Montserrat Alumni, Faculty and Staff Exhibit and Curate in New Art Center’s “You Are Here”
YOU ARE HEREJanuary 15 – March 26, 2016*A Curatorial Opportunity Program Exhibition curated by Pam Campanaro | Darek Bittner | Dan DeRosato | Kevin Frances | Mark Hoffmann | Emma Hogarth
Family Drop-in Day, $10
Saturday, Jan, 30, 1-4PM
featuring illustration and collage workshops with Mark Hoffmann and Darek Bittner
How We Got Here
Thursday, Feb. 4, 7PM
a panel discussion with the artists moderated by curator Pam Campanaro
Here with the Curator
Saturday, Feb. 20, 5PM
an exhibition tour lead by curator Pam Campanaro
DAREK BITTNER (Portland, ME) proposes a radical interpretation of “here” in the form of a mental state. He creates work with the notion that we psychologically carry the places we identify with. Bittner creates abstract pages of a larger narrative through sentimental, personal collages. Set within the High Peaks, a region of New York’s Adirondack Park, Bittner utilizes color, shape, and choice of found paper to create his version of place. While High Peaks is a geographical area on a map, Bittner says High Peaks is also a psychological mindset. “High Peaks as a mental landscape enables me to channel a myriad of themes, characters, conflicts and points of view to paper.” While occasionally Bittner’s titles reference a specific location, he insists that each space can be for anyone, anywhere.
Bittner is a designer and printmaker based in Portland, Maine. Bittner is a member of Pickwick Independent Press and graduate of Montserrat College of Art. His work is bold and matter-of-fact, often concerning the High Peaks region of Upstate New York. Bittner works most frequently with collage methods and letterpress printmaking. Bittner actively shares his work as it’s made on his studio blog.
DAN DEROSATO (Philadelphia, PA) presents easily recognizable sites that over time reveal themselves as either missing something or slowly coming undone. The places DeRosato replicates provide their viewers with an approachable sense of security. But, as an audience spends time with each piece, the more it becomes clear that the place once providing stability and comfort is actually breaking down. In an instant, the viewer realizes they are caught in a liminal state between reality and imagination.
DeRosato holds a BFA from Montserrat College of Art. He works mostly with digital glitching methods to damage and alter digital files into entirely new pieces, but also has experience in traditional printmaking, letterpress, bookbinding, screen printing, lithography, video editing, web design, installation, and performance art.
KEVIN FRANCES (Boston, MA) is a printmaker and sculptor. His work often deals with connections between the home and set design, more specifically how the objects around us are props; physical indicators that communicate the owner’s personality, interests, and contribute to a larger personal narrative. Frances will utilize the stage-like space on the left side of the gallery to install the mixed-media installations Our Bedroom (2012) and Lucas (2014-2015). From afar, the room looks ordinary, much like a set would to an audience. However, as the viewer steps into the bedroom, you begin to see that parts of the room are fake like a paper silkscreened rug or a dresser made from foam core. By combining the mediums of flat, 2D prints and ceramic sculpture in his installations, Frances creates the illusion of a place that is neither here nor there.
Frances received his MFA in Printmaking at the Rhode Island School of Design in 2013, and his BA in Art Studio from the University of California, Davis in 2010. In 2012 he was a participant at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
MARK HOFFMANN (Salem, NH) will create a series of chronological illustrations detailing the transformation of the New Art Center from 1972 to the present. Hoffmann describes his interpretations of place as, “naive visual vocabularies” that are conceptually tied to cultural distinctions of American history. Classic American sites rich in history and contemporary tourism, such as Yellowstone National Park and Niagara Falls, serve as inspiration from which Hoffmann interjects his identity as an illustrator. Hoffmann recycles factual folklore into a world that is distinctively his own. Recurring color palettes, body proportions, and crude application of materials define his practice. Hoffmann will play on the physical location of the viewer, painting a factual miniseries presenting a frame by frame exaggeration of the building’s history through his identity as an illustrator.
Hoffman received his BFA in Illustration from the Rhode Island School of Design and his MFA in Visual Design from UMass Dartmouth. He currently works as freelance editorial and advertising illustrator, painter and animator, and also teaches at Montserrat College of Art in the illustration and animation departments.
EMMA HOGARTH (Providence, RI), an interdisciplinary artist, associates “here” with physical presence. Her immersive, video field “Compound Vision”, operates as a portal through which the viewer may re-experience the specific location in which it is installed. Hogarth’s custom software loops footage, both prerecorded and a live stream of viewers engaging with her work, onto three screens. Hogarth’s interpretation of “here” entangles physicality, memory, and history of place.
Hogarth holds an MFA in Digital+Media from Rhode Island School of Design, and a Bachelor of Visual Arts – First Class Honors in Painting from Sydney College of the Arts. Her practice engages performance, drawing, glass, video and installation, often combining media to explore relationships between performance, documentation, time and the image. Her projects have been presented in gallery spaces, theaters and urban public arenas in New York, Sydney and New England. Emma currently teaches in Foundation Studies at Rhode Island School of Design.
ABOUT THE CURATOR: PAM CAMPANARO (Salem, MA)You Are Here is curated and organized by Pam Campanaro. She is currently the Associate Curator of Exhibitions and Programs at Montserrat College of Art in Beverly, MA. Campanaro was the 2015 curator-in-residence at FLOAT: A Tactical Walking Camp, a program of The Luminary in St. Louis, MO. Campanaro has curated exhibitions at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (Houston, TX), Find & Form Space (Boston, MA), The Samek Art Museum at Bucknell University (Lewisburg, PA) and Montserrat Galleries (Beverly, MA). She is the recipient of the 2013 New England Museum Association (NEMA) University Products Award, an annual grant given to one curator in the New England region. In 2012, Campanaro published, “Labors of Language: Crafting A Revival for Medium in Contemporary Art” and presented the project at the Critical Information Conference at the School of Visual Arts, New York. Campanaro is presently a contributor to The American Alliance of Museums: The Center For The Future of Museums, Big Red & Shiny and Art New England.
ABOUT THE CURATORIAL OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM (COP)This exhibition is presented as part of the New Art Center’s Curatorial Opportunity Program (COP). This open-call curatorial platform investigates contemporary culture through the visual arts. It makes possible diverse curatorial visions in a collaborative, non-profit and alternative exhibition space. Curators of selected group exhibitions receive a 1,000 USD stipend and administrative, promotional and technical support. Unique to the region, the COP is a collaborative vehicle through which curators and artists present thoughtful and innovative contemporary group exhibitions. It is the foundation of our Connections program for gallery education, and is often connected with our invitational Artist in Residence program. Learn more about the program and our upcoming curator workshops at www.newartcenter.org/cop.
These exhibitions are free, open to the public. Our main gallery is wheelchair accessible. Please call 617.964.3424 to plan your visit.
61 Washington Park, Newtonville, MA 02460
www.NewArtCenter.org
617.964.3424