“Are We Having Fun Yet?” New work from Fay Ku

October 1st, 2011

Exhibition Dates: October 14 - November 25

“Are We Having Fun Yet?” takes current political and economic events as a point of entry to explore ideas of security, passivity and general anxiety for the future. Although these concepts are serious, the result is not without humor. Comprised of new works on paper, the works in this exhibition are a product of loosely associated images as mediations rather than projecting any one ideology or thesis.

Taiwanese-born American Fay Ku graduated from Pratt Institute with an MFA and a Master’s of Science in Art History. The faux-naïve nature of her illustrative style is exemplified by her use of watercolour, ink, and graphite on paper. Her choice of subject matter has evolved over the years, yet she retains the elegant juxtaposition of seriousness and puerility of her earlier art. Conscious of the fact that her unconscious is largely at work when she creates, her recent illustrations demonstrate a somewhat playfully cynical view of society. Her Darger-esque drawings present relevant socioeconomic commentary via images of modern-day youth of the glitterati living a neo-Rococo lifestyle, provoking the viewer to contemplate economic stability of the future and the results of passing the torch to a generation that seems to be more concerned with role-playing as rather than becoming adults.

Documentary Fiction Installation Views

September 16th, 2011


Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Oct 7
Opening Reception: August 12, 7-10pm
CUAC Main Gallery and CCAspace

Participating artists:
Josh Azzarella
Ben Thorp Brown
Ben Dean
Laura Heyman
Ann Hirsch
Sara Jordenö

Recur: New work from Roland Thompson

July 28th, 2011


Exhibition Dates: Aug 12 - Sept 2, 2011
Opening Reception: Aug 12, 2011 7-10pm
CUAC Upper Gallery

|riˈkər|from Latin recurrere: to run back
This group of artwork is part of ongoing research into the concept and application of recursion, which is generally associated with computer science, linguistics, and mathematics; but has also been applied to the visual arts. Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary defines recursion as “the determination of a succession of elements (as numbers or functions [or lines]) by operation on one or more preceding elements according to a rule or formula involving a finite number of steps.” The aspect of my paintings that is recursive is the structure. Each design is produced by a particular predefined motion along a path. So far I have produced three different types of recursive structures. One which is recorded along a singular path as in Circuitous Melody; two, moved along a distinct path during each cycle as in Flammeum Gladium; third, a path is started, terminated, and restarted in a new position multiple times to produce a cluster of enclosed shapes as in Ventus Turbinis.

Roland Thompson was born in 1970 in Utah, where he continues to live and work. He received a B.F.A. from Brigham Young University in 1998 and an M.F.A. from Virginia Commonwealth University in 2001. Thompson has been featured in over 60 exhibits, the most notable including: Hot & Sticky, The Painting Center, New York (2001); Random Order, White Columns, New York (2003); Reductive, Mahan Gallery, Columbus, Ohio (2006); and 24/7, Sego Art Center, Provo, Utah (2009). Thompson is recipient of numerous awards and scholarships, including a 2008 Utah Arts Council Grant, and teaches at Brigham Young University and Art Institute of Pittsburg-Online Division.

This exhibition is one of many at the CUAC that features highly acclaimed artists from around the United States and Utah. A review of our programming has recently been included in the highly influential international Flash Art magazine published in Milan, Italy. Artists who have shown at the CUAC over the last four years have been included in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, collected by Charles Saatchi; they have been exhibited in the Getty Museum, Whitney Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Saatchi Gallery, major museums in Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Korea, and Spain; They have shown in Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, Freight and Volume Gallery, the Drawing Center, and many other important New York, Los Angeles, and international venues.

Here, Now

July 28th, 2011


New and Re-visited photography
Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Dec 2
Opening Reception: August 12, 7-10pm
CUAC Annex

Participating artists:
Andrea Cerveny
Bethany Davis
Rachel Call

These artists are establishing connections with people and places where there is an inherent disconnection in the relationship between artist and subject, and in the process discovering more about who and where they are as individuals.
Each are motivated by curiosity; by a need for deeper understanding of our various subjects. Andrea Cerveny’s House prints explore the assumptions and conclusions, correct or otherwise, we make when we see things only from the outside. Bethany Davis’ reproductions of old family photos allow her to connect with her 9 older siblings and parents in a way otherwise not possible, as she wasn’t yet born during their growing-up years. Rachel’s contact prints represent the details and nuances of individual people which are lost through the passing of generations.

Documentary Fiction: curated by Lizzie Gorfaine and Rachel Wetzler

July 28th, 2011


Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Oct 7
Opening Reception: August 12, 7-10pm
CUAC Main Gallery and CCAspace

Participating artists:
Josh Azzarella
Ben Thorp Brown
Ben Dean
Laura Heyman
Ann Hirsch
Sara Jordenö

The artists in Documentary Fiction explore the tension between the perceived objectivity of the photographic image and their capacity to transform and manipulate, creating partial, even fictional, narratives from what appear to be recordings of reality. Drawing on the conventions of the documentary genre-photographs and videos that seem to testify to an actual event-these artists pose a direct challenge to our expectations of fidelity. Exploiting the gap between fact and fiction inherent in the creation of representational images, the works in the exhibition resist the assumption that an image is an accurate depiction of the world as it exists.

Josh Azzarella alters appropriated images found on the internet, digitally removing the central figures from the scene depicted. Often using iconic photographs of historical events, the resulting photographs are stripped of their function as historical documents, leaving behind only background details and compositional devices.

In his project Unseen (2011), Ben Thorp Brown addresses the gap between text and image, and the inherent subjectivity of a second-hand account. Attempting to reconstruct an archive of classified images taken by soldiers in Afghanistan charged with murdering civilians, Brown interviewed journalists who had seen the photographs, presenting their text descriptions in lieu of the censored images themselves.

Using computer rendering techniques, Ben Dean creates digital reconstructions of various landscapes, complicating the notion of what it means to document a particular place. For his projection Landmark (2003), he created a rendering based on the rock formation seen in the first propaganda video of Osama bin Laden, adding the sound of footsteps and the perspective of walking around the object to give the impression of traversing the landscape. Combined with ambient noise recorded in the artist’s studio, the dissonant elements that constitute Landmark form an ambiguous portrait of a place that is neither wholly real nor wholly fictional.

Laura Heyman: Drawing on the familiar trope of the artist’s lover as muse, Laura Heyman’s series The Photographer’s Wife presents a recurring female figure in intimate, domestic settings. However, the woman depicted is not the photographer’s wife, as the title might suggest, but the artist herself, challenging our expectations of the relationship between artist and model. Moreover, the photographs take on the status of a kind of fictive document of a relationship that doesn’t exist.

Conceiving of her work as a form of sociological investigation into subcultures of fame, Ann Hirsch injects herself into various media landscapes, adopting fictionalized personas that interact with the real world. For her project Scandalishious, Hirsch spent a year documenting her life as “Caroline”, a college student who went by the moniker Scandalishious, through videos she placed on YouTube. Interacting with various fans and detractors who were unaware that the videos were part of a larger performance and study, Hirsch uses the camera as a vehicle to create a fictional life, complete with inter-personal relationships via the Internet.

Sara Jordeno’s film The Set House (Hedvig), part of a seven-part series exploring various aspects surrounding Ingmar Bergman’s film Persona, takes the house in which the film was set as its subject, examining a place that exists simultaneously within the fictional space of Bergman’s narrative and the real life of Hedwig, the woman who presently occupies it, documenting both the temptation to recreate a favorite film and the ways in which Hedwig resists attempts at her fictionalization.

This exhibition is one of many at the CUAC that features highly acclaimed artists from around the United States and Utah. A review of our programming has recently been included in the highly influential international Flash Art magazine published in Milan, Italy. Artists who have shown at the CUAC over the last four years have been included in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, collected by Charles Saatchi; they have been exhibited in the Getty Museum, Whitney Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Saatchi Gallery, major museums in Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Korea, and Spain; They have shown in Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, Freight and Volume Gallery, the Drawing Center, and many other important New York, Los Angeles, and international venues.

CUAC Mission Statement:

The purpose of the CUAC is to educate Utahns about Contemporary Art through exhibitions of artists from three categories:

  1. Sanpete artists who demonstrate a high level of professionalism in their art;
  2. Utah artists who make art in a Contemporary genre who are emerging or well established;
  3. and artists who are exemplary of important trends in Contemporary Art worldwide.
  4. The CUAC maintains that good education about art starts with strong exhibitions of Contemporary Art that have relevance in content or image to our community. Education also includes outreach to the community in the form of classes for adults and children, lectures and critical dialogue about art, and an inviting, friendly environment that welcomes visitors and encourages questions and strives to provide answers.

Localized: Working in Proximity - Installation Views

July 21st, 2011

June 10 - Aug 5

Artists:

Scott Allred

Amy Jorgensen

Adam Larsen

Brad Taggart

For Immediate Release: “Localized: Working in Proximity June 10, 7-10pm

June 1st, 2011

CUAC Main Gallery
Central Utah Art Center
86 South Main
Ephraim, UT 84627
(435) 283-5110
www.cuartcenter.org

Exhibition Dates: June 10 - August 5, 2011
Opening Reception: June 10, 2011 7-10pm

CUAC is pleased to announce an exhibition of work from Scott Allred, Amy Jorgensen, Adam Larsen, and Brad Taggart. This exhibit explores the relationship between colleagues and the what role location and proximity plays in the creation of art.
Each artist is a full-time professor at Snow College. Working individually they set out to create work that is both personal and also communicates a sense of place through media and concept.

Scott Allred

Scott Allred is interested in formal aesthetic relationships. In the drawing process shape is what makes the subject recognizable and value execution makes the subject believable. His work consists primarily of figure studies, portraits, and large biblical narratives in the tradition of historic masterpieces. It is his desire to revisit this imagery in his drawings and paintings.

Amy Jorgensen

Amy Jorgensen’s work began as an inquiry into the practices and aesthetics of historical criminal photography and associated assumptions of the photograph as a document of the moment, or a representation of truth – what Walter Benjamin describes as evidence of an occurrence. Traditional notions of the body in art, the figure as object on view, are set aside to consider the body as an active participant in artistic process. She incorporates performance and photography with a willingness to use her own body as both test subject and subject matter in an investigation of personal and cultural assumptions linked to our artistic and scientific expectations of photographic practice. Jorgensen explores the body as both repository and author of information. The resulting photographs are the striking visual residue of her experience: traces of body fluid, clothing, skin prints, and the fine edges of body hair are evidence of her occurrence. Jorgensen states, “My body is an archive, my skin the surface through which I experience the world.”

Adam Larsen

Adam Larsen is a passionate artist and teacher of the visual language. His philosophy of art and teaching embraces the idea that art occurs when craft and concept homogenize. He is dedicated to promoting the practice of fundamental visual and dextral skills in a variety of artistic disciplines. His work cannot be categorized completely by one artistic medium but instead exists in varied forms of drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, photography, and artists’ books. This mixed-media affiliation allows him freedom as an artist to produce work in any combination of material and process, informing and enhancing his particular concept. His current work can be characterized as a visual reflection of his life as he attempts to translate commonplace occurrences into intimate visual dialogs utilizing the visual and tactile container of the artists’ book. The work includes the use of toys and elements of childhood play, metaphorically creating a reciprocal relationship between early memories and adulthood.

Brad Taggart

He is a maker of objects. As a sculptor Brad Taggart modifies materials and space to suit the body of work. He is a traditional sculptor in the sense that he places emphasis on the quality of the object even when the nature of the object is driven by conceptual concerns. He believes that a high-minded idea, in the absence of a finely crafted object, is philosophy mixed with theatre. He considers himself a contemporary sculptor and subscribes to the notion that he can work in any tradition, material, technology, or style that suits him. He is a figure sculptor, but also an installation artist. He embraces realism, yet is equally at home with abstraction. He uses age-old processes to create his work, but is willing to accept new technologies that allow him to be more efficient. He relishes the freedom to say what he needs to say when he needs to say it using whatever means necessary to get his message across. In the end Taggart’s message will always take a material form because he believes that as a sculptor he is a maker of objects.

For Immediate Release: “Sanpete is for Lovers” June 10, 7-10pm

June 1st, 2011

Master Mahan Fyling Before Jehovah’s Curse (After Cormon) / Jason Metcalf / 2010

 

curated by Jason Metcalf

 

Central Utah Art Center

86 South Main

Ephraim, UT 84627

(435) 283-5110

www.cuartcenter.org

 

Exhibition Dates: June 10 - August 5, 2011

Opening Reception: June 10, 2011 7-10pm

 

CUAC is pleased to announce the two part exhibition, Sanpete is for Lovers, where Jason Metcalf acts as curator-artist-folklorist in an investigation into superstitions specific to the locale of the Sanpete Valley. In half of the exhibition, Metcalf has conducted research into and gathered evidence of a Sanpete Valley sighting of the forever-traveling figure of Master Mahan - the wandering Biblical Cain who has been cursed to roam the earth until the end of days. The other half of the exhibition examines the formal and theoretical affinities that are had with quilt barn paintings and Modernist geometric abstraction. Metcalf has placed quilt barn paintings within the galleries of CUAC, while simultaneously displaying examples of the latter on the original grain storage building which is situated on the historic pioneer complex of the art center, as well as throughout the Sanpete Valley. Quilt barn paintings are believed to have genesis with Amish hex paintings, which some folklorists think were placed on barns to ward off or hex evil from the lives and property of a given group.

Jason Metcalf is an artist and curator based in Sundance, Utah. He has exhibited his work nationally and locally throughout Utah in venues including the Scope International Art Fair in NY and Miami, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, The Mesa Arts Center, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibits, Kayo Gallery, and the Rio Gallery among others. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and completed a BFA at Brigham Young University. Metcalf co-founded and directed the former Sego Art Center, which was located in Provo, Utah. Additional work can be found at jasonmetcalf.com.

 

Jason Metcalf Central Utah Art Center

Design for All Hallows Quilt Block Painting Number 1 / Jason Metcalf / 2011

This exhibition is one of many at the CUAC that features highly acclaimed artists from around the United States and Utah. A review of our programming has recently been included in the highly influential international Flash Art magazine published in Milan, Italy. Artists who have shown at the CUAC over the last four years have been included in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, collected by Charles Saatchi; they have been exhibited in the Getty Museum, Whitney Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Saatchi Gallery, major museums in Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Korea, and Spain; They have shown in Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, Freight and Volume Gallery, the Drawing Center, and many other important New York, Los Angeles, and international venues.

 

CUAC Mission Statement:

The purpose of the CUAC is to educate Utahns about Contemporary Art through exhibitions of artists from three categories:

  1. Sanpete artists who demonstrate a high level of professionalism in their art;
  2. Utah artists who make art in a Contemporary genre who are emerging or well established;
  3. and artists who are exemplary of important trends in Contemporary Art worldwide.

The CUAC maintains that good education about art starts with strong exhibitions of Contemporary Art that have relevance in content or image to our community. Education also includes outreach to the community in the form of classes for adults and children, lectures and critical dialogue about art, and an inviting, friendly environment that welcomes visitors and encourages questions and strives to provide answers.

 

Blake Carrington Installation Views

May 19th, 2011

Photography courtesy of Jason Metcalf

Get Free Vegan Macaroons on the pARTy Bus May 13

May 10th, 2011

 

Raw Melissa will be providing free vegan macaroons for pARTy Bus riders. Raw Melissa is committed to LIFE and LOVE - Living and Loving.

Hi! I own a company called Raw Melissa that sells extraordinary healthy gourmet desserts and offers nutrition coaching and education. Our products at Raw Melissa are made from only fresh fruits and vegetables, raw nuts and seeds, cold pressed healthy oils and natural sweeteners. We recycle all we can, we use very small amounts of electricity and almost all our packaging is made from materials that are so biodegradable, they can be composted. We strive to buy locally as often as possible and lastly and most importantly, we don’t sell anything that doesn’t taste absolutely delicious. I’m also lucky enough to have been a doula (birth assistant) and childbirth educator for over a decade, having helped several hundred couples during pregnancy and childbirth and am also one of two DONA Approved Doula Trainers in Utah.

More About Raw Melissa

website: rawmelissa.com

food twitter: twitter.com/rawmelissa
food blog: rawmelissa.blogspot.com
birth twitter: twitter.com/doulamelissa
birth blog: doulamelissa.blogspot.com

About the Original pARTy Bus

This 50 passenger bus will not only be providing transportation, but a full art experience. The bus picks up at 5:50pm every second Friday of the month at GARFO, located 1800 South 1500 East, with another pick up along the way in Provo at 1st West and 1st North. On the bus, patrons will enjoy free drinks as well as video art by local, national or international artists for the ride to the show. This way, the bus itself, serves as a sort of mobile art exhibition. Upon arrival, they will enjoy the art show opening (free to the public) as well as a free concert. CUAC pARTy bus is sponsored in-part by the Pizza Gallery across the street from CUAC in Ephraim. The Pizza Gallery often hosts live music events and art exhibitions in collaboration with CUAC.

Get Your pARTy Bus Tickets

CUAC mentioned in Spanish Art Blog

May 7th, 2011

Destacadas exposiciones con obras de artistas españoles en el exterior

Durante las dos pasadas semanas se han producido destacadas inauguraciones de exposiciones de artistas españoles en el exterior. Algunos de ellos ya fallecidos, como Pablo Picasso (Málaga, 1881 - Francia, 1973) y Joan Miró (Barcelona, 1893 - Palma de Mallorca, 1983). A estos hay que sumar las exposiciones de creadores internacionalmente reconocidos en sus distintas disciplinas como el arquitecto Santiago Calatrava (Valencia, 1951) y el fotógrafo Chema Madoz (Madrid, 1958). También han inaugurado exposición otros artistas como Ana Álvarez Ribalaygua (Santander, 1962), Fernando Navarro Vejo (Santander, 1977) y Fernando Villena (Bilbao, 1974). Además, como adelanto, destacar la exposición “Destino: Berlín / Zielort: Berlín” organizada por la Embajada de España en Berlín que del 25 de mayo al 17 de junio mostrará en el Studio 1 - Bethanien una selección de 21 artistas españoles residentes en Berlín, a cargo de la comisaria Creixell Espilla-Gilart. En su mayoría son artistas emergentes pero también se incluyen trabajos de artistas ya consolidados dentro del mercado internacional como son Ignacio Uriarte, Pablo Alonso, Javier Chozas, Paul Ekaitz, Cristina Gómez Barrio, PSJM y Jasmina Llobet & Luis Fernández Pons, entre otros.

En la sede neoyorkina de la Gagosian Gallery se inauguró la exposición que lleva por título “Picasso and Marie-Thérèse” y que está curada por John Richardson. Por su parte, la londinense Tate Modern ha organizado la retrospectiva “Joan Miró: The Ladder of Escape (La escalera de huída)” con con 150 óleos, acuarelas, dibujos y esculturas de diferentes museos y colecciones privadas. En su creación ha colaborado Teresa Montaner, curator de la Fundació Joan Miró. Además, la directora de esta última institución, Rosa María Malet i Ybern, y Vicente Todolí, ex-director de la Tate Modern, han ejercido como consultores. En la Neue Nationalgalerie en Berlín, bajo el título “Stella & Calatrava: The Michael Kohlhaas Curtain” se puede ver una obra de arte sin precedentes que fusiona una de las obras monumentales de Frank Stella (EE.UU., 1936) con una escultura de acero diseñada por Santiago Calatrava (Valencia, 1951). Estos dos creadores de dos disciplinas diferentes han usado sus trabajos individuales para crear una instalación que transforma dos obras en una. Esta instalación estará en Berlín hasta mediados del mes de agosto y después viajará al recién estrenado Instituto Aragonés de Arte y Cultura Contemporánea Pablo Serrano - IAACC de Zaragoza, donde formará parte de una ámplia selección de pinturas, dibujos y esculturas, que incluyen varias esculturas en movimiento nunca antes vistas y creadas de forma específica por Calatrava para la muestra. También en Alemania, en la ciudad de Colonia, en el espacio 100 kubik - Raum für spanische Kunst, que dirige la española, Carmen González-Borrás, se inauguró “Chema Madoz ‘La vida secreta de los objetos’. Fotografía” que supone la primera vez que se presentan obras de Chema Madoz (Madrid, 1958) en una galería alemana.

La fotógrafa Ana Álvarez Ribalaygua (Santander, 1962) inauguró la exposición “On y off” en el Museu Histórico de Santa Catarina de la ciudad brasileña de Florianópolis. Esta artista figura entre los artistas representados por la galería santanderina Espiral. El también santanderino Fernando Navarro Vejo (Santander, 1977) inauguró la individual “Para eso habéis nacido” en Galería Patricia Ready en Santiago de Chile. Navarro figura entre la nómina de artistas representados por la galería barcelonesa Sicart, con quien participó en un Solo Show de la última edición de JustMad 2011, y donde tuvo su última exposición individual en 2009. La pareja de artistas Cristina Calderón & José Luis Paulete, también representados por Sicart, tienen actualmente una exposición en Galería 713 - Arte Contemporáneo con sede en Buenos Aires.

Por su parte, Fernando Villena (Bilbao, 1974), a quien le representa la bilbaína Windsor Kulturgintza, inauguró una individual con nuevos trabajos en el Central Utah Art Center. Este 2011 Villena disfruta de una residencia en la Birch Creek Residency de Utah.

“Projeto Ideal” es el título de la colectiva que ha organizado el Centro Cultural Sao Paulo, donde se pueden ver obras de artistas como Santiago Sierra (Madrid, 1966), así como de otros, que tienen una significativa presencia en nuestro país como Regina José Galindo (Guatemala, 1974), Carlos Garaicoa (Cuba, 1967) y Jota Castro (Perú, 1964). También en Sao Paulo, en la sede del Instituto Cervantes se inauguró la exposición “Coleccionando o tempo”, comisariada por Berta Sichel , directora del departamento de audiovisuales del Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (MNCARS), desde 2000. La muestra reúne una selección de obras audiovisuales de la Colección Helena Fernandino y Emilio Pi. Por último, el próximo día 30 de Abril, se inagura “The Last First Decade” en la sede de The Ellipse Foundation Contemporary Art Collection, en la ciudad portuguesa de Cascais. En ella se podrán ver entre muchas otras obras pertenecientes a la Colección Ellipse las de artistas españoles como Ignasi Aballí (Barcelona, 1958) o Gonzalo Puch (Sevilla, 1950). Es reseñable que los fondos de esta colección -propiedad de Joao Oliveira-Rendeiro, presidente del Banco Privado Portugués- iban a depositarse en el MARCO - Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Vigo, según se anunció en junio de 2008, si bien, después de mantener avanzadas negociones para conseguirla, no llegó a alcanzarse un acuerdo. ARTEINFORMADO

“Dis/continuum” New Work from Blake Carrington

May 7th, 2011

Exhibition Dates: May 13-June 3, 2011

Opening Reception: May 13, 2011 7-10pm

Blake Carrington was born in Indiana in 1980. As an artist, he operates within the spheres of visual, sound and media art. His work in all of these varieties is informed largely by cultural geography, landscape and architecture. The areas between these formalized spatial practices and the compelling qualities of sound and visual arts are the main focus of his work. He is currently an artist-in-residence at LMCC’s Swing Space on Governors Island, New York, and recently received a NYSCA grant in support of his debut CD release concert at the Basilica of St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral. He has completed residencies at the HIAP in Helsinki, Finland, the Atlantic Center for the Arts in Florida, and the Rustines Lab in Montreal, Canada. In 2009 he received his MFA from Syracuse University, where he co-founded the platform for outdoor projections called the Urban Video Project. Last year he also co-curated a series for UVP featuring Trevor Paglen, Jill Magid, Thomson & Craighead, Miranda Lichtenstein and Jaume Ferrete. His print series Loci_, exploring the questionable translation of field recordings to abstract landscape imagery, is located in The Drawing Center’s Viewing Program in New York. Blake currently resides in Brooklyn, where he continues to explore new ideas for the utilization of installation, sound and the media art.

The CUAC is pleased to announce Dis/continuum, the first exhibition to feature Blake Carrington. Here, he will use topography and mineralogy as metaphors to examine cognitive boundaries, perception of landscape, and states of becoming rather than being. There are three components to this exhibition. First, the Temporary Formations list will include almost 200 geographic landform terms in multiple languages, which will appear as text on vinyl attached directly to the walls. Second, the Pile Gestalten will explore the idea of pieces becoming a unified whole. He will use a few rocks or several rocks to generate a pile of rocks. Groups of various materials such as mulch, rock salt and gravel will be arranged and outlined on the floor in an attempt to define their respective boundaries. Thirdly, the Colored Noise section will evaluate the molecular structures of crystals, using these patterns to create droning ambient sounds.

This exhibition is one of many at the CUAC that features highly acclaimed artists from around the United States and Utah. A review of our programming has recently been included in the highly influential international Flash Art magazine published in Milan, Italy. Artists who have shown at the CUAC over the last four years have been included in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, collected by Charles Saatchi; they have been exhibited in the Getty Museum, Whitney Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Saatchi Gallery, major museums in Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Korea, and Spain; They have shown in Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, Freight and Volume Gallery, the Drawing Center, and many other important New York, Los Angeles, and international venues.

CUAC Mission Statement:

The purpose of the CUAC is to educate Utahns about Contemporary Art through exhibitions of artists from three categories:

  1. Sanpete artists who demonstrate a high level of professionalism in their art;
  2. Utah artists who make art in a Contemporary genre who are emerging or well established;
  3. and artists who are exemplary of important trends in Contemporary Art worldwide.

The CUAC maintains that good education about art starts with strong exhibitions of Contemporary Art that have relevance in content or image to our community. Education also includes outreach to the community in the form of classes for adults and children, lectures and critical dialogue about art, and an inviting, friendly environment that welcomes visitors and encourages questions and strives to provide answers.< br/>< br/>

CUAC Projects: Standing In Reserve

April 25th, 2011

Standing in Reserve blurs the lines between art and technology. These fields, although often considered dissonant, have the potential to produce exemplary outcomes when synthesized. With increasingly powerful technologies artists and programers are exploring the possibilities in the “no man’s land” between these two fields. Standing in Reserve exhibits works by Daniel Everett, Bryan Cera, and Davey Hawkins.

Curated by Spencer Twelmeyer

CALL TO ARTISTS

April 14th, 2011

2011 Heritage Highway Juried Art Exhibition

The Central Utah Art Center is accepting applications for its annual Heritage Highway Juried Art exhibition. Artists living in Sanpete, Sevier, Piute, Wayne, Garfield, & Kane counties are invited to participate. This year we have invited Paul Bingham, President of the Thunderbird Foundation of the Arts to jury the exhibition. The exhibit will be held in conjunction with the Scandinavian Festival held in Ephraim, Ut, May 27 - June 7. There will be an opening reception Friday, May 27 from 7-9pm. Awards will be announced during the reception.

Dates

Submission Deadline: 5/14/11

Artist Notification: 5/18/11

Delivery of Accepted Work: 5/23/11

Pick Up of Exhibited Work: 6/7/11

 

Entry Fee: $20 for 3 images, $5 per additional image

All media accepted

Prizes: $500/$300/$200

 

[email protected]

435-283-5110

 

PLEASE APPLY ONLINE AT:

www.cuartcenter.org/apply-online

 

Application Process

We have created an online application that is both simple and completely secure. The selection process will take place through this web portal so we suggest submitting clear digital representations of your work. We ask that you submit your work digitally either online or by mailing in a CD.

Mailed Submission:

Fill out the provided form.
Mail in your CD, application form, and fee.
(Your images and information will be added to the web portal by CUAC staff.)

Online submission:

Create an account at https://apps/cuartcenter.org
Apply for the exhibition.
Upload images.
Pay Fee.
Enter Image Information.
Please contact us if you have any questions about the application process.

DOWNLOAD

2011 Heritage Highway Form

Our Juror

Paul Bingham grew up on a dairy farm in Northern Utah. He later graduated with a BA from Weber State University in 1967. He went to work as a Marketing Executive at Xerox Corporation in San Francisco.

He established the Bingham Gallery in 1974 in Los Altos, Ca. and became the dealer for Edith Hamlin, Maynard Dixon’s Widow in 1974. He later bought the Maynard Dixon property in Mount Carmel and formed The Thunderbird Foundation for the Arts in 1999 and began organizing the important annual event ”Maynard Dixon Country”.

 

CUAC Music Series: Matteo April 8th, 9pm

March 29th, 2011

Matteo will be putting on a free show April 8th at Ephraim’s Pizza Gallery. They will go on at 9pm and play until 10pm.

If you’re traveling and it seems like buying a Chinese zither harp over five feet long is a good idea, let it be known that it actually costs more to ship it back home than what you bought it for. But so was the beginning of MATTEO, an indie folk feel on traditional Chinese instruments. Eric Chipman on guzheng and guitar is joined by Brinn Chipman on violin, erhu, morin khuur, Jordan Riley on ruan and Luke Williams on all of the above… and bass.