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Sculpture + Extended Media
MFA Thesis Exhibition (Round 2)

MFA Thesis Exhibition (Round 2) May 9th – May 18th
Opening reception: 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm
VCUarts Anderson Gallery

The Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibition is the final requirement for students earning a master’s degree in the fine arts and design departments from VCU. The exhibitions provide a forum for emerging artists to display their work and give viewers a “preview” of new directions in the visual arts. Each of the participating artists will exhibit work that represents the culmination of their 2 year masters program in one of the following disciplines: Painting and Printmaking, Sculpture and Extended Media, Communication Arts, Crafts/Material Studies, Photography and Film, and Interior Design. “These exhibitions provide an excellent opportunity for viewers to invest in up-and-coming artists, as many of the pieces on view will be available for purchase,” remarks Amy Moorefield, Anderson Gallery Assistant Director and Curator of Collections.

MFA Sculpture + Extended Media candidates Jesse Robinson and James Sham will have work on display in this exhibition.

Off campus, MFA Sculpture + Extended Media candidates, Sami Ben Larbi, Lily Cox-Richard, David Grainger, and Eli Kessler, plan to exhibit their thesis work in an Annex Exhibition at 209 North Foushee Street May 2nd through May 18th. Opening receptions will be held on May 2nd at 6pm and May 9th at 7pm; both until 9pm (the latter following the MFA Round 2 Anderson Gallery reception from 5-7pm.)

The public is invited to attend all receptions and exhibitions. VCUarts Anderson Gallery is free and open to the public. Operating hours are Monday – Friday 10 am–5 pm and Saturday and Sunday 1– 5 pm. For more information, please call the Gallery at (804) 828-1522 or visit our website at: www.vuc.edu/arts/gallery


Terminal: VCU Sculpture + Extended Media MFA Thesis Annex Exhibition

Terminal
VCU Sculpture + Extended Media
MFA Thesis Annex Exhibition

Sami Ben Larbi
Lily Cox-Richard
David Grainger
Eli Kessler

May 2-18, 2008

Opening Receptions: May 2, 6-9pm & May 9, 7-9pm

2 Locations: 5-7 West Broad St & 209 N Foushee, Richmond VA

Gallery Hours:
Friday 5-7pm
Sat & Sun 12-5pm
and by appointment -- contact commonbric.com.

Friday May 9, 2008: open until 9pm
Extended hours, in conjunction with the VCU Anderson Gallery Thesis opening


Shopping for Gursky: A color based installation by Matthew Brett

Shopping for Gursky: A color based installation by Matthew Brett (BFA  candidate)

Friday, May 2nd, 7:00 pm to 11:00 pm

The entire market will be rearranged by color in an aesthetic manner similar to painting.  Come participate in a community based art happening that will support a local business and be a lot of fun! Refreshments will be provided by Allstar Market. (donations welcome!)


FEAST at ADA Gallery

Chris Norris (BFA alum) Becca Witt (BFA candidate), members of the collaborative group Feast:

OPENING MAY 2 , 2008
TOM CONDON, KATIE BAINES, members of FEAST & JEFF MAJER
ADA GALLERY
228 W. BROAD STREET
RICHMOND, VA 23220
(804) 644-0100
info@adagallery.com


The Metropolitan Museum of Art presents Tara Donovan (MFA 1999)

The Metropolitan Museum of Art presents Tara Donovan (MFA 1999)
Donovan takes everyday objects, such as Styrofoam cups and paper plates, and “figures out what it is that the material really wants to do.” Donovan is a very patient artist who has taken, for example, 1.2 million toothpicks to make a 36-inch cube held together by gravity and friction. For the exhibition at the Met, Donovan covered a 1,600 square foot gallery in small loops of Mylar tape; the walls seem to glitter with thousands of water beads.
Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Avenue. New York, New York
November 20 – April 27


Exhibition: Sculpture at Evergreen 2008

Sculpture at Evergreen 2008
Evergreen Museum & Library's
Fifth Biennial Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition
May 4- September 28, 2008
Public reception: Sunday, May 4 from 2pm-5pm

The Hammer, by Jeannine Harkleroad (BFA)
This installation brings the indoors outside through the intermediary of an all-weather LCD television. Using the conventions of cinema, the video becomes a narrative extension of the sculpture and performers in the artist's studio.

John Hopkins University Museums
4545 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21210


Exhbition: Here & Now

Here & Now
Focusing on issues of place, time, fragility, security and fantasy
Two-site exhibition featuring 17 artists
 Derek Cote (BFA), Mia Feuer (MFA candidate)
& Paul Shoemaker (BFA candidate)
May 10-24, 2008

Transformer
1404 P Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20005

Special Program:
Saturday, May 10, 2008 at 4pm
Performance by artist Paul Shoemaker
1840 14th Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20005


About the Artists:
Derek Cote studied at Virginia Commonwealth University and Western Washington University where he received his BFA and MFA respectively. He has exhibitednationally and internationally including exhibitions at
the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, New York; Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, Washington; Exit Art and Roebling Hall, New York; Delaware Center for Contemporary Art, Wilmington, Delaware; Contemporary Art
Center of Virginia, Virginia Beach; Scope Art Fair Special Projects in New York and Miami; Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey; and appeared on Artwave Radio in Athens, Greece. In addition, Derek was included in the
2007 Young Sculptors Competition and Exhibition at Miami University of Ohio, is a recipient of a Professional Artist Fellowship from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and was Artist-in-Residence at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. www.derekcote.com
 
About his work, Derek states:  “My sculptures, installations, and drawings explore notions of memory and gestalt as a function of architectural relationships, geography, and place dynamics. Investigations into universal place as well as personal displacement are arranged by recreating familiar instances that employ scale shifts, the collision of metaphors, and posing interior versus exterior. The social and cultural landscape is a recurring theme that is at once personal and foreign. Through the investigation of general and specific sites, I present conditions that provide a platform for questioning individual place, displacement, and what it means to belong. By encouraging conceptual versatility and flexibility, I am able to employ a range
of relevant media from wood, plastic, and cardboard, to light, sound, and video, as a function of their inherent ability to communicate.”
 
Mia Feuer was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada.  She received her BFA with a
major in sculpture from the University of Manitoba in 2004 and is currently a 2009 MFA candidate in the sculpture program at Virginia Commonwealth University.   She is the recipient of numerous grants from the Winnipeg Arts Council and the Manitoba Arts Council.  Before moving to Richmond, VA to attend graduate school, Mia spent time living in the West Bank, an occupied Palestinian territory where she facilitated “on the street” sculpture workshops with Palestinian children using next to no resources.   Through her work, Feurer investigates the illusion of security and the idea of systematic dehumanization through architectural form.  Informed by time she
spent in the West Bank, Feurer searches for an understanding of barricades both as signs and as physical realities which restrict freedom and deeply affect people’s lives.   

Paul Shoemaker was raised in Virginia and is receiving his Bachelors of Fine Art this year from Virginia Commonwealth University.  In 2005, Paul was selected as a representative to the Tasmeem Design Conference in Doha, Qatar.  The following year he worked as an intern in the Photography Department at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden under Lee Stalsworth and Amy Densford.  In 2007, he studied abroad in Stockholm, Sweden for five months.  While studying at VCU he received the James Bradford Scholarship (2006), won the Virginia Museum of Fine Art’s Portfolio Review (2007) and the Richard Carylon Research Fund (2008).
For Here & Now, Paul is presenting his new work, Pennies from Heaven
Paul states:  “‘If you want the things you love, you must have showers,’ is a remarkable line that comes from my performance and installation “Pennies from Heaven.”  The desires and fantasies we all strive to fulfill or experience are continuously being bombarded by the realities of our lives.  Meaning is subjective but experience, especially in a live performance becomes a shared moment.  For my piece, this shared moment of a performance along with allusions to abstracted historical references is meant to be a bizarre and theatrical spectacle. The life of a dream is metaphorical to the ephemeral act of a performance while artifacts seemingly from a distant time period try to ground the piece into a familiar reality.” 






 
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