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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181015
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181201
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195510Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:2006-1539561600-1543622399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:Reticulate (Divergent)
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM-F\, 10am–5pm \nOpen to students\, faculty\, and staff; public by appointment \nReception: October 18th\, 11:00am–12:30pm \nA Bare Gallery exhibition\, Reticulate (Divergent)\, artists Dennis Collins ’19 and Cameron Hurley ’19 come together for an exhibition of work that explores composition across the mediums of collage and photography. \nDennis’s collages are generated purely from a progression of responses to color\, shape and material while Cameron’s black and white\, aerial photographs come from an observed perspective incorporating a strong sense of detail and texture. Although there is a disconnect in process and medium\, the work displays a shared awareness of compositional elements: large divisions in the picture plane\, line\, and a marriage of material/textural differences. \nThe exhibition is curated by Dennis Collins ’19 and Cameron Hurley ’19 in collaboration with Keely Quirk ’18 and Darcie Blake ’22. \nCam Hurley
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/reticulate-divergentoctober-15-november-30-2018/
LOCATION:Bare Gallery\, 275 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/DSC_0599-1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181008
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181104
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1999-1538956800-1541289599@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:TEXT NOT TEXT
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM-F\, 10am–5pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: October 11th\, 5–8pm \nVeteran letterpress artists and alternative publishers H.R. Buechler and Aaron Cohick will exhibit their work and host a roundtable discussion at Montserrat College of Art to honor the 15-year anniversary of the letterpress studio at the college. In conjunction with their exhibition\, Montserrat Assistant Professor\, book artist\, and book conservator Bill Hanscom will participate in a roundtable discussion with Buechler and Cohick that explores alternative publishing methodologies and philosophies\, among other topics relevant to the letterpress\, book arts\, and publishing communities. \nH.R. Buechler is an interdisciplinary artist\, researcher\, and founder of OXBLOOD Publishing. Her practice synthesizes research\, writing\, and physical actions mediated through print\, video\, and performance that examine our relationship to/with mechanization\, technology\, and culture.  Her current work shows an acute interest in historic and contemporary communication technology/media as a means to explore/exploit the intangible\, tenuous nature of language. \nBuechler is a doctoral student in Information Studies at the University of California – Los Angeles. She holds an M.F.A. in Interdisciplinary Book and Paper Arts from Columbia College Chicago\, and a B.F.A. from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is the 2016-2018 Victor Hammer Fellow at the Wells College Book Arts Center (Aurora\, NY) and former Print Production Fellow to the Journal of Artists’ Books (JAB). Her work can be found in numerous collections in the US and internationally\, including the Yale University Library\, Centre Pompidou of Paris\, France\, and the University of Regina Library in Regina\, SK\, Canada. \nAaron Cohick runs The NewLights Press\, an independent printer and publisher working at the intersection of experimental writing and artists’ books. Founded in 2000 in Baltimore\, The NewLights Press is publishing-as-artistic practice\, and is the imprint under which Cohick publishes his own work and that of other artists and writers. All of the books are printed & bound “by hand\,” using a variety of techniques\, ranging from the obsolete (letterpress) to the utilitarian (laser/Risograph) to the meditative (delamination). Cohick received his BFA in Painting from the Maryland Institute College of Art and his MFA in Printmaking from Arizona State University.. He is also the Printer of The Press at Colorado College\, a letterpress studio and classroom that seeks to create an interdisciplinary space in the liberal arts curriculum. Cohicks work\, under both imprints\, is held in public and private collections all over the world\, including the Library of Congress\, the British Library\, the National Library of Australia\, Yale University\, the Letterform Archive\, the Newberry Library\, and the Tate Britain Library. \nEvents:\nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 11\, 5-8pm \nArtist Round Table: Wednesday\, October 10\, 6-7:30pm \nPaul M. Scott Library\, moderated by Montserrat Assistant Professor Bill Hanscom. \nAaron Cohick\, & NOW & NOW\, Flexible collagraph
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/text-not-textoctober-8-november-3-2018/
LOCATION:Carol Schlosberg Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181001
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181121
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195508Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:2002-1538352000-1542758399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:TRACE MATTER
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM-F\, 10am–5pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: October 11th\, 5–8pm \nMontserrat College of Art Galleries invites you to view the upcoming group exhibition\, Trace Matter\, which includes work by six artists from New England\, New York\, and Minnesota that captures ambiguous historical moments by exploring what’s left behind. Artists Jimena Bermejo\, Kristina Estell\, Meredith Morten\, Scott Nedrelow\, Alisha Wessler\, and Jenna Pirello explore various relics and remains through photography\, sculpture\, drawing\, painting\, and performance. \nJimena Bermejo (MA) is a dancer\, choreographer\, performance artist\, and dance educator with more than 15 years of experience creating performances that explore identity\, race\, and power. At Montserrat\, the remnants and audio of a hidden performance will invite viewers to envision potential narratives. \nKristina Estell (MN) uses a variety of processes and materials to create sculptures that generate sensitive and dynamic material experiences. For this exhibition\, a series of silicone rubber molds captures specific objects that are layered in space. \nMeredith Morten (MA)\,  created a series of embroidered doilies as an outcome of a 2016 Fulbright to Austria and Hungary. Fascinated by the burial rites of the Urnfield Culture (1300 BCE – 750 BCE)\, she superimposed images of broken ceramic urns with cremated remains (bone fragments) onto handmade 20th century Viennese doilies. The crisp white doilies\, found in Vienna’s flea markets\, are oval and circular in shape bordered by lace\, reminiscent of Baroque portraiture. \nScott Nedrelow’s (NY) paintings involve a post-photographic process that uses the materials of inkjet printing. Employing an airbrush to manually spray Epson ink onto photo paper\, Nedrelow’s work alludes to shadows and the idea of an afterimage. \nAlisha Wessler’s (NY) work explores hybrid objects\, their narrative potential and taxonomic slippage. The drawings and objects she makes occupy the indeterminate realm between reality and dream\, nature and artifice. \nJenna Pirello (ME) is a process painter\, instinctually responding to an unwritten dialogue between herself and her paintings. Her work explores the transition from painting to sculpture and how combined\, they can interact with a space and the viewer. \nFeatures: \nArtscope Magazine – Trace Matter: Making Connections at Montserrat \nBoston Globe: Cate McQuaid – Trace Matter at Montserrat \n  \nEvents:\nSpecial Performance – Jimena Bermejo: Thursday\, September 27\, 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. \n \nOpening Reception: Thursday\, October 11 from 5-8 p.m. \nGallery Talk – Alisha Wessler: Monday\, October 1\, 11:30 a.m.–12:20 p.m. \nGallery Talk – Scott Nedrelow: Thursday\, October 11\, 11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. \n 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/trace-matteroctober-1-november-20-2018/
LOCATION:Montserrat Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/TraceMatter.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180918
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181109
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1993-1537228800-1541721599@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:TIFFANY SMITH: THANK YOU FOR THE SOUVENIR
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nT-F\, 11:30am–2:30pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: September 20th\, 5-8pm \nTiffany Smith is an interdisciplinary artist from the Caribbean diaspora working in photography\, video\, installation\, and design. Using plant matter\, design and home decor elements\, pattern\, and costuming as cultural signifiers\, Smith creates photographic portraits\, site responsive installations\, user engaged experiences\, and assemblages focused on identity\, representation\, cultural ambiguity\, and displacement. Visual references from an array of multi-cultural influences\, derived from her upbringing between Miami\, Florida\, Nassau\, Bahamas\, and Jamaica inform constructed environments that serve to articulate cultural subjectivities that oscillate between visitor and native roles. Smith’s practice centers on what forms and defines communities of people color\, in particular; how they are identified and represented\, and how they endure. \nSmith’s current works in progress react to a history of representation of people of color by focusing on how identity is constructed and culture is commodified. For Tropical Girls… presents photographic self portraits that question identity constructs and the psychological implications of iconography. Smith’s staged ethnographic survey of invented personas who author their own representations of a blended cultural heritage use her own experiences and recalled memories to create performative studies that empower reclamation of representation and reclaim agency in “performing the other.”  \nPhotographs and videos from the series are presented within contextualizing multi-media installations\, creating site specific environments that reference domestic space through cultural signifiers and decor elements recalled from Smith’s own memories of a fluid definition of home\, and aim to construct constants within a shifting space that balances precariously between cultures. Using evocative references to plant life\, natural phenomena\, and tropical locales\, these temporary habitats provide familiar points of entry and access to the complex narratives of the subjects depicted. \nSmith received a BFA in Photography from S.C.A.D. and an MFA in Photo/Video from SVA\, NY. Her work has been included in recent exhibitions at MassArt\, Boston\, MA\, St. John’s University\, Queens\, NY\, The Bronx Museum of the Arts\, The National Gallery of Jamaica and exhibited at Photoville\, NY\, Photo NOLA\, New Orleans\, and Spring Break Art Show\, NY. She has presented public art installations in Newark Penn Station through The Gateway Project and Marcus Garvey Park during Flux Art Fair\, Harlem and recent solo exhibitions at Space Create\, Newburgh\, NY and The Wassaic Project\, and a forthcoming solo exhibition at Montserrat College of Art\, Boston\, MA. Tiffany Smith is currently based in Brooklyn\, NY. \nItems available for purchase at Tiffany’s web store \n  \nSelf portrait as a sunburned tourist\, 2016
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/tiffany-smith-thank-you-for-the-souvenirseptember-18-november-8-2018/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Sunburned.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180914
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181112
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1990-1536883200-1541980799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:GARY BATZLOFF: Horizon(s)
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nReception: N/A \nI am thinking of sunsets\, quietude\, and that moment when you remember home. I am remembering: holding my breath and diving deep\, feeling the undulations in the sand; waking at sunrise\, watching orange turn to blue; sitting in a tree far from anything\, waiting for foxes and the wind. I am working toward being still\, but not alone. -Gary Batzloff \nGary Batzloff is an Oklahoma-based artist whose work has delved deeply into the relationship between his practice and the history of Landscape in America. Gary’s work engages and contemporizes Landscape as a medium through the use of GPS and locating technologies and the intersection of the physical form or place and the digital world. He uses the processes and visual language of 3D modeling and fabrication to achieve a current interpretation of landscape in the modern era. This body of work and research utilizes materials that are relevant to the landscape being identified including regionally indigenous woods\, metals\, and finishes that respond to the industrialization of the United States\, and bright colors that are reminiscent of sunsets and sunrises overseeing the growth and entropy of each unique place. \nAbsolute Return (detail)
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/gary-batzloff-horizonsseptember-14-november-11-2018/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Batzloff_06_2709-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180910
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181013
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1996-1536537600-1539388799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:LETTER OF INTENT
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 10am–5pm \nOpen to students\, faculty\, and staff; public by appointment \nReception: September 16th\, 11:30am–12:20pm \nLetters\, as language\, carry inherent meaning for us as human beings. Letter of Intent is an exhibition showcasing just a few of the multitude of ways in which artists utilize letterforms to comment on\, erase\, manipulate\, or expand upon these ingrained associations. Across disciplines\, text and letters become a medium just a flexible\, variable\, and poignant as paint\, ink\, light\, and pixels. \n-Curator Keely Quirk ’18. \nAnnie Lee-Daly\nAshley McNulty\nTaylor Mortimore\nn.n.newhart\nAndrew Tricoche \nThe Bare Gallery is a student run exhibition space and art house. All of the projects are student conceptualized and realized. \n 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/letter-of-intentseptember-10-october-12-2018/
LOCATION:Bare Gallery\, 275 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180730
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180909
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195457Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1968-1532908800-1536451199@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:FROM/TO: 2018 Alumni Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nTuesday–Thursday\n10am–2pm \nReception: September 8th\, 4:00–6:00pm \nParticipating Montserrat Alumni: Amanda Batien (Halsdorff) ’01\, Kaleigh Brann ’18\, Christopher Broughton ’93\, Chelsea Sams ’08\,  Janice Colby ’94\, Paul Demakes ’11\, Zachary DeWitt ’16\, Isabelle Dillard ’09\, Loren Doucette ’13\, Kevin Duffy ’77\, Stacey Durand ’02\, Morgan Dyer ’13\, George Frary III ’00\, Connie Glore ’78\,  Deanna Jacome ’15\, Jon Bolles ’12\, Lillian Kology ’08\, Erin Landry Fowler ’02\, Victoria Lopez ’17\, Kevin Lucey ’15\, John McCormick ’74\, Ricky Molander ’17\,  Eddie Negron ’18\, Megan Pepin ’12\, Scott Profenno ’93\, Kristine Roan ’11\, Brenda Roswess ’15\, Joseph Saunders ’15\, Bryant Skopek ’17\, CJ Stephens ’96\, Christopher Stepler ’09\,  Jes Thayer ’13\, Daniela Thomas ’14\, Dorothy Tribeman ’07\,  Victoria Vega ’16\, Shannon Walsh ’18\, and Amanda Woronecki ’12. \nMorgan Dyer\, Bright \n 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/from-to-2018-alumni-exhibitionjuly-30-september-8-2018/
LOCATION:301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180728
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180930
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1987-1532736000-1538265599@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:WE ARE ALL HERE: Jeila Gueramian
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–Th\, 12–5pm\nF\, 10–1pm \nReception: September 6th\, 5–8pm \nJeila graduated with a BFA from Otis Parsons School of Design in 1991. After graduating\, she worked in art departments and costume design. Later she moved into making custom props\, focusing on plush sculptures\, puppets and fantastical costumes. In 2011\, Jeila refocused on her fine art with a six-month residency at The Wassaic Project\, culminating in a large-scale installation. She has since done major installations at Children’s Museum of the Arts\, New York\, NY; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art\, Bentonville\, AR; Mixed Greens Gallery\, New York\, NY; and Allegra LaViola Gallery\, New York\, NY . Jeila currently lives and works in Brooklyn\, NY. \nhttp://www.jeila.com/
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/we-are-all-here-jeila-gueramianjuly-28-september-29-2018/
LOCATION:Carol Schlosberg Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180723
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180921
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195502Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1984-1532304000-1537487999@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:HOT SUMMER DAY
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–Th\, 12–5pm\nF\, 10-1pm \nReception: September 6th\, 5–8pm \nA joint exhibition by  \nBrian Butler\nChris E. O’Neill\nSarah Gay-O’Neill \nBrian Butler is drawn to the road. Quite literally as a muralist who paints in the street\, and figuratively as an active traveling illustrator. His inspiration ranges from concerts to roadside curiosities. \nIn this exhibition Brian will be exploring the medium of virtual reality for the first time. Taking ques from off-road sites he’s personally traveled and marrying them a twist of his own imagination. \nChris E. O’Neill is a Somerville\, MA based artist and illustrator. He is a compulsive draw-er\, hardly ever looking up from the page in front of him. He can be found lurking in cafes and bars\, sketchbook open\, furiously jotting down the goings-on around him. He is a keen observer of people and their weirdness. His characters are often nervous or sweaty. He is super-awkward in real life. \nChris will be exploring what happens at the sweaty and psychedelic intersection of joy\, delirium\, haziness\, and exhaustion that comes with triple digit temperatures in summertime. \nSarah Gay-O’Neill\, wanderer\, observer\, communicator. Her work\, both large scale and small\, is often inspired by fragile figures set in natural environments such as mountains and swamps. \nWhen nature isn’t made available to her sauntering soul\, she can be found drawing in cafes and bars\, translating the wild unknowns of city dwelling via textures\, patterns\, lonely spaces\, and people. \nSarah will invite her ethereal figures into the gallery space where they will escape the heat of life. \nThe artists will be on campus July 16–20 installing\, stop by to say hello!! \nSarah Gay-O’Neill will be doing a special workshop on: \nWednesday\, July 25\n4:30–6:00 p.m.
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/hot-summer-dayjuly-23-september-20-2018/
LOCATION:Montserrat Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180718
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180720
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1975-1531872000-1532044799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:Painting Peace: Kaz Tanahashi July 16–20\, 2018
DESCRIPTION:The Underground\n248 Cabot Street\nBeverly\, MA 01915 \nGallery Hours\nVarious \nCalligraphy Workshop\nJuly 18\, 10–12:30 pm \nPainting Peace\nJuly 18\, 5:00–6:00 pm \nPeace Seminar\nJuly 19\, 10–12:30 pm \nKazuaki Tanahashi is a world-famous calligraphy master and devoted peace activist working as an artist\, writer\, and peace and environmental worker. He was born in Japan in 1933 and has been active in the United States since 1977. \nAs a painter and calligrapher\, he has been pioneering the genres of one-stroke painting. He has staged multi solo exhibitions of his brushwork worldwide and has taught innumerable workshops around the world\, including at seven international calligraphy conferences. As an environmental activist\, he was the founding secretary of Plutonium Free Future\, and founder of No War with North Korea. His website BRUSHMIND illustrates the decades of his work on this front. \nZen Center North Shore\, Montserrat College of Art\, Shodokan Dojo\, Atomic Cafe\, Cabot St Books and the Cabot Theater are joining efforts to introduce this remarkable artist and peace activist to the Beverly community and beyond. \nAll events are by donation and open to anyone: \n  \nCalligraphy Workshop\, Wednesday\, July 18\, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm\, at Montserrat College of Art\, followed by a painting performance by Kaz at 5:00 pm \nPainting Peace\, Wednesday\, July 18\, 5:00 – 6:00 pm. A painting performance by Kaz Tanahashi\, accompanied by Aikido demonstration \nPeace Seminar\, Thursday\, July 19\, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm\, at Montserrat College of Art \n  \n  \nFull Schedule of Events Available Here. \nPlease register here to let us know if you are coming. \nPlease give generously\, according to your means. A portion of proceeds will benefit Kaz’s peace work around the world. \nFor more information\, please email us at info@zencenternorthshore.org or call 781/718-5455.
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/painting-peace-kaz-tanahashijuly-16-20-2018/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/scaled_384.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180615
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180909
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1978-1529020800-1536451199@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:RICKY MOLANDER
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nReception: September 8\, 2018\, 4–6pm \nA site specific installation by alumni Ricky Molander ’16. Ricky’s recent paintings are geometric explorations of the connections between Pop Art\, Op Art\, and Minimalism with an emphasis on perspective\, illusion\, and color theory. His latest mural was commissioned by the Punto Urban Art Museum in Salem\, MA. In addition to maintaining a fine art practice\, Ricky also works at Salem Ink Tattoo and Art Gallery where he enjoys tattooing in different styles such as Geometric and American Traditional. \nHappening in conjunction with FROM/TO: 2018 Alumni Exhibition. \nFor more information:\nhttps://www.rickymo.com/
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/ricky-molanderjune-15-september-8-2018/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/image1-1-scaled.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180615
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180723
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1981-1529020800-1532303999@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:KRISTINE ROAN
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nReception: N/A \nKristine Roan is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice encompasses assemblage sculpture\, collage\, and video. Her process begins with\, and is informed by\, an extensive collection of children’s toys\, decorative objects\, and craft materials. Courting chance\, she seeks out discoveries of objects in isolation from their mass-produced clones. This activity’s alignment with environmental concerns only became obvious as her work progressed\, deepening her attraction to plastics and providing a limit to work within.  \nThe collection primarily consists of highly artificial representations of natural forms. Plastic signifies planetary destruction and is thus more hastily banished to thrift stores and landfills than ever. These lone objects are imbued with precious care in an effort to rescue them from their classification as unsightly taboo. \nRoan assembles sculptures as if they are puzzles\, seeking out even the most minuscule synchronistic moments when the parts happen to fit together just so\, and begin to speak as a single form. Together\, this queer cast of sculptures diffuse the boundary between nature and artifice. \nShelf-Life is an ongrowing arrangement of (mostly) unmodified objects\, which have been maintained in Roan’s home for several years. The title is a play on “still life” and perishability. \nFor more information: \nhttp://kristineroan.com
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/kristine-roanjune-15-july-22-2018/
LOCATION:301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180614
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180721
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1972-1528934400-1532131199@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:Cultured Interactions
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM-Th\, 10am–5pm\nF\, 10-1pm \nReception: June 16th\, 3–5pm \nCultured Interactions\, a solo exhibition of works on paper by Guhapriya Ranganathan\, explores the process of physical and spiritual change and growth through continuous interactions\, movement and synthesis. Ranganathan relies on scientific research as a primary source for her work. She says\, “Scientific research involves stepping into the unknown without fixed or definite answers. The abstract nature of the questions and the experimentation involved in research mirrors the process of creating art and becomes a metaphor for the experience of life.” Her works are reminiscent of maps that reference neurological patterns\, memory\, and travel\, asking us to consider how changes at the microcosmic level lead us to visually and spiritually reflect on the macrocosm. \nAbout Guhapriya: \nBorn and brought up in India\, Guhapriya Ranganathan (Gupi) had prior degrees in engineering and management before moving to the United States in 1995. She studied art at Simmons College\, and received her MFA in painting and printmaking from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in 2008. From 2009 to 2011\, Gupi was the Broad Artist in Residence. She has exhibited and shared her work focusing on the intersection of art and science in galleries and forums in the US\, China and India. Her work is represented in public and private collections. She currently works and lives in Wayland\, Massachusetts. \nhttp://www.guhapriyaranganathan.com/ \nConcatenation 03\, 2017
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/cultured-interactionsjune-14-july-20-2018/
LOCATION:Carol Schlosberg Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180507
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180609
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1955-1525651200-1528502399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:COLOR COPIES: BERMUDA - RACHEL PERRY
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: May 17th 8–9pm \n\n\nInternationally renowned\, multi-disciplinary artist Rachel Perry of Gloucester and Brooklyn\, New York will present a free\, public lecture on her work and career at the Cabot Performing Arts Center\, Thursday\, May 17 at 6:30 pm\, followed by a reception at Montserrat College of Art Galleries\, 23 Essex St.\, where her work will be on view. She will also present the keynote speech the following day at Montserrat’s annual commencement ceremony.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPerry will present the keynote lecture at Montserrat’s Commencement the following day and receive an honorary doctor of fine arts degree. She is a trustee at Montserrat College of Art and has had her work included in a group exhibition “It’s Getting Hot in Here” in the Montserrat Gallery in 2008.\n\n“We are delighted that Rachel will honor us in this way at our annual Commencement ceremonies\, and also present a lecture to the public the prior evening\,” said President Steve Immerman. “Montserrat’s tradition of offering public lectures\, by artists of her caliber and reputation\, is our way of providing a gift to the community each spring and will hope the public will want to join us and have a chance to meet her.”\n\nRachel Perry was born in 1962 in Japan. Her work is held in numerous museums and private collections around the world\, including the Museum of Fine Arts and the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston\, the Baltimore Museum of Art\, Cornell Fine Arts Museum\, Florida\, and the List Visual Arts Center at MIT. Since 2006 Rachel Perry has been represented by Yancey Richardson Gallery in New York City where in 2018 she had her sixth solo exhibition.\n\nPerry has been honored with four residencies at the MacDowell Colony\, earning both the Cathrine Boettcher and the Kurt and Anne Stark Locher Fellowships. She has participated in several other residency programs\, including Yaddo and ArtOmi\, and was Artist-in-Residence at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in October of 2014\, beginning an affiliation that continues today. Perry is a three-time recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Council Award for Excellence\, the only artist in its history to win in three separate disciplines: Photography\, Drawing\, and Sculpture. A finalist for the Foster Prize at the Institute of Contemporary Art\, Boston in 2006\, she participated in the inaugural exhibition at the Museum’s grand re-opening in Boston’s Seaport.\n\nShe has participated in group shows at Kunstmuseum Bonn\, Germany; The Drawing Center\, New York; the Institute of Contemporary Art\, Boston; and the Beatriz Esguerra Gallery\, Bogotá\, Colombia. Her solo shows include What Do You Really Want? at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum\, Boston; Chiral Lines and Lost in My Life at Yancey Richardson Gallery\, New York; Same Difference at Barbara Krakow Gallery\, Boston; and her first solo museum show\, 24/7\, at DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum\, Lincoln\, Massachusetts\, which subsequently traveled to the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University in New Brunswick\, New Jersey.\n\nPerry lectures extensively and has held many visiting artist positions at institutions around the country from New York to Alaska. Notably\, she participated on a panel with Sherry Turkle and Helen Schulman at the Museum of Fine Arts\, Boston in 2010\, and co-presented with author Michael Chabon at the MacDowell Colony Benefit in 2014.\n\nShe has been reviewed in many national and online publications\, including Art in America\, The New Yorker\, The New York Times\, Chicago Tribune\, Huffington Post\, Art on Paper\, Art:21\, Sculpture\, and Harvard Business Review\, with cover stories in Boston Common and Art New England. Perrycontributed a photo-performance project to Women in Clothes\, published by Penguin in 2014\, a New York Times bestseller. She has twice been commissioned by The New York Times Magazine to create art for feature stories\, most recently for coverage of the “Me Too” movement. In 2011\, Perry created a four-page pictorial essay for the December issue of Vogue.\n\nShe holds a BA in English Literature with a minor in French from Connecticut College\, and a Diploma and Fifth Year Certificate from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts\, Boston.\n\n\n\nThe lecture is free but advance registration is required for planning purposes.  Register below or contact us at:\ngallery@montserrat.edu\n\n\nMontserrat College of Art is educating the designers\, artists\, entrepreneurs and problem solvers for a rapidly changing world that requires creative solutions to new challenges. At the intersection of art\, design and technology\, the college offers three international programs\, 12 concentrations and a required internship program. Montserrat alumni are employed by some of the country’s biggest brands including Disney\, Puma\, Hasbro and more. Students earn the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and develop their skills for success in today’s growing creative economy. The college also offers year-round classes for youth\, teens and adults through our Continuing Education Division\, and has four public galleries offering year-round\, free\, exhibitions and lectures.\nMontserrat is “Where Creativity Works.”  www.montserrat.edu \nRACHEL PERRY ©2017\, Water at Sandys Bc-T2\, 8.5 x 11 3/8 inches\, archival pigment print on paper mounted to white acrylic with Coloraid chip \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThis event is generously sponsored by Eastern Bank
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/color-copies-bermuda-rachel-perrymay-7-june-8-2018/
LOCATION:Carol Schlosberg Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180504
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180519
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1962-1525392000-1526687999@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:ALL SENIOR SHOW
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: May 7th\, 11:30am–12:30pm \nJuror’s Award Reception\nMontserrat Gallery\, 23 Essex St.\nMonday\, May 7\, 11:30 am \nThe 2018 All Senior Show will be juried by Lauren O’Neal\, Curator and Director of Lamont Gallery at Phillips Exeter Academy.
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/all-senior-showmay-4-18-2018/
LOCATION:Montserrat Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180430
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180505
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1965-1525046400-1525478399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:Commemorating a Meltdown
DESCRIPTION:Gallery 95\nPorter Mills Building\n95 Rantoul Street\nBeverly\, MA 01915 \nGallery Hours\nApril 30\, 12 – 3\nMay 1\, 4 – 6\nMay 2\, 5 – 8\nMay 3\, 3 – 6\nMay 4\, 12 – 6 \nReception: May 2nd\, 5–8pm \nCommemorating a Meltdown features the work of Fine Arts seminar seniors Percival Barron\, Meaghan Greene\, Jackson Haley\, Chelsea MacDowell and Lex Young. \nWhether it’s through letterpress\, printmaking\, embroidery or digital manipulation each artist explores non-traditional subject matter in their work. With underlying themes of decomposition\, physical or societal\, the artists highlight subject matters that are not a mainstream focus in society. \nThe artists hope to create moments of contemplation and self reflection within the viewer. \nIn much of the work the artists have re-purposed traditional utilitarian methods which mirrors the shift of Porter Mill from an industrial building to a place of artistic creation. \nPercival Barron (Painting) taps into memory and its nature through digital degradation. \nMeaghan Greene (Interdisciplinary) explores ideas of preciousness and mortality through embroidery and images of dead animals. \nJackson Haley (Printmaking) utilizes traditional letterpress printmaking to explore superstitious beliefs and ideas. \nChelsea MacDowell (Printmaking) appropriates images from natural history through printmaking and drawing processes\, to express her interest in the insect world and decomposition. \nLex Young (Book Arts and Creative Writing) employs an experimental approach to letterpress printing using text and image to explore the abstract and fluid nature of gender\, sexuality\, mental health and how and where they intersect.
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/commemorating-a-meltdown-april-30-may-4-2018/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180423
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180426
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1959-1524441600-1524700799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:ME + EVERYONE ELSE April 23–25\, 2018
DESCRIPTION:Porter Mills – Gallery 95\n95 Rantoul Street\nBeverly\, MA 01915 \nGallery Hours\nApril 23-24\n1-5pm \nReception: April 25th\, 5–8pm \nA Montserrat College of Art Senior Thesis Exhibition featuring Maria Patsopoulos and Shannon Walsh \nGallery 95 @ Porter Mill\n95 Rantoul st\, Beverly\, Ma 01915 \nOn view: April 23-27\, 2018\nGallery hours: April 23-24 1-5 pm\nReception: April 25 5-8 PM \nFind us on Instagram!\nMaria- @wet.dollar\nShannon- @wonkyline
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/me-everyone-elseapril-23-25-2018/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/29664825_10211485035946960_1680699969866383838_o.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180418
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180603
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195453Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1952-1524009600-1527983999@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:JODI COLELLA: BEING
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nA public art installation by Jodi Colella. \nJodi Colella works with a broad range of materials to create provocative\, tactile works that often include public participation. She has exhibited at Danforth Art\, Fruitlands Museum\, Wheaton College\, Helen Day Art Center\, Museums of York\, World of Threads and Textile Museum\, among others. Her awards include 2016 Thailand Residency at ComPeung\, 2014 China Residency at Da Wang Culture Highland\, 2013 Artist-in-Residence Fruitlands Museum\, Pollack-Krasner Fellowship Vermont Studio Center\, and Somerville Arts Council Fellowships 2015\, 2012. \nJodi has been featured in Huffpost Art & Culture\, Artscope\, The Boston Globe\, Harvard Crimson\, 500 Felt Objects\, TextileArtist.org\, BU Arts & Science Magazine and The Worcester Telegram. She is a member of New England Sculpture Association\, Arts & Business Council of Boston\, Surface Design Association\, The American Craft Council\, and International Sculpture Center. \nShe received a B.A. from Boston University and studied at Massachusetts College of Art and School of the Museum of Fine Arts\, Boston. She teaches fiber workshops at The Eliot School in Jamaica Plain MA\, The De Cordova Museum School in Lincoln MA\, at Surface Design Association National Conferences and at several private venues. Jodi has taught nationally at Society for Craft in Pittsburgh\, SDA’s Confluence in Minneapolis\, plus many local venues. She lives and works in Somerville\, MA. \n– Joyce Browne
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/jodi-colella-beingapril-18-june-2-2018/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/IMG_4154_edit.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180301
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180415
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1949-1519862400-1523750399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:Joo Lee Kang: CHAOS
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nJoo Lee Kang received her BFA in Painting from Duksung Women’s University\, Seoul\, Korea and her MFA from Tufts University – School of the Museum of Fine Arts. \nShe had numerous exhibitions including in Taipei Fine Arts Museum\, Arko Art Center\, Museum of Art at Univ. of New Hampshire\, The Gallery at Penn College\, Danforth Art Museum\, Gallery NAGA\, and Jonathan Ferrara Gallery. Kang was invited as an Artist-in-Residence at Cheongju Art Studio in Korea\, Willapa Bay AiR\, and Beijing Inside-Out Art Museum\, also received SMFA Traveling Fellowship\, St. Botolph Club Artist Grant\, and Massachusetts Cultural Council Award. \nHer upcoming exhibitions in 2018 will be at Harvard Medical School\, Korea Cultural Center in Spain\, and Space55 in Seoul. Currently she is showing her works at Fitchburg Art Museum and very active internationally.
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/joo-lee-kang-chaosmarch-1-april-14-2018/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Chaos-PoscoArtMuseum_small.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180215
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180331
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1941-1518652800-1522454399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:THE BEAST: HERD MENTALITY
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 12pm–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: Thursday\, February 15th\, 5-8pm. Artist’s remarks @ 6pm \nThe Beast: Herd Mentality\nBy John Preus\nMontserrat is partnering with Chicago-based artist John Preus to build a large-scale beast in Montserrat Gallery that will serve as as a community art space and a multidisciplinary platform for cultural activities. This temporary sculpture/performance pavilion will be a site for a wide range of cultural programs\, including concerts\, performances\, academic talks\, poetry readings\, writing sessions\, conversations\, and much more. \nIn light of the political divisiveness and tragic news that pervades our everyday lives\, The Beast\, in the form of a bull\, will offer a free\, accessible space for people to come together to find common ground\, particularly across differing ideologies or viewpoints. \nCommunity members are invited to propose programming of their own and to use the space for gatherings like meetings\, reading time\, yoga practice\, conversations across differences\, and other endeavors. To propose a program or a group visit\, please email Gallery Director Michele L’Heureux at michele.lheureux@montserrat.edu and include a title and short description of the program\, as well as proposed date and time. \nArtist John Preus will be in the gallery from January 27 through February 14 building The Beast with the help of Montserrat staff\, students\, and local contractors. Feel free to stop by the gallery during business hours to meet the artist and witness the project unfolding. \nCheck back often for an updated list of events\, photos\, and ongoing news about the project. \n  \nEVENTS\n\nWe Are The Beast\, a conversation series exploring the intersections of art and philosophy presented by the Beverly Philosophy Salon and moderated by co-curator Leonie Bradbury. \nSession 1: The Space of Art\nMontserrat Humanities faculty Kate Farrington in conversation with artist John Preus\nThursday\, February 15\n11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. (11:00 for coffee & pastry) \n\n\nSession 2: The Experience of Art\nArtist-Philosopher Dr. Jennifer Hall in conversation with Dr. Vidette Asher\, Neuroscience Researcher\, Peabody Essex Museum\nThursday\, March 1\n11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. (11:00 for coffee & pastry) \nSession 3: The Materiality of Art\nArtist-Philosopher Dr. Mary Anne Davis in conversation with Jen Mergel\, Vice President\, Programming\, of the Association of Art Museum Curators\nThursday\, March 22\n11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. (11:00 for coffee & pastry) \nON.THE.SPOT.\nPut a staff member on the spot and ask them ANYTHING about their career; they have one minute to answer the question. Candy Included. Organized by Career Services.\nMonday\, March 5\n11:30 a.m.-12:20 p.m. \n\n\nAn Introduction to Relaxation and Mindfulness Techniques\n\nwith Montserrat’s Director of Counseling\, Janet Dauray\, PhD\nLearn ways to reduce stress and increase relaxation.\nAll welcome. No experience necessary.\n\nTuesday\, March 27\n11:30 a.m. – 12:20 p.m.\n\n\nCocktail Conversation with poets Liz Bradfield & Colleen Michaels\nHear about the innovative ways these two poets bring poetry and art to the public in unexpected places.\n\nThursday\, March 29\n5:00-6:00 p.m.\n\n\n\nLive stream of The Beast being built! 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/the-beast-herd-mentalityfebruary-15-march-30-2018/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180108
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180225
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1936-1515369600-1519516799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:DAVID BUCKLEY BORDEN: SITE VISIT
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nDavid Buckley Borden’s installation\, Site Visit\, can now be viewed at the 301 Frame Gallery at Montserrat College of Art in Beverly\, MA. Site Visit is a traveling installation intended to promote a cultural ecology supported by art-based interdisciplinary science-communication. The installation includes twenty-four speculative design objects ranging from “Back 40 Eco Monitors” for the suburban corporate-class compound to a “Flood Light Warning System” aimed at warning coastal citizens of approaching storm flooding.  \n\nDavid Buckley Borden is a Cambridge-based interdisciplinary artist and designer known for his creative practice of making ecological issues culturally relevant to the general public by means of accessible art and design. David studied landscape architecture at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design and worked with Sasaki Associates and Ground before focusing his practice at the intersection of landscape\, creativity\, and cultural event. David’s work now manifests in a variety of forms\, ranging from site-speciﬁc landscape installations in the woods to data-driven cartography in the gallery. David’s place-based projects highlight both pressing environmental issues and everyday phenomena and have recently earned him residencies at the Santa Fe Arts Institute\, Teton Art Lab\, Trifecta Hibernaculum\, and MASS MoCA. David was a 2016/2017 Bullard Fellow at the Harvard Forest where he answered the question\, “How can art and design foster cultural cohesion around environmental issues and help inform ecology-minded decision making?” \nFree Public Program:\nAaron Ellison and David Borden\nA conversation about the Hemlock Hospice project now on view at Harvard Forest\nApril 16\, 2018\n11:30-12:20 p.m.\n23 Essex street\, RM H201
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/david-buckley-borden-site-visitjanuary-8-february-24-2018/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20171118T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20171118T170000
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1929-1510963200-1511024400@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:ART WALK
DESCRIPTION:Stroll through downtown Beverly and enjoy multiple art exhibitions\, open studios\, and pop-up art experiences along the way!\nVisit Montserrat’s annual Art Sale\, stop into local galleries and artists’ studios\, and discover art in unpredictable places. Refreshments served along the way. \nHave your map stamped at 5 or more stops\, return it to 301 Gallery\, and you could win a Montserrat zip-up hoodie and water bottle. \nPDF of Map  \nParticipating Galleries and Locations: \n1A Knowlton Street\nPop-up exhibition \n248 Cabot Street\nPop-up exhibition \n301 Gallery\n301 Cabot Street\nMontserrat Art Sale hundreds of small works for sale \nArt by Alyssa\n110 Cabot Street\nOpen showroom for holiday shopping \nGallery 95 & Studios at Porter Mill\n95 Rantoul Street\nOpen Studios & holiday market\, dozens of artists \nHistoric Beverly\n117 Cabot Street\nCommunity art exhibit\, gallery talks on the hour 12-4 pm \nMingo Gallery & Framing\n284 Cabot Street\nReception 2 new exhibitions \nMontserrat Galleries\n23 Essex Street\nHardie Building\nTwo exhibitions of MA & NY painters \nPaper Asylum\n166 Cabot Street\nComic store with drawing space for kids of all ages \nRed Fence Gallery\n268 Cabot Street\nOutdoor gallery on a fence \nSteez Design\n3 Washington Street\nDesign studio open house with free give-aways \n  \n 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/art-walknovember-18-2017/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/artWalk17c.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20171101
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171110
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195448Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1933-1509494400-1510271999@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:OPEN DOORS
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: November 7th 5–7pm \nAn exhibition of work created during our Study Abroad programs.  The exhibition includes students from the Montserrat College of Art\, Rhode Island School of Design\, and Parsons Fashion Art and Design School. \nThe work was created variously in Viterbo\, Italy\, Niigata\, Japan\, and Mallorca\, Spain. \nFor more information on our Study Abroad programs\, visit: \nhttps://www.montserrat.edu/travel/ \nLincoln Willians\, Calo de Moro
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/open-doorsnovember-1-9-2017/
LOCATION:301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20171028
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180121
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195446Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1927-1509148800-1516492799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:TRANSMUTATIONS
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: November 1st\, 5–8pm \nBorders—whether demarcating geography\, politics\, identities\, or ideas—are shifting more rapidly than ever before\, leaving everything in a state of flux\, with seemingly disparate parts coming together at every turn in new\, inventive\, and sometimes volatile ways.  Depending on one’s vantage point\, this fluidity can be uplifting\, disorienting\, or transformative. \nArtists Esteban del Valle\, Jose de Jesus Rodriguez\, and Sean Downey make paintings\, prints\, videos\, and animations that draw\, in part\, from cinema\, political cartoons\, and pop culture iconography and that engage with the topics of displacement\, personal and collective memory\, visual culture\, and the history of art—reminding us that nothing we know is fixed and that all is open to endless interpretation. \nPanel discussion with Esteban del Valle\, Sean Downey\, and Jose de Jesus Rodriguez\, moderated by curator Michele L’Heureux Nov. 29 at 6:00 p.m.\, Montserrat Gallery
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/transmutationsoctober-28-2017-january-20-2018/
LOCATION:Montserrat Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/unsettling_FINAL_Build-a-Wall-iphone.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20171003
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171112
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1925-1506988800-1510444799@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:CHRISTOPHER ALDAY
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours 24/7 \nReception October 21st 6–9pm \nChristopher Alday is a California native and Minnesota based artist who primarily works with printmaking.   Using repetition and the fracturing of simple shapes\, he creates vast modular arrays that can take innumerable forms and dimensions. Installations like the one on view generate deceptive amounts of movement\, tone\, and depth with the aid of optical illusion and implied lines.  The prints on display were made possible by Jerome Emerging Printmaker’s Residency 2014/2015 and Highpoint Center for Printmaking\, Minneapolis\, MN.
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/christopher-aldayoctober-3-november-11-2017/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170918
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171105
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1922-1505692800-1509839999@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:THE BLACK VEIL
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\n24/7 \nReception: October 21st\, 6–9pm \nSalem-based twins Matt and Ryan Murray along with Nathan Ernce revel in the dark and otherworldly. Their illustrations — brushed with cobwebs and punctuated by spider-legs — reveal entities\, places\, and creatures from regions unknown\, incorporeal\, and in- between. Beyond their artistic practice\, they are successful entrepreneurs\, owning a gallery and tattoo studio in Beverly and playing an active role in the Beverly Arts District. Curated in conjunction with the Quietus exhibition\, their installation will act as a gateway into the 301 Gallery. \nThe Black Veil Studio
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/the-black-veilseptember-18-november-4-2017/
LOCATION:Frame 301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/148618716314174782.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170918
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171017
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195444Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1920-1505692800-1508198399@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:TEMPLE OF FLIES: Caitlin and Nicole Duennebier
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: September 28th\, 5–8pm \nCaitlin and Nicole are sibling rivals in the best way possible\, and no matter how hard they try to abstain\, they continue to collaborate. Caitlin trained in photography but primarily works in narrative illustration\, and Nicole is a classically trained painter who creates exquisitely rendered\, luscious still-lifes in the tradition of the Dutch masters. Together\, their styles aren’t so much blended as they are overlaid and intertwined; simply drawn figures wade through puddles of dense oil in their fantastical and sometimes frightening vignettes. \n  \nCaitlin and Nicole Duennebier visiting artists presentation\nSeptember 28\, 11:30–12:20 p.m.\nCarol Schlosberg Alumni Gallery \nShow Description\ninsert nextgen gallery from green button above
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/temple-of-flies-caitlin-and-nicole-duennebierseptember-18-october-16-2017/
LOCATION:Carol Schlosberg Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/templepofflies_1-1_small2.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170905
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171029
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195443Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1918-1504569600-1509235199@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:QUIETUS
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nT-F\, 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: October 21st\, 6–9pm \nCurated by Nathan Lewis\, Quietus is an exploration of the indescribable nature of loss\, memory\, and their manifestations. Rather than glorifying death or dying\, this exhibition looks at how we memorialize and render tangible that which we may have lost\, wish to regain\, or never had. Through film\, photography\, sculpture\, and forensic drawings\, these five artists examine the ardent desire to communicate about and come to terms with the passing of a person.  \nThe included artists span a wide range of media\, backgrounds\, and interests. Minnesota-based social practice artist\, Jess Hirsch\, creates work that begs participation from across streets\, cities\, cultures\, and lifetimes; Sculptor\, Andy Mauery of Maine\, uses the reverential material of hair to comment upon extinction\, gender\, craft\, and sacred remnants; Detective Ian Spencer of the Lincoln\, MA police force is an internationally recognized forensic and reconstructive artist who returns the likeness and voices to those whom have had it unjustly taken; Shannon Taggart is a documentary photographer from New York who offers glimpses into the lives and communities of those who wish to communicate with the departed; Berlin-based artist David Zink Yi\, is a multi-media creator who blends music\, sculpture\, and performance in an attempt to conjure hidden feelings and beings. \nVisiting Artist events: \nShannon Taggart with author Peter Bebergal\n\nA conversation about art\, the otherworldly\, and technology\n\nOctober 26\, 2017\n6:30-8:00 p.m.\n301 Gallery\n\nDetective Ian Spencer\nNew England’s only FBI trained forensic artist shares experiences and techniques\nNovember 9\, 2017\n6:30-8:00 p.m.\nB-208\, 248 Cabot St\n 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/quietusseptember-5-october-28-2017/
LOCATION:301 Gallery\, 301 Cabot Street\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/The_Spiritualists_006-1200x800-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170815
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171015
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1916-1502755200-1508025599@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:FIGURE/GROUND
DESCRIPTION:Gallery Hours\nM–F\, 12–6pm\nSat.\, 12–5pm \nReception: September 6th\, 5–8pm \n\n\nContemporary figurative painting is more relevant than ever\, as artists portray people engaged with the salient issues of our time—including race\, sexuality\, violence\, migration\, and privacy. What does it mean to be human as our relationship to our bodies\, to nature\, and to society evolves? \n\nEight artists working in the figurative tradition explore the body from a wide range of angles and in an array of mediums—including printmaking\, painting\, animation\, photography\, collage\, sculpture\, and drawing. Their work engages with the history of figurative art and also sheds light on both current and timeless notions of humanity.\n\n\nMiguel Aragon · Matt Bollinger · Justin Kim · Susan Lichtman ·\nKirk Lorenzo · Azita Moradkhani · Simonette Quamina · Leslie Schomp\n\n\nLeslie Schomp – Artist Lecture\nOctober 10\, 2017\n6:30–7:30 p.m.\n H-201\n23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA.\n\n 
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/figure-groundaugust-15-october-14-2017/
LOCATION:Montserrat Gallery\, 23 Essex St\, Beverly\, MA\, 01915\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Asleep-and-Awake-II-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170616
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170816
DTSTAMP:20260420T010428
CREATED:20231220T195441Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240108T165757Z
UID:1913-1497571200-1502841599@www.montserrat.edu
SUMMARY:EXPLORATIONS
DESCRIPTION:New England Biolabs\n240 County Road\nIpswich\, MA \nReception: June 17th\, 5–7pm \nA Montserrat College of Art Faculty Exhibition at the award-winning New England Biolabs headquarters in Ipswich\, MA. The NEB have been long time supporters of Montserrat and we are thrilled to have to the opportunity collaborate on this exhibition together. \nFrom traditional pictorial paintings to abstract digital art\, the featured artists span numerous genres\, themes\, and subjects. \nChelsea Samms\, Kayla + Zoey\, Digital painting produced in collaboration with rhesus macaques\, 2016\n16×20″
URL:https://www.montserrat.edu/event/explorationsjune-16-august-15-2017/
LOCATION:MA
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.montserrat.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/SammsChelsea-scaled.jpg
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END:VCALENDAR