Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Box, first in a series of art installation. Friday May 3, 2013.

Box is first in a series of installation art shown in Studio 14 at 200 Main Street, Burlington, VT.  Each month, there will be a new installation with the intention to bring more awareness and experience of installation art  to the public, specifically the Burlington area. You enter the studio into a box the size of the room and 9ft tall.  There is a smaller open box in the center of the room and 2 small chairs in one corner. Box began with the idea of playing on the cliche of 'thinking out of the box' and that one can think they are 'outside of the box', but ultimately we are always inside of another 'box', hence never really 'outside of the box'.  Entering the studio, one can see that they are outside of one box, yet still inside of another. The work can be considered minimalist, monochromatic and essentialist. In the process of making the installation and after, with others comments, many additional themes and responses arose including; corporate oppression, reincarnation, safety, antidote to overstimulation of society, the impulse to 'contain' or 'compartmentalize' art especially if it challenges us, impermanence, temporality of the work, a visceral physical experience of being inside and a part of the artwork, an examination of the sensory experience of boxes/cardboard, meditative, look inside.








Sunday, May 12, 2013

Pipes



Studio 14 invites you to an intimate experience with the innate qualities of the pipe. "Pipes", second in a series of installation art by Karen Powell evokes an essentialist perspective on the subject matter and provides the opening for new association.  Open First Friday Art Walk 5-8pm and by appointment.
Located on the second floor of the Park Hill Building, Suite 14, 200 Main Street (next to Mirabelle's). 802-318-6050.

Friday, May 3, 2013

greedy and vain

"Artists are very greedy but not necessarily for money. There are so many other ways to get rich. Instead, they're always on the prowl for what I would call 'glimmerings,' the merest suggestion of a shape or an image -- some inkling that might become a painting, sculpture or performance. They're always looking, thinking, collecting, making, arranging, borrowing, experimenting, ruminating. The perpetual barrage of ideas is why they keep notebooks and obsessively self-document in order to hoard every possibility." ~Jeanne Silverthorne