Showing posts with label Wind Challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wind Challenge. Show all posts

Wind Challenge 3 @ Fleisher Art Memorial

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

The final exhibition in this year's Wind Challenge Exhibition is on view now thru June 25.

Warren Angle, Exhibition Curator at the Fleisher Art Memorial was at Moore in September speaking about his experiences and the Wind Challenge along with Nadia Hironaka, a past Challenge winner. Interviews with both Warren and Nadia can be found in our archives.

The Wind Challenge is a great opportunity for any emerging artist in the city so make sure to check out the exhibition before its closes and look into next year's Wind Challenge deadline and requirements at www.fleisher.org.


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Interview with Nadia Hironaka

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Artist and co-founder of Screening, Philadelphia’s first gallery dedicated to the presentation of works on video and film, Hironaka is currently a professor in the Video and Film Arts department at The Maryland Institute College of Art. Hironaka, whose video works have been exhibited internationally, has also received numerous grants, fellowships and residences including: the 2008 Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellowship, the 2006 PEW Fellowship in the Arts, PEI Artists Grant from the Joan Mitchell Foundation, Atlantic Center for the Arts Artist Residency, and Leeway Foundation Grants in 2001 and 2003. You can further explore Nadia’s work and learn more about her on her website www.nadiahironaka.com. Nadia was interviewed by BSA students Laura Bonvini, Melissa Chancer, Samantha Emonds.

 


What is Screening?
NH: It is the only gallery dedicated to the moving image in
Philadelphia. Nadia was able to fund Screening with a PEW (link)
Grant, worth $50,000. Screening has been established for 2 1/2 years, and it shows the work of internationally acclaimed video artists. You can go to Screening’s (link-there may be a better location or introduction for this link…) website to learn more!

Some good advice?
NH: Apply to everything!
You should apply to as many grants, galleries, exhibitions, festivals, etc. as you can. Anything to get your work out there and noticed!!!

NH: Consider all your options when applying for a job and hold out, if possible, for the one that fits your passion.
While Nadia was applying for jobs after grad school, she had an offer to work part-time in Temple University’s gallery. At the same time, University of Pennsylvania was developing video courses, and Nadia applied to teach video at Penn about a year before the classes were to begin.  To tide her over before she could begin the teaching job, Penn offered her a position working in their video lab.  She took the interim job in the lab because she realized that her passion was teaching video.  Six to seven months later, Nadia had a full-time teaching job at Penn.

NH: The Challenge Exhibition is open to all!
Don't be afraid to submit some work to Challenge or to visit the Challenge Exhibition.  There’s more about this in our post on Warren Angle.


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Interview with Warren Angle

Thursday, February 4, 2010


Warren Angle is the exhibitions curator and a teacher at Fleisher Art Memorial, and he’s a former Wind Challenge artist. His personal experiences growing up in a rural area, out west, influence his current artwork. He is inspired by the interactions of humans with the rest of nature and strives to make people bring their own narrative to his work. After graduate school, Warren got a teaching position at the University of New Hampshire before moving to Philadelphia. The Challenge exhibition introduced Warren to the Philadelphia art community. He taught at many schools around Philly before getting involved in museum work. This led to his job at Fleisher. Warren was interviewed by BSA students Samantha Emonds, Melissa Chancer and Laura Bonvini.
 

What is the Wind Challenge?
WA: The Challenge is an annually held exhibition that takes place at Fleisher. Anyone can submit work to the Challenge, but only a few are chosen. It is worth applying repeatedly since the judges change each year. Do not be discouraged if you are not selected, because you still may catch the eye of someone important. You just need to make sure that your work is consistent, clear, and cohesive.

How has your work changed since being a Challenge artist?
WA: Quite a bit. I used to work more in ceramics and still used it to some extent when I came to Philadelphia. I worked more at the time in terms of the module. Later I became more and more interested in the narrative aspect to the connection between nature and humans. Now I do mostly tableaus of plants and animals in some form.

What inspires your artwork?
WA: The interaction of humans and the rest of nature examined not blatantly but with a twist so people can consider it and bring their own narrative to the work. Also personal experience…. coming from the west in a rural area, for a time on a farm, has influenced and is sometimes reflected in the work I do now. Experience and the things I see around me….

Some good advice…
WA: Fleisher offers “high quality tuition free art instruction” for people interested in forwarding their art education. (http://www.fleisher.org/). So if you’re interested in low to no cost art classes, look into Fleisher Art Memorial.


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