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ProXimity: Columbus Park Artists Opening May 18 at the Trap Gallery

27 Apr

Kurt, me and our creative neighbors will be the theme of the Trap Gallery’s May exhibition.

Join us at the intersection of Gillis Street and E. Missouri Avenue, where multiple venues will exhibit work created by artists living in Columbus Park.

The Trap gallery at 525 Gillis will join forces with the Blau Space Gallery, at 520 Gillis, the Dahlquist Sculpture Garden at 519 Gillis, Salon Alexandria at 1022 E. Missouri, and CheBay’s Garage at 533 Gillis, to bring a show so big, it will take over the street. Over 30 artists will display their talents in visual and musical arts.

Opening Reception of ‘Construction In Structure’ at City Arts Project

15 Mar

Calder Kamin Career Services Assistant, Rishad Gandhi Career Services/CASL Coordinator, and Julie Metzler Career Services/CASL Director

Career Services and I would like to thank everyone who attended the opening reception of ‘Construction In Structure’, First Friday, March 2, at City Arts Project as well as those whose contributions made the first Access Alumni Event a success. The exhibition is on view through April 21st. I appreciate the freedom I have had in my position at KCAI to make programing like this available to students.

XOXO: Salon Show at Spray Booth Gallery

14 Mar

How do you stand out in a crowd of 118 Kansas City artists? The Spray Booth Gallery features a salon style installation for First Fridays in February and March. It reminds me on H&R Block Artspace Kansas City Flatfile, if the call was sent out on Facebook. There is certainly no salon de refuse in our community. Thanks for inviting me to participate.

My contribution VS, 2012.

Urban Culture Project Open Studios December 9th and 10th

12 Nov

Come see my studio progress at the pARTnership place, 906 Grand 13th floor, from 5:30-9:00pm December 9th.

Urban Suburban

19 Sep

Images from the UrbanSuburban VII opening reception at the Kansas City Jewish Museum of Contemporary Art’s Epsten Gallery.

The UrbanSuburban Art Auction is Saturday, October 15, 2011 from 7-10:30pm. You can find the 2011 UrbanSuburban online catalogue at http://issuu.com/kcjmca/docs/urbansuburbanvii/1.

Roadkill Remix

19 Aug


Urban Still Life: Death By Car, a Calder and Julie collaboration at Ann St opened last Friday.

Breaking Boundaries is a fantastic survey of contemporary ceramics, including other KCAI alumni.
There is more to see on their Flickr. A big thanks to Virginia Walsh at Ann Street Gallery for the invitation, and her crew for quick the emails, polite phone calls and their super install skills!

Breaking Boundaries at Ann Street Gallery

3 Aug

Breaking Boundaries is an invitational Julie and I will participate in August 13-September 24th at the Ann Street Gallery in Newburgh, NY.

Urban Still Life: Death by Car a Calder Kamin and Julie Malen collaboration

Press Release:

In this exhibition, twenty-four contemporary artists from across the country come together and offer an expansive vision of the contemporary ceramic scene. Breaking Boundaries provides a survey of ceramic works highlighting an impressive array of ceramic artists, from young emerging talents to establish artists whose work is on the cutting edge of contemporary art. On display in the exhibition are varied selections of challenging works ranging from small whimsical utilitarian vessels, large sculptural pieces to site-specific installations.

As a medium ceramic art has an ancient and rich history of cultural expression and utility. There is also something fascinating about the primitiveness of clay and its versatile creative process. Perhaps the attraction is its timelessness, or just a medium itself that seems to resound within all of us as human beings. For contemporary artists the potential of clay for expressing aesthetic ideas is enormous, varied and ever expanding. The artists work in Breaking Boundaries reflects new and exciting responses to the medium while exploiting its malleability, which makes for an infinite range of artistic expression and interpretations.

In particular, this exhibition calls attention to the existing prejudices surrounding the medium and challenges those to take a broader view of its possibilities, while elevating an awareness of contemporary ceramic arts. Works showcased offer ceramic enthusiasts new talent to explore, for visitors it is an opportunity to directly connect to the visceral tactility and joy of objects made in clay. In Breaking Boundaries viewers can explore the creativity of contemporary ceramic artists who extend the possibilities of working with clay and unconventional materials while breaking through the boundaries imposed by the art establishment.

Artist featured: Dylan Beck, Ruth Borgenicht, Maureen Burns-Bowie, Bryan Czibesz, Carole Epp, Raymond W. Gonzalez, Doug Herren, Priscilla Hollingsworth, Liz Howe, Roxanne Jackson, Calder Kamin, Debbie Kupinsky, Julie Malen, Kate Missett, Wendy Olson, Vince Palacios, Gabriel Parque, Jesse Ring, Benjamin Schulman, John Williams, Alyssa Wood, Jennifer Woodin, Jindra Viková and Matthew Ziemke.

The exhibition will be on view through Saturday, September 24.

New Images Courtesy of E.G. Schempf

6 Jul

New images in the 2011 file thanks to EG Schempf and Chloe Mann.

Review by Jonah Criswell

10 Jun

Yesterday Review Magazine Online published a review of our exhibition by Jonah Criswell .

Link to review by Jonah Criswell:
http://ereview.org/2011/06/09/where-the-wild-things-are/

Today is the last day of our show!

WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE

By Jonah Criswell June 9, 2011

A review of Calder Kamin’s and Julie Malen’s Urban Still Life

The Underground Gallery
at The Kansas City Artists Coalition
Kansas City, Missouri
May 13 — June 10

The animal is a meal, a companion, a spectacle, and at times a way of seeing our behavior and ourselves afresh. Urban Still Life is a product of Calder Kamin‘s and Julie Malen’s year-long collaboration, centered on their encounters with animals in an urban environment. From Kamin’s First Approach, a three-foot-tall fox that appears to greet viewers, to the large wall installation Urban Still Life (the show’s title piece), this is an exhibition about the intersection between people and animals. The installation, Urban Still Life (2011), contains 26 ceramic sculptures that correspond to the artists’ encounters with dead animals. The sculptures are grouped based on their cause of death, many of which were the result of human activities. Calder Kamin’s coyote, squirrel, and raccoon are expressively handled which makes their stillness more tragic. Julie Malen’s pigeons and opossum are beautifully realized but lack the warmth that she later finds in her more lyrical and political pieces.

CalderKamin_FirstApproach(bySchempf)Calder Kamin, “First Approach,” ceramics, 28″ x 10″ x 24″, 2011. Image: photo EG Schempf, courtesy of the artist

The statement regarding the installation and the entire exhibition posits the idea that human experience is not separate from nature. This idea is elaborated upon in both Kamin’s and Malen’s additional works that are free of the strict rule of responding to daily experiences with animals. Kamin’s separate works deliberately involve the viewer, from her First Approach piece to her The Love Seat, a soft white chair with imbedded ceramic dog stomachs and recordings of people playing with their pets. The interactive facets of these works reflect compassion and generosity for the viewer but also for her subject matter, the animal.

Malen’s realizations of bored animals imply something about America we have known for some time, but she uses the animal as a metaphor for our own lazy and savage nature. Her animals are realized with both anxiety and sympathy. Malen’s addition to the installation Urban Still Life felt somewhat analytical and sterile, yet with The Joy in Folly she finds empathy for a culture that cannot respond more responsibly and are trapped in its own circumstance. Either by interactive experience or lyrical use of metaphor, both artists appear determined to make Urban Still Life more than an aesthetic experience for the viewer; however, the work and ideas present don’t require an immature rethinking of our entire society. Being born out of a collaborative urge to document their experiences with animals, Kamin and Malen have tugged at a thread of how humans relate to animals. We see how this relationship can unravel, but they find unexpected routes for us as well.

CalderKamin_TexasandAsianTigerPopulations(bySchempf)Calder Kamin, (left) “Animal Graph 1: Texas Tiger Populations,” ceramic, 18″ x 3″ x 6″, 2011, and “Animal Graph 2: Asian Tiger Populations,” ceramic, 18″ x 3″ x 6″, 2011: There are more tigers in captivity in Texas than in the wild in India. Image: photo EG Schempf, courtesy of the artist

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JulieMalen_JoyInFollyJulie Malen, installation view of “Joy in Folly,” ceramics, 2011. Image: photo Jonah Criswell

In the exhibition Urban Still Life, the animal acts as a means of seeing what we want to see in ourselves and in our culture. Julie Malen finds a culture of death, excess, and, most strikingly, boredom. Her pink pigs stare blankly with ennui, surrounded by the banal and brutal products of a consumer culture. Malen is doing nothing new, but here it feels genuine and without hubris despite her substantial craft. There is a pensive character to her sculpture The Joy in Folly, in which a monkey sits smoking a cigarette on Americana-style diner table. Malen’s animals are subject to a boredom that inspires home-alone puppies to tear up shoes and sofas. Her work seems to beg the question, “What do we do now that we know that we thrive at the cost of others?” Malen’s most ambitious piece, The United States of Happiness, has two melancholic pigs amidst a shattered picnic table. The pig’s faces are both despondent and lazy, which allows the viewer to judge the pigs (a metaphor for ourselves) with compassion. Although her titles, The Joy in Folly and The United States of Happiness, seem a bit too easy, perhaps that melodrama is the point. Perhaps Malen is addressing her own complacency.

JulieMalen_UnitedStatesofHappinessJulie Malen, installation view of “The United States of Happiness,” ceramics, wood, mixed media, 2011. Image: photo Jonah Criswell

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JulieMalen_UnitedStatesofHappinessDetailJulie Malen, detail of “The United States of Happiness,” ceramics, wood, mixed media, 2011. Image: photo Jonah Criswell

Given that human beings have lived alongside animals for centuries, it may be fair to see animals as companions. Calder Kamin surveys the animal as spectacle and companion. Her The Love Seat is by far the most experimental of the pieces presented in Urban Still Life: a petite plush white loveseat with two imbedded ceramic sculptures of animal stomachs. Viewers are invited to sit and put on fuzzy headphones to listen to recordings of people talking to their pets in a kind of cute gibberish. There is something unsettling in being privy to another person’s disarmed affection to his or her pet. Moreover, the clay animal stomachs (anatomically correct) are cold when they should be warm to the touch. From her First Approach to her pair of tiger sculptures, Animal Graph I: Texas Tiger Population and Animal Graph II: Asian Tiger Populations, Kamin’s work presents the animal as something that needs our care and our compassion. Perhaps it is that we don’t share our affection and compassion for the animal that she is trying to get at with her The Love Seat.

CalderKamin_TheLoveSeatDetailCalder Kamin, detail of “The Love Seat,” mixed media, including ceramics, speakers, 2011. Image: photo Jonah Criswell

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CalderKamin_TheLoveSeatCalder Kamin, installation view of “The Love Seat,” mixed media, including ceramics, speakers, 2011. (“Urban Still Life,” 2011 is visible in the background. Image: photo Jonah Criswell

I agree with Kamin’s and Malen’s assertion that human experience is not separate from nature. However, I do not know what nature is by viewing Urban Still Life. I know that animals are in danger and have been thoroughly dominated by human beings. The fact that we can use animals in the ways Kamin and Malen show us — plaything, companion, spectacle, and metaphor — demonstrates that terms like “animal,” “human,” and, most importantly, “nature” are deeply protean. The artists’ success is that, after viewing Urban Still Life, I know that we need animals. Urban Still Life presents a view of a complicated and deeply compromised relationship between humans and animals in search of nature. Nature is a mystery and it will remain so until we know what is human and what is animal.

 

Three Moods, Many Talents by Dana Self in the KC Star Today

2 Jun

June 2, 2011 review by Dana Self on our exhibition at the Kansas City Artists Coalition is in this month’s First Friday Preview Section!

Next week is the last week. I am so happy with how it all turned out.

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