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DTSTART:20170312T090000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20171006T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20171127T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T135622
CREATED:20170927T231003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170927T231103Z
UID:10008611-1507276800-1511802000@artintersection.com
SUMMARY:Exhibition "Memories of Oct./Nov."
DESCRIPTION:Juried Art Exhibition\nHerberger Theater Gallery\n“Memories of October and November”\nOpening Reception\nOctober 6\, 2017\n5:30-7:00 PM \n \n \nFrida Shrine\, Deborah Silvis \nAltar-San Miguel\, Deborah Silvis
URL:https://artintersection.com/event/exhibition-memories-of-oct-nov/
LOCATION:Herberger Theater Center\, 222 E. Monroe\, Phoenix\, AZ\, 85004\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hide from Upcoming,Herberger Theater,Community
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20171024T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20171202T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T135622
CREATED:20171001T000158Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190628T005719Z
UID:10008612-1508832000-1512234000@artintersection.com
SUMMARY:Little by Little
DESCRIPTION:Art Intersection presents Little by Little\, our first ever exhibition of small artwork. We are excited to feature pieces\, all ten inches or smaller in every direction\, from over sixty artists nationally! \nJuror\, Dr. Julie Sasse\, Chief Curator at the Tucson Museum of Art selected a diverse range of processes and presentations\, highlighting the unique experience of viewing art on a small scale. Take a closer look at this work in the North Gallery.  \nJuror’s Statement \nIt has been a great pleasure to serve as the guest juror for Art Intersection’s Little by Little. I am honored to be selected for this opportunity because it gives me a chance to learn more about new art being exhibited in the Southwest and to become better acquainted with Art Intersection’s supportive environment for the arts. My thanks go to the many artists who submitted works for this exhibition and to the Art Intersection team who organized this project. \nThis exhibition gives the viewer a snapshot of the creative ideas and originality and artists’ heartfelt connections to their mediums and concepts. Arizona has limited venues for emerging and mid-career artists to exhibit their work compared to more densely populated states\, so this exhibition offers a link between the creative product and those who derive pleasure and insight from viewing it.  \nThis is a small works exhibition\, but that does not mean the works are less in content or aesthetic and conceptual value. I believe artists should make art in the scale that best serves their ideas\, and if the works are small\, they are still important if created with sincerity. Some of the most poignant works I have seen over the years are not the most grand in scale\, but suitable for the message intended. If anything\, small works allow us to concentrate on an idea and an image because of the intimacy provided by the unassuming\, though purposeful size. They encourage us to block out the noise of the gigantic in favor of contemplative statements. I hope you will enjoy Little by Little and let yourself connect to the works in a personal relationship.  \n– Dr. Julie Sasse\, guest juror \nLittle by Little Exhibition \n																																																																																																																																																																																																																																																																																																																																				\n\nFeatured Artists \nDevon Adams\, Bob Allen\, Wendy Blackwell\, Sandy Blain\, Andy Burgess\, Christine Cassano\, Michael Chittock\, Annemarie Comes\, Dennis L. Collins\, Adrian Cornejo\, James Cowlin\, Christine Elysse Crossen\, Scarlette Decker\, Kimberly DeMucha Kalil\, Mary Donato\, Charlene Engel\, Jennifer Fair\, Jeff Falk\, Suzanne Fallender\, Sam Fresquez\, Valerie Galloway\, Denis Gillingwater\, Tina Hays\, Kathi Hofferth\, Karen Hymer\, Barbra Kemp Cowlin\, Jo Kubran\, Dida Kutz\, Maria La Porte\, Leslie Evans\, Annie Lopez\, Rachael Lyn\, Amy Sansbury Manning\, Linda Marshall\, Scott McMahon\, Terry Melser\, Mary Meyer\, Neil A. Miller\, Tess Mosko Scherer\, Clare Murray-Adams\, Nadezda Nikolova Kratzer\, Michael O’Neal\, Jessica Page\, Chris Palmer\, Cyd Peroni\, Chance Phillips\, Elizabeth Z. Pineda\, Joanna Proffitt\, Jill Roig\, Samantha Schwann\, T. W. Sharp\, Marvin Shaver\, Deborah Silvis\, Megan Smith\, Laura Spalding Best\, Janique Suazo\, Mark Timpany\, Ann Tracy\, Shari Trennert\, A. O. Tucker\, Erin Tucker\, Ashley Walden\, Jeff D. Welker\, Victoria Westover\, Hyewon Yoon\, Scott Carlton Youmans
URL:https://artintersection.com/event/little-by-little/
LOCATION:AZ
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Hide from Upcoming,Featured
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20171024T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20171202T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T135622
CREATED:20171001T004544Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171102T002504Z
UID:10008613-1508832000-1512234000@artintersection.com
SUMMARY:(re)View: At Home and Nearby
DESCRIPTION:(re)View\, in the South Gallery at Art Intersection\, presents photography from three outstanding artists: Diana H. Bloomfield\, Ernesto Esquer\, and Katy Tuttle. They were invited back to show additional work\, initially introduced to us in the February 2017 Light Sensitive exhibition.  \nEach artist incorporates a distinct alternative photographic process in their art-making\, including gum bichromate\, wet plate collodion tintype\, gelatin silver\, and Polaroid transfer\, to present his or her artistic vision. \nJoin us to celebrate the (re)View artists during the exhibition and attend the Walk and Talk with the Artists\, happening before the Artists’ Reception on Saturday\, October 28. Click here to learn more about the Walk and Talk and to register. \nFeatured Artists\nEntrance\, Diana H. Bloomfield \nDiana H. Bloomfield\nMy work centers on the intersection of the past and my memories of that past. Memories\, fugitive and ever shifting\, remain ephemeral. Photographs offer tangible\, fixed reminders of what once was\, either experienced or reinvented. Both share the one constant of interpretation. And the interpretive nature of both memory and imagery lends itself to a kind of non-linear\, dreamlike narrative. That’s the form my work follows.  \nTo help create these images\, I often print in 19th-century hand-applied printing processes. The multiple layerings of the gum bichromate process\, in particular\, offer infinite creative possibilities\, removing all the hard and clearly defined edges\, resulting in softness and ambiguity – much the way we see and remember. \n  \nAscend\, Ernesto Esquer \nErnesto Esquer\nIn my tea toned gelatin silver prints\, the photographs were immersed in a variety of black teas to give them their distinct\, aged look. All of the prints were then painted with gold sumi-e watercolor around the edges. \nI created emulsion lifts using Polaroid\, Fujifilm\, and Impossible Project films\, by lifting the instant film emulsions and transferring them onto a variety of pre-painted or pre-gold leaf watercolor and printmaking papers. \n  \nWhite Lines\, Katy Tuttle \nKaty Tuttle\nThe series At Home is a stitching together of tableau making up a quite every-day scene using a very old process and a toy camera. It is an exploration of the way our bodies move and land\, how thoughts become scenic realities and how imagery can be all too fleeting as the days pass us by. These small moments of wonder last but seconds in our short lives\, but often leave us with profound sense memories. This small form helps to magnify the largesse of our days.
URL:https://artintersection.com/event/review-at-home-and-nearby/
LOCATION:AZ
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Hide from Upcoming,Featured
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20171028T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20171028T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T135622
CREATED:20171013T004236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171025T182123Z
UID:10008614-1509208200-1509213600@artintersection.com
SUMMARY:Walk and Talk with the Artists of (re)View
DESCRIPTION:In conjunction with the exhibition (re)View: At Home and Nearby\, Art Intersection is pleased to present a Walk and Talk with visiting artists Diana H. Bloomfield and Ernesto Esquer\, and Gina DeGideo will speak about the work of exhibiting artist Katy Tuttle. Please join us in the Art Intersection galleries from 4:30 – 6pm on Saturday\, October 28 to hear from the artists about their pieces in the exhibition and their creative processes. \n$10 event fee includes hors d’oeuvres. The (re)View and Little by Little Artists’ Reception will immediately follow the Walk and Talk from 6 – 8pm. \nDiana H. Bloomfield\nAn exhibiting photographer for over thirty-five years\, Diana has received numerous awards for her images\, including a 1985 New Jersey State Visual Arts Fellowship\, and five Regional Artist Grants from the United Arts Council of Raleigh\, North Carolina\, most recently for 2015-16. \nSpecializing in 19th century printing techniques\, Diana’s images have been included in a number of books\, including Pinhole Photography: Rediscovering a Historic Technique (3rd Edition)\, by Eric Renner; Robert Hirsch’s Exploring Color  Photography Fifth Edition: From Film to Pixels (2011); Jill Enfield’s Guide to Photographic Alternative Processes: Popular Historical and Contemporary Techniques (2013); in Christopher James’ The Book of Alternative Photographic Processes (2015); and\, most recently\, in Christina Z. Anderson’s Gum Printing:  A Step-by-Step Manual\, Highlighting Artists and their Creative Practice (2017). \nA native North Carolinian\, Diana currently lives and works in Raleigh\, North Carolina\, where she received her MA in English Literature and Creative Writing from North Carolina State University.  She teaches workshops throughout the country\, including at the amazing Art Intersection\, and in her beautiful backyard studio.  \nDiana is represented by Panopticon Gallery\, located in Boston\, Massachusetts. \nErnesto Esquer\nErnesto Esquer is a photographic artist and printer from Tucson\, Arizona. He actively works in all aspects of traditional darkroom photography and various alternative processes including cyanotype and lumen prints. He has extensive experience working with instant film including materials made by Polaroid\, Fujifilm\, and Impossible Project and teaches instant film manipulations. Often he combines processes or materials in attempt to transform a photograph into a precious object. \nHe received his BFA in Photography from the University of Arizona and is currently the Laboratory Specialist at Pima Community College. Most recently he was the printer and curatorial assistant for the Louis Carlos Bernal exhibition Arizona\, Unseen: Color Photographs 1978-1988. His first book In No Time\, featuring a collection of hand colored or toned gelatin silver prints\, was released by Dark Spring Press in 2017. \nKaty Tuttle\nKaty Tuttle was born and raised in the Pacific Northwest in the small town of Clatksanie\, Oregon. She now lives with her family in the woods of Washington State. Her pursuit as an artist began on the stage as an actor/director – earning her degree in Theater Arts. Years ago she stepped off the stage and into a role behind the camera\, inspired by her own family stories. The camera made for a smooth transition into a deeper and more personal creative voice. \nHer photography beginnings were in film on her grandmother’s Minolta SLR and she eventually made the transition to digital as a means to afford the everyday shooting she craved\, but the need for a more hands-on process became imperative to her work. Since then she’s moved into both encaustic and wet plate photography\, which is where her work lives today. Her focus has primarily been on her children and their seemingly everyday scenes\, shot with her Holga camera. Though the photographs are primarily of her own children\, her hope is to make imagery that stirs those haunting sense memories that sit deep in the belly of all that look on. \nHer work has been seen in publications such as The Sun Magazine\, Shots Magazine and Seities Publication as well as on gallery walls across the country.
URL:https://artintersection.com/event/walk-and-talk-with-the-artists-of-review-2017/
LOCATION:Art Intersection\, 207 N Gilbert Rd # 210\, Gilbert\, AZ\, 85234\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hide from Upcoming,Gallery Talk,Featured,Special Events
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