Eco-logic

HOUSTON (October 1st, 2010)- The Community Artists’ Collective (the Collective) is pleased to announce the opening of Eco-logic from October 15, 2010 through November 13, 2010. The exhibit showcases the politics of human interaction and response to the natural environment with work by Shannon Duncan (Houston), Amy Gerhauser (Austin), Raishad Glover (New York), Tierney Malone (Houston), Andy “Champa” Moore (New York), Kaneem Smi…th (Houston) and Youngsuk Suh (San Francisco). The Eco-logic exhibition curated by Divya Murthy and Michael K. Taylor will open with a reception Friday, October 15, 2010 from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. The exhibition runs in cooperation with Life is Living and the Mitchell Center which will host a second welcoming reception at the Collective on Nov. 3rd from 6-9pm, with an artist talk at 6:45 p.m.

Shannon Duncan’s photographic tree grid results from a compulsion to collect and archive discarded and abandoned objects. Her work presents three selected views of trees affected by Hurricane Ike in 2008 and a floor installation of actual documented tree stumps removed after Ike. Duncan’s project is an ongoing pro-active process in which she replants and documents the trees at the same sites.

Amy Gerhauser creates one-of-a-kind map installations showing the direction of currents and location of gyres dealing with the issue of plastics accumulating in the ocean and its effect on pelagic birds. She plays with the shapes of the North Pacific Ocean and images of albatrosses, which are especially vulnerable to plastic debris mistaken for food. Her drawn graphite and iron-capped maps reference science to create visually informative installations.

Raishad Glover creates performative imagery integrating natural organic materials such as diamond dust, soy ink and cotton paper to show chemical descriptions of mass consumption. He utilizes mainly natural organic media to visually comment on transactions of power, natural resources and economy. By using bold colors and referencing Western art history, Glover encourages his viewer to question consumption and class.

Tierney Malone references social awareness through the re-telling of narratives. He has created a new set of colorful works expounding on the challenges of social activism against human “greed” by highlighting the environmental awareness of Dr. Seuss’ 1971 childrens’ book The Lorax. Malone’s sophisticated imagery suggests that the Lorax’s speaking out against the “Once-lers” shameless destruction of their own habitat is reflective of our need to preserve and sustain our community against environmental indifference.

Andy “Champa” Moore’s audio installation collects and contrasts many of the disparate sounds from urban streets and rural landscapes allowing the listener to reconsider the nature of “silence” and “noise.” Moore’s ability to create an auditory experience that dislocates the audience from the white cube brings attention to the underrepresented environment of sound as an art form.

Kaneem Smith’s massive installation opens the dialogue on commercial crop trading with special focus on coffee beans. By creating large fluid shapes out of “found” commercial burlap bags, Smith’s piece challenges her audience to participate in a dialogue that references global concerns on ethical trade, the West’s over- consumption of natural resources, colonialist interactions on the natural environment and economy of developing nations.

Youngsuk Suh’s stunning photographs magnify the complex interdependency of our relationship with the natural world through contemporary rural landscapes using the smoke created by wildfires as a reference of the luminous effects of 19th Century Romantic landscape paintings. Suh addresses the nature of wildfires’ large-scale government response projects, which reveal central questions about human presence in nature and the overwhelming uncertainty of human control over natural phenomena in our society.

Life is Living (Nov. 3rd, the Collective reception) is a hip-hop-based environmental justice festival focused primarily on Houston’s Third Ward neighborhood and the extraordinary people who sustain Houston communities and is sponsored by the Mitchell Center and additional partners at Emancipation Park on Nov. 6th. Houston’s New Living has donated their NOVOC low-voc paint to assist in repainting the Collective gallery as an example of environmentally friendly and sustainable choices for family and community dwellings.

The Collective, located at 1413 Holman in the Midtown Art Center (Tea Room Gallery), is open Thursday through Saturday from 12 noon to 5 p.m. and by appointment. For more information call 713-523-1616.

The Community Artists’ Collective promotes and preserves for all people evidence of African American cultural traditions. Its programs are supported in part by a grant from the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance and through collaborations with community organizations. The Collective is a member of the Fresh Arts Coalition.

For more info visit www.thecollective.org or www.lifeisliving.org/houston

OFFLINE FV and Our Image Film and Arts Festival present


SPECIAL SCREENING of the The Beat


THIS THURSDAY Sept 23th 2010 6-8pm

6-6:30pm OFFLINE Film & Video (short international films) TheCollectiveWebsite

6:30-8pm The Beat presented by Our Image Film & Arts OurImageFacebookPage

The Community Artists’ Collective
1413 Holman near LaBranch Houston, TX 77004 713-523-1616

OFFLINE FV : Film and Video Exhibition curated by Michael K Taylor

Exhibition Dates: Sept 11th 2010 – Sept 25th 2010
Hours: Thurs-Sat 12-5 with special screenings 6-8pm each Thursday
@ The Community Artists’ Collective – Tea Room Gallery

OFFLINE FV : Film and Video Exhibition focuses on experimental video and film narratives from local and international artists and filmmakers Jude Anogwih (Nigeria), Simone Bailey (San Francisco), Uchay Joel Chima (Nigeria), Andrew Esiebo (Nigeria), Jeff Faulkinbury (Houston), Tierney Malone (Houston), Emeka Ogboh (Nigeria), Lilian Pilaku (Nigeria), and Patrick Lovejoy (USA).

Anogwih’s “Dreams (Smaerd)”, Pilaku’s “Outage – Outrage”, and Chima ‘s “Carbon Blues” are abstract collages addressing migration, energy and transportation within Africa. Tierney Malone’s “Songs for My Fathers” features multiple paintings and score Charlie Perez. Jeff Faulkinbury’s feature-length film “Read On” follows four couples experiences with racism, infidelity, and identity when pushed by economic downturns. Run Time: 25 minutes

Our Image Film and Arts Festival showcases positive and entertaining imagery through film, arts and music about Black cultures of the world.

The Beat:

“The audience actually clapped in the middle of this film during the screening.  That has only happened a few times, so we thought this film would be perfect.  It captures life’s tribulations, the arts, and humanity.”
Film Synopsis:
Director Brandon Sonnier’s THE BEAT travels “the roads not taken” through the life of Philip “Flip” Bernard.
Following a tragedy, aspiring rap artist “Flip” Bernard is caught between two staggeringly different realities, each with its own irreversible consequences. Flip is torn between surviving on the streets in order to pursue his own dream of becoming a hip-hop rapper, or giving in to his father’s demands of getting a “real job” with a steady paycheck. In a surreal, suspenseful shuffling of parallel realities, Flip lives out both contrasting fates.

Run Time: 90 minutes

_______________________________________________________________________________

OFFLINE Film & Video Curator Michael K Taylor is a Texas-based artist and curator whose work over the past few years has been featured at the MFAH, Lawndale Arts Center, Project Row Houses, Rice Media Center and Go Down Arts Centre in Nairobi, Kenya. He curated the exhibitions Future Present Series and The Love Movement at the Community Artists’ Collective incorporating visual art, live dance and video.

The Community Artists’ Collective is located at Tea Room Gallery 1413 Holman near LaBranch Houston, TX 77004

The Community Artists’ Collective (The Collective) is a nonprofit 501c(3) organization dedicated to making the arts and arts education more accessible to all children and adults and to foster an appreciation for art and the creative process. The Collective is funded in part by grants from the Houston Arts Alliance, Houston Endowment, Inc., corporations, individuals and through collaborations with community organizations. The Collective is a member of the Fresh Arts Coalition, the Greater Houston Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, the African American Tourism Council of Greater Houston and the Third Ward Community Cloth Cooperative.

OFFLINE FV & SWAMP Present THE TERRITORY


SPECIAL SCREENING of the PBS Show

The TERRITORY SWAMP  PBS & OFFLINE FILM & VIDEO

THIS THURSDAY Sept 16th 2010 6-8pm

presented by SWAMP & The Community Artists’ Collective
1413 Holman near LaBranch Houston, TX 77004 713-523-1616
www.thecollective.org www.swamp.org

OFFLINE FV : Film and Video Exhibition curated by Michael K Taylor

Exhibition Dates: Sept 11th 2010 – Sept 25th 2010
Hours: Thurs-Sat 12-5 with special screenings 6-8pm each Thursday
@ The Community Artists’ Collective – Tea Room Gallery

OFFLINE FV : Film and Video Exhibition focuses on experimental video and film narratives from local and international artists and filmmakers Jude Anogwih (Nigeria), Simone Bailey (San Francisco), Uchay Joel Chima (Nigeria), Andrew Esiebo (Nigeria), Jeff Faulkinbury (Houston), Tierney Malone (Houston), Emeka Ogboh (Nigeria), Lilian Pilaku (Nigeria), and Patrick Lovejoy (USA).

Anogwih’s “Dreams (Smaerd)”, Pilaku’s “Outage – Outrage”, and Chima ‘s “Carbon Blues” are abstract collages addressing migration, energy and transportation within Africa. Tierney Malone’s “Songs for My Fathers” features multiple paintings and score Charlie Perez. Jeff Faulkinbury’s feature-length film “Read On” follows four couples experiences with racism, infidelity, and identity when pushed by economic downturns.

Southwest Alternate Media Project (SWAMP) & THE TERRITORY

THE TERRITORY is a 13-part, 30-minute showcase series of short films and videos broadcast statewide on Texas PBS stations. www.theterritory.tv

SWAMP evolved from programs originally organized at St. Thomas University and later at Rice University Media Center in the early 1970s through the vision of the internationally acclaimed filmmaker and educator James Blue. Houston philanthropist John de Menil lent initial financial support to the program that became an independent nonprofit organization in 1977 under the direction of founding director Ed Hugetz.

SWAMP brings artists and audiences together by providing a variety of on-going exhibition, education, and information services. www.swamp.org

SCREENING TIMES: 6-8pm

OFFLINE FV Shorts 6 – 6:30pm
(short experimental films from American and Africa): total run time 21:23 min
Songs for My Fathers – by Tierney Malone feat. Charlie Perez (Houston, TX)
length 2:43 min
Against the Wall – by Andrew Esiebo (Lagos, Nigeria)
length 3:51 min
[dis]connect – by Emeka Ogboh (Lagos, Nigeria)
length 1:58 min
Dreams (Smeard) Smeared – by Jude Anogwih (Lagos, Nigeria)
length 1:02 min
Carbon Blues – by Uche Joel Chima (Lagos, Nigeria)
length 2:44 min
Outage – by Outrage by Lillian Pilaku (Lagos, Nigeria)
length 2:16min
Elinor Beauregard – by Simone Bailey (San Francisco, CA)
length 1:35 min
Vanishing Point – by Patrick Lovejoy (NY & CA)
length 4:36 min
Read On- by Jeff Faulkinbury
length 2:10 hrs (Viewed on the Side Screen except for selected times)

Selections from THE TERRITORY, season 33 – 6:30 – 8pm
TYGER (Guilherme Marcondes, Brazil, 2006, 4:30, no dialog)
A giant tiger mysteriously appears in a big city, revealing the hidden
reality in an otherwise ordinary night.
SCENE PRIMITIVE (Daniel Faubert, Canada, 2007, 12:10, no dialog)
Like a scroll, this traveling film sequence gradually unfurls, revealing the story of a civilization struggling against nature and human nature.
TELERIFIC VOODOO (Paul Jadoul, Belgium, 2006, 4:30, no dialog)
Counting down, is this the Armageddon? A world evolution by music supremacy becomes manifest.
APNEE (Claude Chabot, France, 2006, 3:50, no dialog)
In this paparazzi revenge fantasy, a photographer tries to capture an embarrassing moment in the life of a celebrity.
HORN (Roohollah Masroor, Iran, 2007, 9:35, Persian with English subtitles)
On a cold, snowy day in Tehran, a man getting on a bus serves to symbolize Iranian social life with honesty and irony.
RED WEDNESDAY (Nazanin Shirazi, Texas, 2008, 11:21)
While trying to heal her mother, a young girl dangerously mimics traditions she doesn’t fully understand.
NO MAIL (Ken and Simon Macrae, Australia, 2006, 6:57)
Small minds in a small town attempt to ostracize the local Muslim postman and divide the town with their actions.

SWAMP & THE TERRITORY are represented by Mary M. Lampe the Executive Director of Southwest Alternate Media Project (SWAMP) since 1998. In addition to her duties as Executive Director, she is also the Co-Executive Producer of THE TERRITORY, SWAMP’s short film showcase series broadcast on Texas PBS stations.

OFFLINE Film & Video Curator Michael K Taylor is a Texas-based artist and curator whose work over the past few years has been featured at the MFAH, Lawndale Arts Center, Project Row Houses, Rice Media Center and Go Down Arts Centre in Nairobi, Kenya. He curated the exhibitions Future Present Series and The Love Movement at the Community Artists’ Collective incorporating visual art, live dance and video.

_______________________________________________________________________________

The Community Artists’ Collective is located at Tea Room Gallery 1413 Holman near LaBranch Houston, TX 77004

The Community Artists’ Collective (The Collective) is a nonprofit 501c(3) organization dedicated to making the arts and arts education more accessible to all children and adults and to foster an appreciation for art and the creative process. The Collective is funded in part by grants from the Houston Arts Alliance, Houston Endowment, Inc., corporations, individuals and through collaborations with community organizations. The Collective is a member of the Fresh Arts Coalition, the Greater Houston Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, the African American Tourism Council of Greater Houston and the Third Ward Community Cloth Cooperative.

SWAMP is supported in part by grants from the Houston Endowment, the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance, the Brown Foundation, Texas Commission on the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, Houston Film Commission, and many other individuals and contributing organizations.

Las Comadres Recycled: Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition

Discovery Green & Talento Bilingue de Houston - Las Comadres RecycledDates: September 3 – October 22, 2010

EXHIBITION DATES & LOCATIONS:
Discovery Green, September 3 – 17
Guadalupe Plaza Park, September 24 – October 22

Talento Bilingue de Houston presents the Las Comadres Recycled: Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition.

A  juried outdoor public exhibit entitled “LAS COMADRES RECYCLED,” in which Houston artists create EIGHT life-size statues inspired by fictional “Doñas” (matriarchs) which commemorate sustainable ideas and practices which benefit and nourish our Pachamama (Mother Earth).

In Latino culture, “Doñas” (matriarchs) are revered for shouldering family traditions, enforcing rules and efficiently running the household. These influential women, endearingly called “COMADRES”, are integral pillars in the community. As friends who support one another, these pertinent female metaphors are symbols which nurture values and behaviors to promote dignity and pride for our collective home.

By creating a memorable and iconic “Comadre,” artists make a dynamic statements relating to the environment. The event acts as a precedent as sculptures are constructed exclusively of recyclable materials and will be a part of a collective outdoor exhibit at both Discovery Green and Guadalupe Park Plaza, two highly visible locations in Houston to be seen by thousands of park-goers.

Inspired by a goal to unite the arts and prevailing attitudes towards the bioshpere, Planeta Verde Now (PVN) an ecologically driven campaign begun in 2009 by TBH, continues a green initiative within the Latino community by aligning art, performance, and cross-media events as well as relationships with artists, groups, and relevant organizations in Houston and make an impact in the way our culture relates with the environment.

Each “Doña” will have an accompanying plaque with her name and accomplishment(s).

Selected artists and respective “Doñas”:

LIZ CONCES SPENCER, Doña Rosa Gardenia Muelle
LISBETH ORTÍZ, Doña Eva Luz
JORGE GALVAN, Doña Susie de la Limpieza
REGINA AGU, Doña Renee “The Fuel Fixer” Green
MICHAEL K TAYLOR, Doña One’der Full’estima
STEPHANIE GUAJARDO, Doña Frida de la naturaleza
ERIN FRY, Doña María Ramos
STALINA E. VILLARREAL, Doña Poly frou-frou Sanguínea

Planeta Verde Now is a TBH Latino Green Initiative dedicated to bridging the arts to local ecological concerns. We offer a multifaceted series of artistic endeavors designed to foster environmental awareness and social responsibility.

With the use of strategic community efforts and through specific grassroots actions, TBH commits to transforming the lives of Latinos by empowering them with the creative means to become involved as green artists and promoters, as recruiters of additional community participation and as vital educators to others by means of its Manada Verde (Green Pride) Campaign. Green Pride’s main objective will be to make its community 100% ecoliterate–in other words, able to read and compose the environment by acquiring a deep understanding of its place and its relationship to it. Also, the Green Pride will educate its community with social practices aligned with sustainable living.

(Pictured Above: Doña One’der Full’estima by Michael K Taylor).

Publicity:

http://www.39online.com/

http://www.artshound.com