Archive for the ‘CUAC Board’ Category

Ephraim City Evicts Central Utah Art Center. CUAC Board views eviction as censorship.

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

Scroll down to read about Edgar Arceneaux and Kurt Forman at the SLC Public Library on July 26

Links to articles about the eviction:

Salt Lake City Weekly

Salt Lake Tribune

KPCW

KUER

Salt Lake Magazine

We are on our way out of Ephraim. We have been pioneers for contemporary art in Utah. We are looking for a new venue so we can continue to do what we do. If you want to help us out, we are working on a couple things 1) we’re looking for a new venue; 2) we need to make up the money we’re short from Ephraim City (make a donation); 3) we’ll have an online petition (Check back soon). For more details, check out the press release below:

Ephraim City Evicts Central Utah Art Center
CUAC Board views eviction as censorship

After 20 years in Ephraim’s Pioneer Square, the Central Utah Art Center (CUAC) received a surprise eviction from the Mayor and Council of Ephraim City on June 20, 2012. Without warning, the government of Ephraim has given notice for CUAC to vacate the building that the CUAC saved from impending demolition and converted into a leading venue for contemporary art in the State of Utah. Although the eviction letter claims lack of support for local arts education and artists, the CUAC Board of Directors views the eviction as a response to the artwork that CUAC exhibited and an attempt to censor the material in a way that violates First Amendment rights.

In conversations with their constituents, the Mayor, City Manager, and several Council members of Ephraim have commented that they feel CUAC exhibitions aren’t “Sanpete appropriate.” Contemporary art of the caliber that CUAC has exhibited is not always intended for viewing by minors, but the CUAC Board maintains that the residents of Sanpete County and the state of Utah deserve exposure to art that challenges, compels, and elevates a viewer who has reached maturity. “That the surprise eviction comes at a time when CUAC is exhibiting three photographs which depict women’s breasts in an exhibition that explores racially-based civil injustices is no coincidence,” said CUAC Director Adam Bateman. “Ephraim City has moved to censor the artwork available to the people of Sanpete County.”

In 1992, Ephraim City planned to raze the ZCMI Granary and co-op building at Ephraim Pioneer Square. A group of citizens raised money and oversaw renovations to save the buildings and start the Central Utah Art Center. At that time, CUAC was a co-operative gallery that showed Sanpete County artists, received approximately 450 visitors annually, and received free rent from Ephraim City. In 2005, CUAC’s focus turned from exclusively showing local artists to exhibiting the best of local, national, and international contemporary artists, a move which brought international recognition, a tenfold increase in financial support, and a twenty-fold increase in visitors (9,000 annually). Ephraim City increased their support of CUAC at that time to include $30,000 annually. CUAC operates under a $130,000 annual budget, the majority of funds coming from private donors and foundation support which includes the prestigious Andy Warhol Foundation.

CUAC has a history of supporting local artists and local arts education. Over the last seven years, 32% of artists exhibiting at CUAC have been from Sanpete County. CUAC has offered classes that target elementary students, occurring an average of more than twice a month for approximately 15 students each. CUAC has also developed a curriculum and been in conversation with Ephraim Elementary School and Snow College to implement an arts education program in the school that would benefit 300 elementary students at least eight times per semester, scheduled to begin this school year. CUAC has also provided art scholarships and internships for Snow College students, and organized and funded travel and accommodations for four or five visiting lecturers per semester for Snow College’s Visiting Lecture Series.

CUAC’s contemporary art format not only brought more people to Ephraim, who, together with CUAC, spend approximately $200,000 a year in Ephraim, but also artwork from internationally-acclaimed artists like Julian Opie, Kerry James Marshall, Jack Smith, Bek Stupak, Rashawn Griffin, Xaviera Simmons, Mariah Robertson, Angela Ellsworth, and Andrea Galvani. This list includes artists who have exhibited in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennale, the Guggenheim, MoMA, UMFA, Getty Center, and the Saatchi Gallery, artists who have been featured on the seminal televised art series Art 21, and artists who have received many residencies and awards, including prestigious Guggenheim fellowships. While exhibiting internationally-acclaimed artists, 32% of CUAC’s exhibiting artists were from Sanpete County, providing an unparalleled opportunity for Utah’s best local artists to be associated with the world’s most celebrated contemporary artists.

The CUAC Board intends to follow the instructions of the eviction letter while continuing to examine legal options available. The CUAC is evaluating alternative locations for the Art Center’s permanent home and plans to sponsor a series of pop-up exhibitions in Utah in the interim.

A private “Farewell, Ephraim” event has been scheduled at the current CUAC location at 8pm on Saturday, August 18, which will include dancing, a live DJ, and a screening of Footloose. Free tickets to the event are available by emailing [email protected]; please include your name and number of guests. CUAC’s pARTy Bus will be available to transport CUAC supporters to and from the event. PARTy Bus tickets are $15 and include transportation, video art, and free drinks; tickets available at cuartcenter.org. The Bus will depart Salt Lake City’s 1300 South TRAX station parking lot at 5:30pm, and depart Ephraim at 11:30pm.

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Press contact:
Andrew Shaw, 801-502-3128
[email protected]

Localized: Working in Proximity - Installation Views

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

June 10 - Aug 5

Artists:

Scott Allred

Amy Jorgensen

Adam Larsen

Brad Taggart

Escape From New York: CUAC board members Adam Bateman and Jason Metcalf in group show

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Official Escape From New York press release

http://escapefromnewyork.tumblr.com/

Our heroine runs with purpose through the darkened streets of Chelsea, looking for a way out. At every corner she’s met with roadblocks. Turning down 24th Street, racing past Feuer, Boone, and Gagosian, she sees a clearing. She leaps across 11th Avenue without a thought, spotting the Hudson! “If only I can only make it!” Darting through the traffic of the West Side Highway, she leaps over the concrete barrier. Herein lies the pier. Out of breath, she looks up. Spotting lights in the distance, New Jersey’s glacial cliffs taunt her, their beams of shimmering color bouncing off the water’s surface. A sirensong like Gatsby’s eyes, she walks to the end of the path. She has no vessel. “How will she get there?”

Throughout American history, the concept of Manifest Destiny has greeted us with a newfound optimism for the future of what COULD BE versus what IS. “Go west, young man” held true for generations. Escape From New York concentrates specifically on the breaking free of long-held notions and mistaken beliefs that Manhattan only can be the center of the art world. An active experiment in reverse bridge and tunnel, Escape From New York highlights Paterson, NJ— a historic community in transition with massive venues less than a 15 minute drive from the George Washington Bridge. Ready and waiting with open arms to help reignite a cultural renaissance, the city has given us heretofore unheard of space to showcase contemporary art in a former silk factory.

Escape From New York will show the work of 43 top contemporary artists currently working today. The exhibition includes artists working in a broad breath of genres—from painting, to video, photography, installation, sculpture, performance, and social media-based art. Come and join us for our opening reception, Saturday, May 15, from 3-9PM as we leave behind the cramped spaces of Manhattan for the broad horizons of New Jersey. The exhibition will be on view in the historic Fabricolor Building at 24 1/2 Van Houten Street, across from Federici Park in downtown Paterson. We will be located on the 2nd, 4th and 5th floors of the building. For more information, please contact curator Olympia Lambert at [email protected].

Below is the final list of participating artists:

2010 Whitney Biennial selectees
*The Bruce High Quality Foundation
*Kate Gilmore

Robert Aitchison
Robert Appleton
Man Bartlett
Adam Bateman
Jason Robert Bell
Alison Blickle
Boyce Cummings
Jennifer Dalton
Vicki DaSilva
Sumner Dilworth
Debra Drexler
Murray Dwertman
Richard Eagan
Jeremy Earhart
Agnes Eperjesi

Stephan Fowlkes
Nicholas Fraser
Angela Freiberger
Micah Ganske
Alex Gingrow
Dean Goelz

Grant Haffner
Iliyan Ivanov
Kezam
Daniel Leeb
Thomas Lendvai
Julie Lohnes
Michelle Manley
Jason Metcalf
Michael Paul Miller
Laelia Mitchell
Laurel Nakadate
Mia Pearlman
Rafael Perez
Don Porcella
William Powhida
Christopher Saunders
Robert Schatz
Sean Slemon

Peter Soriano
Tamas Veszi
An Xiao

9:24 am • 16 April 2010