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 2007 Exhibitions


 



January 6 - February 24, 2007
Daniel Bozhkov, Greta Pratt, Camille Norment


Daniel Bozhkov,  Darth Vader Tries to Clean the Black See with a Brita Filter
Main and Left Galleries
Daniel Bozhkov: A Survey
Daniel Bozhkov is a Bulgarian artist whose extreme conceptual acts incorporate performance, painting, photography and research; creating complex meditations on culture, politics, and consumerism. This exhibition is developed with curator Regine Basha and ArtHouse in Austin, Texas.
In conjunction with this exhibition, Bozhkov will create an Atlanta version of his Fastest Guided Tours of Unfamiliar Places, an ongoing work begun in 2003.

 

Greta Pratt, Lincoln One and Lincoln Two

Greta Pratt

Gallery Four
Greta Pratt: Nineteen Lincolns

In her monumental work Nineteen Lincolns, Pratt documents men who belong to The Association of Lincoln Presenters. While they each started this unusual occupation for a different reason, the men have all become completely immersed in the ideals of Abraham Lincoln and speak passionately about their relationship to him.
Historian Howard Zinn has written that Pratt’s “extraordinary photographs give us glimpses of people and places that stimulate us to think about our history... Her point of view is delightfully antic and provocative.”

Camille Norment, Driftglass

Camille Norment, Installation view

Round Gallery
Camille Norment
Driftglass and Apparition

For her installation at the Contemporary, Camille Norment responds to the unique special elements of the Round gallery to create a new version of Driftglass, a work that examines issues of self-consciousness and the politics of the gaze. Norment’s Apparition is a wallpaper installation that pictures a verdant landscape of trees reflected in water. The symmetry of the image projects various kinds of doubling, from top to bottom and side to side, connecting to the artist’s use of mirrors, and her inquiry into states of reflection and obfuscation.

March 23 - May 12, 2007
Kevin Landers, Devendra Banhart, Recordings, Nina Bovasso
 Artists' reception March 23, 6 - 9 pm


Kevin Landers

main gallery
Kevin Landers

Kevin Landers is a New York based sculptor and photographer who records everyday objects and environments. Using common construction materials (plastic, metal, fabric, foil), he reproduces a rack of potato chip bags and a bicycle wheel and frame from memory. These acts of poetic realism are accompanied by his keenly observed photos taken in restaurants, laundromats, and on city streets.

 

Devendra Banhart

Devendra Banhart

left gallery
Devendra Banhart

Devendra Banhart is a San Francisco-based artist and musician whose drawings combine repeated human and animal figures, ornamental framing devices, and bits of language. Intimate and hypnotic, these works share affinities to Tantric diagrams, Plains Indian narratives, and fantastic private worlds. This exhibition is the first comprehensive examination of Banhart's visual art.

“Devendra Banhart’s small, fine-grained ink drawings, in tight, doodle-like strokes and flourishes, offer a menagerie of beasts with horned and haloed heads, lots of eyes, and bodies covered with feathers that end in fingers. Echoes of Paul Klee, Indian painting and children’s drawings chime together here. Like the psychedelic-folk music for which Mr. Banhart has become well known, the effect has a spooky sweetness.” The New York Times

David Moreno

gallery four
Recordings

Recordings is a group exhibition that examines the intersection of nature, experimental modes of documentary, and time. Included in the show are video and photography by Monica Duncan & Lara Odell, David Moreno, and Sharon Harper.


Nina Bovasso, Springcleanforthemayqueen, 2007

round gallery
Nina Bovasso springcleanforthemayqueen

Nina Bovasso is internationally recognized for her patterned paintings, drawings, and sculptures that incorporate floral and cartoon imagery to exuberant effect. For her installation at the Contemporary, Bovasso has constructed a large ball that transforms her two dimensional work into an outsized three dimensional object.


June 8 - August 11, 2007
Talent Show, the 2007 Atlanta Biennial
Suellen Parker, Well Done, 2006
Suellen Parker, Well Done, 2006
 
 

Talent Show is a large scale exhibition that brings together varied artistic achievements of numerous Atlantans. Modeled on the traditional talent show that honors audacity as well as skill, this exhibition attempts to find and promote the creative work of trained and un-trained artists. Diverse mediums, documentation, and live events will animate this wildly democratic installation.

Exhibiting artists include Lana Adams, Rose Barron, Amber Boardman, Sarah Emerson, Jennifer Hartley, Patrick Holbrook, Carol John, Jennifer Kornder, George Long & Mario Schambon, Louise Merlyn, Jiha Moon, Charles Huntley Nelson, Open Studio Art Group, Suellen Parker, Fahamu Pecou, Shana Robbins, Ben Roosevelt, Ronnog & Steve Seaberg, Ruth Stanford, Constance Thalken, Bean Worley, Harry Zmijewski.

Thursday, June 21 - Talent Talk & Tour, 6 pm
Join exhibiting artists Sarah Emerson, Jiha Moon, Ben Roosevelt, and Charles Huntley Nelson as they discuss creativity, community, and commerce with the show's curator, Stuart Horodner.
FREE admission

Thursday, July 5, 6 - 8 pm
Quilting Bee
Exhibiting artist, artist Amber Boardman, invites everyone, novices and experts alike to join her for a "new fashioned" quilting bee. Bring old clothes. Notions will be supplied—no sewing experience necessary.
FREE admission

Saturday, July 21 - Performances & Awards, 2 - 5 pm
Live events by Patrick Holbrook, George Long & Mario Schambon, Shana Robbins, Ronnog & Steve Seaberg, and Bean Worley
Awards will be presented in various categories, voting by gallery visitors
FREE admission


Talent Show
is sponsored through the generous support of SunTrust and Marcia Weber Gardens to Love.
SunTrust                            Marcia Weber Gardens to Love



October 5 - December 22, 2007
Harrell Fletcher: The American War
Nubar Alexanian: S.O.P.
Finding Form: Droog Design, Jason Fulford, Philip Guston, Jim Lee, Erik Levine, Bradley McCallum & Jacqueline Tarry, Francois Morelli, Hannah Wilke

Harrell Fletcher, The American War
Harrell Fletcher, The American War, (detail)

Main Gallery
Harrell Fletcher, The American War


This photo installation examines the Vietnam War from the point-of-view of the Vietnamese people, incorporating documentary images and texts from The War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City. Artist Harrell Fletcher visited the museum in 2005, and appropriated its content for distribution at venues throughout the United States. He states: “In June 2005 I was in Vietnam for a month as part of an international artists retreat. While I was there I visited The War Remnants Museum, which is a memorial museum for what is referred to in Vietnam as The American War. I was so affected by what I saw at the museum that I went back several times and eventually re-photographed all of the images and text descriptions from the main museum--over two hundred photos. I used my digital camera and took the shots hand held at off angles to avoid reflections, so the images have an oddly casual quality but are still accurate representations of the material depicted at the museum, with a similarly horrifying quality.”

This exhibition has been presented to great acclaim at venues including White Columns in NYC, The Vera List Center at MIT, Massachusetts, and the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art in Oregon. Art critic Michael Kimmelman writing about this exhibition in The New York Times in 2006 suggests: "Fletcher's bootlegged museum, partly reassembled, has been traveling the United States. It is an ingenious little show; heartbreaking, too. It would be a pity to miss."

Harrell Fletcher - www.harrellfletcher.com

 

Nubar Alexanian, SOP Lynndie England, 2007
Nubar Alexanian, S.O.P. Lynndie England, 2007

 

Gallery Four
Nubar Alexanian, S.O.P.


Photographer Nubar Alexanian has been granted unprecedented access to the film sets of director Errol Morris for many years. He has recently been documenting the making of S.O.P., Morris’ exploration of the abuses at Abu Ghraib, which includes interviews with military participants and re-creations of torture based on the widely seen photographs taken by participants. These photographs have never been shown before, and the exhibition will coincide with the release of Morris' film.

Nubar Alexanian - www.nubar.com

 

Drum (relic), Erik Levine
Drum (relic), Erik Levine

Francois Morelli, Belthead, 1998
Francois Morelli, Belthead, 1998

 

Left Gallery & Round Gallery
Finding Form


This group exhibition was inspired by a sculpture by Erik Levine that was discovered on the Contemporary’s premises. What was once a finely crafted object in laminated wood has now become a split and cracked relic from having been left outside for several years. The ways in which forms are established is the subject of this diverse group show, focusing on aspects of making and unmaking, plans and deviations, decay and destruction. Artists include Droog Design, Jason Fulford, Philip Guston, Jim Lee, Erik Levine, Bradley McCallum & Jacqueline Tarry, Francois Morelli, and Hannah Wilke.

Droog Design - www.droogdesign.nl
Jason Fulford - www.jasonfulford.com
Erik Levine - www.eriklevine.com
Francois Morelli - morf.concordia.ca
Bradley McCallum & Jacqueline Tarry - www.mccallumtarry.com




 

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