorescent hues to suggest color’s narcotic power. Burnier’s bended and folded forms, with specific, hard-to-name colors, appear reductive while retaining an improvisational openness. Raafat’s blue sculptural works reference Islamic architecture and design, ornament and repetition, as they also speak to geometric abstraction. The paintings of Cary Smith, using a primarily geometric vocabulary, organize and balance color into precise, handmade resolutions. Arjan Zazueta also uses a palette of bright, strong color to playfully consider pictorial pleasure during dark political times. Adam Henry’s paintings use color as a central component in their questions about language, repetition, and perception. Clare Grill’s organic, intuitively responsive paintings accumulate smaller markings and sensations into cohesive fields of seductive color. The exhibition aims to feature individual approaches to color usage and art-making, while creating a dialogue of related conversations between works.
The Korn Gallery is located in the Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University and is open Tuesday through Friday 12:30-4:00 PM, selected weekends and by appointment. Free Admission.
For more information please call: (973) 408 – 3758
Korn Gallery, Drew University, 36 Madison Avenue, Madison, NJ 07940
Gina Werfel
Interface
January 30 – March 2, 2018
Curator: Lee Arnold
Reception: February 2, 5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Artist Talk: February 2, 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. / ARTS 106
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Interface by artist Gina Werfel.
Like polyphony in music Werfel’s work consists of textures of multiple independent voices. In her recent paintings, she employs a wide vocabulary of marks which slyly reference the influence of Photoshop on contemporary visual culture. A shallow space, in which a combination of clearly defined graphical lines and stencils sit on the surface, contrasts with a more ambiguous environment made up of naturalistic gestures that fade in and out of focus like a distant memory. In a process-driven series of mono-prints the removal of the hand suggests this dichotomy even more strongly.
Recent travels abroad have influenced Werfel’s work. Inspired by a stay in Singapore in 2015 where she taught at Yale-NUS College, Werfel began to layer stencils over her gestural brush marks. In 2016 while a visiting artist at the American Academy in Rome, she renewed her interest in Baroque ceiling paintings and incorporated their spatial complexity into her compositions.
Trained at Columbia University, the New York Studio School and Hamilton College, Werfel has been featured in numerous exhibitions. Recent solo exhibitions include the Coombs Gallery at American University of Paris, Prince Street Gallery in NYC, and the Mondavi Winery in Napa, CA. She has been awarded residencies at the American Academy in Rome, the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center in Italy, the Djerassi Foundation in California, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and Yosemite National Park. She recently completed a public art commission Clearing for Burnett Miller Park in McKinley Village in Sacramento.
Werfel is a Professor of Art at University of California Davis.
The Senior Exhibition 2017
Cynthia Lin
Re-Drawn
October 20–November 21, 2017
Curator: Claire Sherman
Reception: November 10, 5–7 p.m.
Artist Talk: November 10, 2 p.m., Arts 106
Admission: Free
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Re-Drawn by artist Cynthia Lin.
Cynthia Lin uses painting, drawing, digital and lithographic processes to alternate between mapping and improvisation.
Hyper-detailed images of skin, orifices and scars, acquired through direct computer scans of the body, become sites for excavation: a variety of approaches are used, including hand-drawn, digital, and lithographic techniques. Applied to large scale, these processes become unpredictable, thus alternately reinforcing recognition and introducing alternative interpretation. Multiple, ongoing translations, supported by representational and digital structures, intertwine the familiar, subconscious, and irreconcilable.
Cynthia Lin was born in Taiwan and grew up near Chicago, Illinois. She currently lives in New York and works in Brooklyn. Cynthia Lin was awarded a New York Foundation for the Arts Finalist in Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts in 2014 and a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 2006. She has shown at Lehmann Maupin Gallery, Yossi Milo Gallery, DeCordova Museum, Pierogi Gallery, Garis & Hahn Gallery, Michael Steinberg Gallery, The National Academy of Design, The Drawing Center, Weatherspoon Art Museum and Kentler International Drawing Space. Her work is in collections at the Minneapolis Institute of Art and the Dallas Museum of Art. Fellowships include The Brown Foundation Fellows Program at the Dora Maar House in Menerbes, France, as well as Yaddo, The MacDowell Colony, The Space Program at the Marie Walsh Sharpe Art Foundation, Blue Mountain Center, Djerassi Resident Artists Program, and the Visiting Artists and Scholars Program at the American Academy in Rome.
She is Assistant Professor and Area Coordinator of Painting + Drawing at Purchase College, SUNY.
The Korn Gallery is located in the Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University and is open Tuesday through Friday 12:30-4:00 PM, selected weekends and by appointment.
For more information please call: (973) 408 – 3758
Omar Rodriguez-Graham
September 5–October 6, 2017
Curator: Michael Peglau
Reception: October 6, 5–7 p.m.
Artist Talk: October 6, 2–3 p.m.
Omar Rodriguez-Graham C’02 is based in Mexico City and is known around the world. He explores painting’s inherent language-hoping to find the meeting point between the recognizable and the abstract.
This program has been made possible by support from the Traphagen Distinguished Alumni Speaker Series Endowment. Endowed by Mr. Ross Traphagen, Trustee Emeritus, the series brings prominent alumni to campus to engage in discussion with students and other members of the Drew community.
Patty Cateura
Distant Exposure
Curator: Kimberly Rhodes
March 21- April 25, 2017
Reception: April 7, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
Free Admission
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Distant Exposure by Patty Cateura. To counteract the passive intake of images that bombard us daily, Cateura’s paintings entice the viewer to slow down and pause. Her art originates from time spent in remote landscapes, hiking, camping- being in nature. Back in the studio, this inspiring exposure yields flattened and juxtaposed abstract shapes of mountains, vistas, canyons, rivers and sea. Color is precisely chosen and hand-made from dispersion pigment. Perspective is vast and skewed within the infinite expanse of monochromatic space. Occasional floating and fragmented geometric shapes allude to the man-made. Yet nature prevails in hills, trees, desert and pure color fields. Through the openness and sometimes emptiness of her compositions, Cateura evokes nature’s vibrancy, power, scale, and stillness as an arresting visual pause from the overdose of our media driven digital lives.
Patty Cateura attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, received an MFA from The Maryland Institute of the Arts and a BA from Oberlin College. Her work has been shown throughout the US including recent solo shows at Robert Henry Contemporary, Brooklyn, NY; Carol Shen Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; The Cooler Gallery, VT; and Gregory Lind Gallery, San Francisco, CA. She has been awarded residencies at: The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts; Yaddo; The MacDowell Colony; Virginia Center for the Creative Arts; and The Millay Colony. She has received painting grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and The Pollock-Krasner Foundation
Rory Mulligan
Sam I Am
Exhibition: January 24 – February 29, 2017
Reception: February 3, 5:30 – 7:30 PM
ARTIST TALK: February 3, 4;30 ART 106
Free Admission
The Korn Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Sam I Am by Rory Mulligan.
Rory Mulligan is a photographer who explores the history of an urban landscape that was the setting of human violence. He comments on the erasure of the site that attempts to re-write its history. Mulligan compares this guise to ancient male human violence, which he suggests conceals masculine vulnerability.
In addition to the solo exhibition at the Korn Gallery, Mulligan had solo exhibitions at Motus Fort, Tokyo, Japan and Center Gallery at Fordham University, New York, NY. His work was included in group shows at Crosstown Arts, Memphis, TN; Lisa Cooley, New York, NY; Skirball Museum, Cincinnati, OH; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA, as well as other galleries and institutions. His awards include the Process Space Residence, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, New York, NY; the Photography Fellowship Commendation Award, Silver Eye Center for Photography, and the Ward Cheney Memorial Award, Yale University, New Haven, CT. His work is collected by The Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Rory Mulligan received a BA from Fordham University and an MFA from Yale University. He currently teaches at Drew University in Madison, NJ.
The Gallery is located in the Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University and is open Tuesday through Friday 12:30-4:00 PM, selected weekends and by appointment.
Norman Lowrey
SOUNDINGS
Singing Masks/Automata/ Multimedia
Curator: Michael Peglau
Exhibition: October 20 – November 18, 2016
Reception: November 11, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
https://vimeo.com/192992043
Artist Statement
Sounding. Listening. Connecting. Dreaming.
I am an unabashed animist. I believe that everything is infused with what, for want of better word, might be called spirit. There is intelligence at the heart of all matter. Human intelligence is just one peculiar manifestation of this larger ground of being. Other manifestations are radically different, incomprehensible to conventional human sensibilities. Yet all things give voice to the underlying cohering essence, the spirit swirling through cells, molecules, atoms, quarks and superstrings. If we listen carefully we can resonate along with these primary vibrations and receive information, knowledge, altered understanding.
This has been the thrust of the teaching by the Singing Masks that I have been making and employing in ceremonial/performances over the past thirty-five years. Their voices and iconographic presences have been continual reminders of connection with that animistic sense of spirit-essence in rivers, rocks, sky, trees, as well as among all things animate. They have become guides in all my work into shifting perspectives, into experiencing everything as holy (William Blake), into mythic and oneiric reality. This same sensibility has also come to inform my approach to making automata, sculptural instruments and a variety of multimedia creations.
The ceremonial/performance pieces inspired by the Singing Masks are not entertainments in a traditional sense. They are not music, theater or dance meant to tell a story or lead one along a preconceived path. They are more often invitations to dive into ineffable richness and chaos even, to discover and explore
Whenever possible I like to make use of found objects as well as inexpensive materials, including electronics. I have also sometimes incorporated state-of-the-art computer technology to loop and pitch-shift the voices of the masks in real-time. This can be heard in recordings of some performances. I do not hide the technology. Nor do I make much effort to gloss over the inevitable awkward gestures needed to control the devices in my near-blind masked condition. I have an interest in the convergence of the primal and the present, the sacred and the mundane. In the Dream Time presence of the masks, automata, sculptural instruments and multimedia, even the most trivial occurrence may be recognized as having its own kind of perfection and beauty.
Dreaming. Connecting. Listening. Sounding.
Norman Lowrey
October, 2016
Sangram Majumdar
here
Curator: Margaret Kuntz
Exhibition: August 30-October 6
Reception: September 9, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
Artist Statement
Left turns at night.
I only work from life, which is a half-truth.
I make left turns more than right turns, mostly at night. At those stoplights that don’t have a green turn signal I wait for a break in the oncoming traffic, and go.
The painting is me in space.
Continuity is contingent on interruptions, or is it the other way around?
‘What if’s and ‘why not’s.
Looking begins with naming.
Painting is simultaneity experienced viscerally.
Does knowing something is abstract make it more real?
Does something verifiable open up the possibility for abstract thought?
The image is everywhere; I wonder what stays.
Contours and silhouettes,
Echoes and parallel possibilities,
Spaces interrupted and painterly interventions.
Stephanie Elden
processes of life and decay
June 3 – June 24, 2016
Opening Reception : June 3, 4-6 p.m.
Artist Talk: June 3, 4:30p.m.
I seek to understand why humans are so troubled by the inevitable processes of life and decay that we feel a need to create an artificial distance between ourselves and the aspects of the human experience that make us uncomfortable.
I am speaking to the distancing from our food sources, from our bodies, from our instincts, from the environment and from death. We’ve developed machines and unnatural procedures in hopes of bypassing the difficult or distressing conditions of life. We try to perpetuate the good: keep our food fresh, preserve our bodies, and fight sickness & corrosion. As in the story of Siddhartha’s enlightenment, we are being blinded from the negative sights and ultimately prevented from seeing life for what it really is: as a process of constant change.
With my work I am tracing the symptoms of the epidemic that I observe to be stemming from mankind’s disengagement with their natural processes, and through the creation of investigative artworks that focus on the abnormalities arising out of repetitive manipulation, I offer up my notes to the world in the hopes that someone more political than I will be curious enough to respond with a solution.
Stephanie Elden
May 2016
Robert Yarber
Sleep has Eyes
Exhibition: March 17 – April 30, 2016
Reception: April 1, 5:30 -7:30 p.m.
Artist Talk: March 31, 5:00 p.m.
The Korn Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition Sleep has Eyes by Robert Yarber on view March 17 through April 30, 2016. The Gallery is located in the Dorothy Young Center for the Arts at Drew University and is open Tuesday through Friday 12:30-4 p.m., selected weekends and by appointment.
This exhibition consists of paintings and drawings Yarber has done from 2005 to the present. Organized by Drew Professor of Art, Michael Peglau, the exhibition features work whose focus lies not in the pursuit of simple family resemblances of style nor of a series of imagistically related works. Instead Yarber has elected work for this show which all arose of what he has termed, ‘the intensity of his response to the moment.’
Since the early 1970’s, Yarber has created a unique oeuvre which is remarkable in the compositional complexities of its inhabited and natural spaces and in its deployment of figures, ranging from supine to falling to levitating. Yarber’s work is no less fascinating in terms of his great resources as a colorist. Beyond his total command of both artificial and natural light effects, he often pushes his color into an extreme zone, where coupled with his imagery, it unmoors his work from being exclusively engaged in a shared social world. Instead, his color in it’s aggressive, incandescent interaction with his imagery opens into an interior world where, while we all venture there, unlike Yarber few of us return fully cognizant of its uncanny vividness.
Yarber has had a remarkable career with numerous exhibits in New York, including the Whitney Biennial, many exhibitions internationally, including the Venice Biennial, and many exhibitions in major galleries in Los Angeles and San Francisco. He currently is a distinguished Professor of Art at Pennsylvania State University.
Ben Pranger
Spacer
January 18 – February 20
Reception: February 5, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.
Ben Pranger’s current sculpture combines organic and architectural elements in hybrid constructions of papier-mâché, plaster, wood and paint. Moving between organization and chaos, the work often begins with a fragment of a previous work. Blobby masses are built around skeletal structures or scaffolding supports bulbous growths. These contrasting forms operate in tension: pixilated grids emerge from fluid forms like cities colonizing an indeterminate terrain. The sculpture is a kind of failed architecture, where structures, overwhelmed by disaster, collapse under the weight of matter, only to rise again from the ruins to rebuild the city anew. While the sculpture is decidedly low-tech, investigating material-based abstraction, it also imagines future worlds and habitations, suggesting sci-fi, dystopian scenarios.
Ben Pranger earned a BFA from Oberlin College and MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has shown his work throughout the U.S., including recent group shows at Drawing Rooms (NJ), Artist-Run/ Satellite Show (Miami), Trestle Gallery (NY) and Grizzly Grizzly (PA). He has participated in artist residencies at Kohler Art/Industry, Fine Arts Work Center of Provincetown, the Marie Walsh Sharpe Studio Program, and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and has received sculpture grants from the Virginia Commission for the Arts, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New Jersey Council for Art.