Fall Art Exhibition at New
Euphrat Museum of Art
Offers Refreshing Perspectives
EVENTS:
Fall Art
Exhibition: In Between: The Tension and Attraction of Difference
September 29
– November 25, 2009
Hours: 10-4,
M-Th
Open to tours by
appointment
Reception with the
Artists: Tuesday, November 10, 5:30-
7:30 pm
For additional
events, check the Euphrat Museum of Art website http://www.deanza.edu/euphrat/
WHERE: Euphrat Museum of Art, De Anza College,
21250 Stevens Creek Boulevard, Cupertino, CA 95014
INAUGURAL
YEAR ART EXHIBITION:
The Euphrat
Museum of Art at De Anza College serves a culturally diverse, technologically
sophisticated, urban community undergoing rapid economic and social changes.
The inaugural year exhibitions weave together the stories of artists and groups
with local and global connections in an effort to understand the fascinating
community that we are situated in: Silicon Valley. Our second exhibition, In
Between: The Tension and Attraction of Difference, continues our examination of Silicon
ValleyÕs varied and colorful growth through visual media and shared narratives.
Artists include Marlene Angeja, Mei-Chu Chang, Sam Hernandez, Bu
Hua, Ken Lo, Abraham Menor, Minette Lee Mangahas, Penny Nii, Ricardo Richey,
Lucy Sargeant, Imin Yeh, Xudong Yu, and more.
In Between is a gathering of artists who do or see
things in a fresh way, who investigate and rethink the status quo, upset common
perceptions, embrace the unknown, and change the game. It is language-oriented,
yet not
confined by
language. Age-old tradition is combined with street art, technology, animation,
music, etc. In Between
brings together people from different generations and cultures, working with
different aspects of the community, stretching across boundaries. This outreach
is nourished in the constantly re-inventive Silicon Valley and in the vibrant
Bay Area, where tradition and new ideas abound.
ÒMuch of my work is about MOVEMENT and
the tension and attraction of difference. ItÕs about the freedom that can come
from embracing what is born in-between, what we do not know, and sometimes what
we fear.Ó
– Minette
Lee Mangahas
The recent art
of Hawaiian-born Minette Lee Mangahas bridges many different cultures. After years studying Zen
calligraphy, she began a project working with graffiti artists from around the
country. Called Calligraffiti, it opens the door to the many connections that draw from oneÕs
expertise/experiences and pull in the expertise/experience of others. In her Exquisite
Corpse series, Mangahas worked with eight graffiti artists
individually. Based on a collaborative game invented by the Surrealists, the
images are collectively assembled, with each collaborator adding to the
composition in sequence. The artists included Amend One, Desi W.O.M.E, and Denz (Oakland), Apex (San Francisco), Coby Kennedy (New York), Lucha (NY + SF), Zen One (Minneapolis), and Toons One (Los Angeles). MangahasÕs own work is
like poetry with a brush; she calls it brush-song. Combined with the graffiti artists, a
new poetry grows. In one instance, Ricardo Richey (aka Apex) began with the letter Òa,Ó
created street variations, and then broke into an abstract version as Mangahas
responded/interpreted with calligraphy. http://www.headlands.org/event_detail.asp?key=20&eventkey=266
http://brushsong.com/home.html. Ricardo Richey has created
a special window painting for Front View.
Mei-Chu Chang
is a well-known Chinese
calligrapher and seal engraver from Taiwan currently living in the Bay Area. A
student of master Bei-Yue Wang, he explored and learned from classic
calligraphy. He has been giving calligraphy classes in the Bay Area for ten
years. He organized the Antiquarian Club of Chinese Calligraphy while traveling
to various U.S. art museums. The Qing Dynasty calligrapher and painter Shi Tao
said: ÒWhile it takes great efforts to deeply emulate other artists, it takes
great courage then to emerge as a unique artist.Ó Beginning in 2008, Chang
started a series of breakthrough pieces that encompassed his new experiences.
His unique compositions elevate the life of the bold, black brushstroke and
place it in a new environment. http://www.cccgallery.org/profile/zhngmij
Painter Lucy
Sargeant uses
brushstrokes differently, with an abundance of color. Brushstrokes and drips
freely form the large portrait faces of artist friends, who are often notable
San Jose State University professors who have helped shape the Bay Area
artistic landscape. Her painting David M. is of sculptor and professor David Middlebrook, who created
a major bronze public sculpture on the De Anza campus. Sargeant catches his
inner reflection, depicting his unique character traits. Likewise with her
portrait of poet and professor Virginia de Araujo. SargeantÕs second career is
teaching representational drawing at San Jose State, often to future
animators. She finds appeal in de
AraujoÕs philosophy: ÒTo write a good poem, one has to know grammar.Ó Sargeant
builds up form through brushstrokes; then like de Araujo, the artwork takes on
a life and poetry of its own. http://lucysargeant.com/
Sam Hernandez, longtime professor of sculpture at
Santa Clara University, adds an unusual dimension to his customary
free-standing sculptures, illuminated by his study of many different cultural
traditions. For his large wall piece Dichos y Bichos, he combines a long list of folk wisdom
in Spanish. Sprinkled throughout the heavily gessoed lines of text are little
bronze critters. This magical piece speaks to all those experiences where we find wisdom on a day-to-day basis. The work
is flanked by Homage, a
free-standing totemic Chinese scholar-stone work (Òawkward stone,Ó Northern style) of redwood, with inlaid
pool balls in the base for nodules. HernandezÕs totemic sculptures often have
jutting wood elements, like solidified brushstrokes, forming figures or
characters for meditative contemplation. http://www.samhernandezart.com/
The unusual
books of Penny Nii
are investigations in form, ideas, and the passage of time. NiiÕs expertise has
encompassed fabric art, book art, and curating (after a career as research
scientist at Stanford University). Her book, Pic to Words, is comprised of pictographs,
Chinese/Japanese ideograms, and drawings. It utilizes Gocco prints and a type
of accordion/concertina structure. ÒI have been collecting ancient pictographs
and hieroglyphs from Chinese and Japanese sources for many years. The ideograms
in use today and the images of the meanings of the ideograms are printed on the
left-hand pages. The pages form a wall when opened fully.Ó Yen for Death is in the form of a Japanese funerary
urn that opens to create an altar. ÒThe wrapped box É opens into panels that
show artifacts related to a short story about the death of my sister-in-law and the aspects of
Japanese funerary business. The accordion-folded book, which contains the
story, is stored in the lid of the box. The photographs are from my fatherÕs
funeral in 1969.Ó http://www.penny-nii.com/Site/PennyNii.html
Imin YehÕs traditional woodcut prints are a
platform to take off to new realms. ÒUtilizing history, subtle humor, exchange
and generosity, social intervention and technical craft,Ó her work opens lively
dialog on cultural understanding, playing with subjects such as Ògood importsÓ
and Òstudent loans.Ó The images range from comforting patterns to Benjamin
Franklin to power animals of the zodiac, but with a twist: Year of the Pill Bug,
Year of the Three-Toed Sloth, and Urban Street Pigeon, etc. ÒI am interested in American and
Chinese history and in the many ways both cultures and economies are entangled
today.Ó While this interest encompasses the function of souvenirs in cultural tourism,
cultural fetishism, divisions of labor that result from global industry, and
more, YehÕs playfulness and spirit enliven the unusual projects. Come and
participate. Make your own folk festival. http://iminyeh.com/
Marlene
Angeja exhibits several
abstract paintings, bold in color and brushstroke. Titles such as The
Wheelbarrow only begin
to allude to the process and range of ideas around the paintings. Nearby,
videos provide another window. Island is a video project using archival footage (1953-58) of the
Azores Islands, which lie in the unstable junction between the North American,
Eurasian and African tectonic plates. When Angeja was a child, she lived on the
island of Pico. Her mother and her brother took a boat to record the eruption
of Capelinhos volcano on an 8mm home movie camera. Today, the video composite
is about the idea of island from an emigrantÕs point of view, which involves a
profound sense of nostalgia (saudade) for the lost landscape. <http://marleneangeja.com/>
ÒFor us,
geography is history.
Like mermaids, we have a double nature:
we are flesh and stone.
Our bones dive into the ocean.Ó -
Vitorino NemŽsio
Bu Hua (Beijing, China) recently exhibited a
short animation in San Francisco. Entitled Anxiety, it is about the anxiety that comes from
desire and greed, societal status, and about a lone little girl with a wand who
with Òpure noble thoughts and feelingsÓ goes about saving animals. While HuaÕs
Shanghai solo show was Man-Made Fairyland, the core of her work is about Òthe heart.Ó An earlier
animation, Oneness,
features four figures on a ÒJourney to the West.Ó Each figure is different, yet
sometimes we find their characteristics in the same person. ÒEverybody is
multi-faced.Ó Wordless, the animations speak across continents.
Yu Xudong (Guangzhou, China) exhibits simple signs, all with
the letter Òa.Ó In One PersonÕs Parade (his take on ChinaÕs parade law), he has photographed himself all alone
with a megaphone, determinedly holding his sign high in various safe parts of
China — in the middle of an empty warehouse, in the middle of an empty
street, standing atop some nondescript low building. In China he canÕt protest.
For him the rhetorical structure is important and Òhow the physical and
political space in society is being used and consumed.Ó His simple signs,
leaning against the museum wall, reference a much larger relationship between
the individual and public, whether one is part of the
critical dialogue or not even noticed.
Abraham Menor lives in the pulse of San JosŽ: Silicon
Valley. He is an edgy
photographer, an Òat-riskÓ youth case manager, and a community organizer/worker
affiliated with Silicon Valley DeBug. With a background in sociology, he began
documenting graffiti as a way to examine social behavior. His blog is
Brainsoiled. Keepitsoiled — stay grounded. He has documented various
social and political movements such as the anti-war movement, the Filipino
World War II Veterans Equity Movement, the Silence the Violence Day, and the
Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom Train March. The energy he saw on the street
greatly influenced his approach to his documentation of Hip Hop culture and
street culture. As a participant and observer, Menor captures lived moments,
raw and real. He combines his photos with music or alters them with artist
Shorty Fatz. He has documented the Shorty Fatz phenomenon from a garage
operation to a hot company in the bike world.
Ken Lo, an Asian b-ball legend at 5Õ7Ó who ran
with Kobe, creates a special installation. K. Lo is a straight shooter: ÒIÕd
like to think the quality of your game was all that mattered.Ó So he lays it
out: ÒYou are not anyone unless you have a name, and youÕre not a name that
means anything unless you have a shoe.Ó Through video (The Rice Balla
Chronicles), poster, SLAM
interview, and an
elaborate storefront display (balla cards, radical Chinese paper cutouts and
grillwork, Lucky Feet Happy Shoes T shirt, and more), you can check out the man
and the all-important shoes. ÒThey used to call me Yellow Fever, because my
game was sick. What will they call you?Ó So if you have a big ego and want to
be one of the guys, K. Lo gives good advice: Work versatility into your game. ÒDonÕt just be a shooterÉ.You need to
develop a complete game to play.Ó
And, ÒMay you always dribble forward and shoot without regret.Ó http://www.yelp.com/biz/lucky-feet-happy-shoes-san-francisco
Come On Down! is
a multi-purpose project space that includes a collaborative communal area for
connecting visual and oral history, and an experimental exhibition area for the
results of interactive projects. Part of this campus/community space will
feature frequently changing artwork. Fall 2009 presentations will include:
á Student Activity: Santa Clara County
high school students in the Summer Bridge Program for foster youth (developed by Donna
Fung) at De Anza created
(Super)heroes.
Working with Euphrat staff, they examined qualities of heroism in their own
lives and in the lives of those around them. They built powerful mixed-media art pieces, using words, poetry, images,
paint, and sections of recycled doors.
á Publications: This area is also used for study and research. Several publications
are on display, including Present Tense and The Fourth R: Art and the Needs of Children and Youth.
The
exhibition was curated by Jan Rindfleisch, along with the artists and with Nancy
Hom, Abby Chen, Robin Treen, Jianhua Shu, and others.
Works
by Bu Hua, Ken Lo, Imin Yeh, and Yu Xudong were
recently shown at the Chinese Culture Center in an exhibition entitled Present
Tense: Chinese Character, which reflected
a fresh perspective through the eyes of young artists. http://presenttense.us/artists/
More information on these artists can be found in the accompanying book
of the same name. In addition to its focus on youth, one of the exhibitÕs
premises was that any of us can be Chinese. In In Between, we expand that concept further by
considering the multiple, inventive ways that people employ to probe other
identities and to take on new traits and styles that suit their fancies or
needs.
ABOUT THE EUPHRAT MUSEUM OF ART
For over 30 years, the Euphrat Museum has presented one-of-a-kind
exhibitions, publications, and events reflecting the rich diverse heritage of
our area. The MuseumÕs mission is to provide a venue and resource for
visual ideas and communication that stimulate creativity and an
interest in art among audiences of all ages. The Euphrat provides for a
spectrum of interactions with a large and diversified public, working on and
off campus with specialists in all disciplines. The Museum has an outstanding
Arts & Schools Program, primarily in Cupertino and Sunnyvale, at various
school and community sites. Each year the Museum creates public art projects
involving elementary and middle school students, De Anza student interns, and Euphrat
artist/teachers.
The new Euphrat Museum of Art is in the front of the new De Anza
College Visual and Performing Arts Center, prominently located facing Stevens
Creek Blvd. The Euphrat is funded in part by De Anza College, De Anza
Associated Student Body, City of Cupertino, City of Sunnyvale, and Arts Council
Silicon Valley. It is also supported by an Applied Materials Excellence in the
Arts grant and Adobe Systems Inc. grant (both in partnership with Arts Council
Silicon Valley), by Target, and by the Euphrat Museum Advisory Council and
Friends of the Euphrat Museum.
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