Erica Prince, et al., Far In Far Out, FUEL Collection.

Read the article here.

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Thank you artblog!!

FUEL Presents Far In/Far Out: A group exhibition featuring the work of Mylinh Chau, Garrett Crabb, Garrett Davis and Erica Prince. On view from August 15th – October 24th, 2009.

The spectator has to think in a vocabulary of action: its inception, duration, direction – psychic state, concentration and relaxation of the will, passivity, alert waiting. He [/she] must become a connisseur of the gradations between the automatic, the spontaneous, the evoked.  -Harold Rosenberg

Erica Prince, Mylinh Chau, Garrett Crabb

Erica Prince, Mylinh Chau, Garrett Crabb

In viewing the work of these four artists, one becomes immediately aware of the physical and psychological conditions requisite to their mode of creation. Like the practitioners of the Dada and Surrealist movements, Chau, Crabb, Davis and Prince are also seemingly aware of these conditions and their potential as paths to illumination. Although each artist is uniquely defined through their own medium; collage, as a practice, seems to play an integral role in the development of these otherworldly and absurdist works.

The show brings together a selection of drawings from animator Garrett Davis whose critically acclaimed work [Story From North America] is, “a combination of surprisingly poignant song-driven storytelling and some of the most crazily inventive and funny hand drawn animation”. (Quoted from Amid of Cartoon Brew). Davis’ primary influence draws from his study of the long survey of western philosophy and oftentimes implies moral questioning. Although there is an absurd and funny dimension underlying Davis’ drawings, for example in the interactive collage of a moveable nun superimposed on another face in which you can change the expression, there is something about the work that leaves one feeling a bit unsettled.

Expounding on animist philosophy, proverbs and her own personal narrative, Mylinh Chau’s drawings envision alternate civilizations, inhabited by mythical creatures, humanoids, and macabre artifacts. Man/woman’s connection with the natural world is a dominant theme throughout most of her work, a factor that is likely inspired by her recent year-long visit to the Northern mountainous regions and coastal villages of Vietnam. Using ink and watercolor as her primary medium, these folkloric drawings seem mysteriously poised in an undefined pictorial space.

Submitting to chance and a willful misunderstanding of documentary-based source material (dated National Geographic Magazines and text book illustrations), Garrett Crabb presents collaged landscapes that are both humorous and disturbing in their unlocatable familiarity. In White Flag, for example, the background image featuring an atmospheric forest, is altered only by a single collaged addition, an ambiguous white form resembling a flag, floating ghost-like in the center. Although seemingly effortless in their application, these mysterious images are a labored balance of artistic imagination with concrete fact.

By projecting furniture, “art”, clutter and décor into her drawn interiors, Erica Prince creates environments of indulgence and frivolity. Lowbrow art and design merge to the effect of cinematic space, unpeopled yet distinctly evocative of the characters that might inhabit them. As the artists puts it in her own words: “I urge the viewer to make themselves at home. Become the missing character. Feel the silk upholstery, meditate, host a cocktail party, and entertain a lover. Try the spaces on like trying on a bad outfit. You know it is too flamboyant, but you have a sick curiosity of how it might look.” 

Artists Reception will be held on Friday September 4th – first Friday – from 6-9 pm.

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August 14 — October 24, 2009

Artist’s Reception: Friday, September 4th  5-9pm

6-9.  3rd and Arch!

DSCN3185Installation of Hussain Aga Khan: Focused On Nature.

Thanks to Jeff for all his help.

HAK Install 1

HAK Install 2

Join us this first Friday for the public opening of Hussain Aga Khan’s Focused On Nature.

From his global travels Hussain Aga Khan has been able to capture exotic creatures in their natural habitats from every corner of the world. Khan displays 52 digital prints, ranging in size from 11” x 15” to 38” x 42”. The resultant effect of the larger print sizes envelopes his viewer within the scene, where they are asked to contemplate the importance of our planet’s rich diversity.

Hussain Aga Khan asks us to view the work not through the lexicon of ‘the perfect print’ or in relationship to fine arts photography; instead, he brings to us vibrant, lively photographs of nature and animals, during a time of rapid environmental degeneration – a time when we need to see it most. Hussain hopes that we can share his understanding that every one of these animals and their homes are incredible and irreplaceable and need to be protected as such.

In connection with the exhibition, Hussain has initiated a children’s art educational summer camp with the After School Activities Partnership (ASAP) and the Caring People Alliance to help children learn about art and create their own.  The program is a month long course where professional artists will be working with students ages 10-13. The campers will be taught to use digital cameras, and travel on field trips in Pennsylvania and New Jersey to animal sanctuaries and other points of interest related to environmental preservation. For more information about Hussain Aga Khan and these programs you can visit www.focusedonnature.org.

First Friday runs from 6-9 pm.

249 Arch (Corner of Third and Arch)

Love this ad for Gerhard Richter at Edward Tyler Nahem.  Rather than most of the ads in Artforum, this one is understated, clean, to the point, and just aesthetically pleasing. Good Job.

Gerhard Richter Artforum

There is always a question on how to keep galleries running, especially in a recession, and especially one which deals predominantly with emerging artists.  For FUEL, we have been blessed with a beautiful space that we can rent out for weddings and events (go here for more info).  It is truly amazing to see the space transformed for a big event here.  The latest edition of the Knot magazine features a beautiful wedding that took place here at FUEL, and hopefully gives you a little insight on to how transformative these events are.

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Conrad, over at Philthy Blog was hit by a car biking to work last month.  Although he is better, the driver had terrible insurance, and so he is left with some huge medical expenses.  His friends are throwing him a benefit monday, June 29  at Tattooed Mom’s from 7-10PM.

With Kyle Miller and Philthy Paul DJing!, art to raffle, gift certificates raffle from PRINT LIBERATION, BELL’S BIKES, EXIT SKATE SHOP, and more!

$1 PBR tall boys

Give some support to a great supporter of FUEL and art and culture in Philly.

Samuel Trioli, Untitled III, 2007, Oil on Canvas

Samuel Trioli, Untitled III, 2007, Oil on Canvas

Summer is road trip time.  And road trips across America inevitably involve Louisiana.  So rather than heading right to New Orleans, make a stop in the northeast Louisiana town of Monroe, to see the work of Samuel Trioli.  His pieces are in the FUEL Collection’s collections (love it!)and he took part in FUEL’s Duck and Recover show here last fall.  His photorealistic, often apocalyptic paintings are equally beautiful and disturbing and won him a place in the Masur Museum of Art’s 46th annual juried exhibition in Monroe, LA.

And apparently Monroe/ West Monroe is like the spa capital of north Louisiana (?) so take your tired and abused body that has sat in a rented Ford Focus since Philly, and get a massage, see some art, and maybe go to the zoo.  Then head south to NOLA.

Samuel Trioli, Plus Unleaded, 2008, Oil on Canvas

Samuel Trioli, Plus Unleaded, 2008, Oil on Canvas

Flickr Photos