PAST EVENTS

Location: 44-02 23rd Street, Long Island City, NY 11101
Hours: Thursday - Sunday 12-6pm

11

May 20
Opening Reception: May 20 12-6pm

M55 Art in collaboration with LIC ARTS OPEN and the support of Beit Issie Shapiro is pleased to present

Artist Valentina DuBasky is pleased to present her student, Oron Tal, age 11, in his first solo exhibition. This exhibition titled “11, Paintings and Drawings, 2010-2012” will take place at the M55 Gallery on May 20, 2012, 12-6pm. In 2010, Valentina accepted Oron, then an eight year old student, after recognizing his passion for art. For two years, he has been coming to Valentina’s painting studio in the West Village in New York City for weekly art lessons. This exhibition marks Oron’s first two years of art study with a selection of paintings and drawings in a variety of media on the themes of travel, reading, media, fashion and family.

Valentina is an exhibiting artist whose work has been included in more than 150 exhibitions nationally and internationally. She is also the founder and Executive Director of Art-in-a-Box, an international nonprofit organization. Oron’s artwork has been influenced through a combination of Valentina’s unique expertise, Oron’s diverse experiences, his rich imagination and love of learning. Oron writes of his relationship to art:

Oron Tal is a student at Solomon Schechter School of Queens. Oron’s academic environment is a place where curiosity rules and where children learn to honor timeless traditions and think for themselves. The students are encouraged to become global citizens – the classroom is a launching pad that enables students to view the world from an extraordinary new perspective. Oron’s artwork projects his global lens and the recognition that we are all part of something greater than ourselves.

Being a global citizen encompasses a commitment to social responsibility – a call-to-action as compassionate human beings. Oron will be donating proceeds from the sale of his artwork to Beit Issie Shapiro, Israel’s most effective nonprofit organization in 2012. Beit Issie Shapiro is a leading innovator of new therapies for children and adults with disabilities, sharing best practices internationally. Beit Issie plays a leading role in promoting the inclusion of people with disabilities in society. Oron is happy that his art can help people in need and invites all to join him in supporting Beit Issie Shapiro.

Oron’s show, “11”, Paintings and Drawings, 2010-2012, presents 50 original works of art that demonstrate the breadth and depth of Oron’s creativity, intellect and skill in expressing his ideas and interpreting the world around him. Please join us to celebrate the beginning of a unique creative journey of a young artist.



M55 PROFILES - LIC ARTS OPEN

May 14 – May 19, 2012
Opening Reception: Tuesday, May 15, 6 to 8 pm

M55 ART in collaboration with LIC ARTS OPEN is pleased to present

LIC ARTS OPEN is an exciting celebration of the thriving arts community in Long Island City, Queens. Featuring 200+ Open Studios, Painting, Sculpture, Music, Dance, Theater, and more. The event is organized by the LIC Arts Open organization, a collaboration of arts entities, businesses and individuals seeking to spotlight the diverse artistic community in LIC.

M55 PROFILES
In collaboration with LIC Arts Open, an exhibit of work featuring members of M55 Art and invited guest artist .
Celebrating Long Island City Arts!

Artists

John Beardman
Karen Gentile
Iris Levinson
Alfred Martinez
Eileen Mislove
Annette Morriss
Carolyn Oberst
Virginia Pierrepont
Richard Pitts
Alice Plusch
Ed Rath
Judy Russell
Shiro Sasaki
George Schulman
Joyce Silver
Emily Stedman
Jeff Way



Studio of the Absurd. "Good-Bye Amsterdam"

April 25 – May 12, 2012
Opening Reception: Wednesday, April 25, 5 - 8pm

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to presents:

STUDIO OF THE ABSURD
“Good-Bye Amsterdam”
by
Virginia Pierrepont

Featured Artists:

Judy Glantzman
Jeffrey Bishop
Chuck Webster
Eddie Martinez
Virginia Pierrepont
Shari Mendelson
Yoshihito Ito & Kazuya Kubo

___
In her latest installation at M55 ART, artist and curator Virginia Pierrepont reconstructs her personal studio practice into an allegorical showcase of her personal touchstones. Reversing of the normal order of things, she invites her artist friends, family, and social contacts to participate in her creative process while she develops new paintings during the course of the exhibition. Eschewing the idea that creativity is an internal process, Pierrepont is directly inspired by the energy of her social interactions. She has gathered together the work of six simpatico artists, whose paths collide in an expression of pure freedom and wild temporal energy. The combined effects evoke a historic theme of seduction and allure that reference back to the fading red light district of Amsterdam. As the main character in this theatre of the absurd, Pierrepont positions herself within the red light space of the Galleries main window. In what appears to be the artist’s studio space, she actively paints from a voluptuous reclining model.

Participating artists Eddie Martinez, Judy Glantzman and Chuck Webster exhibit an almost 80’s wild, Pier 34, East Village feeling. Sculptor artist Shari Mendelson juxtaposes her talents of recycling with ancient history through use of modern products. Jeffrey Bishop works on multiple series that don’t necessarily cohere to a singular signature style. Yosi and Kazuya Kobo complete this perpetual space with bizarre furniture creations that seem to echo Adirondack chic from old world stock. Seen together, these eloquently defiant artworks conjure up the ancient muse of poetry in our world absurd.

Judy Glantzman
War Series: The Roses I began this series after visiting the Guernica, at the Reina Sophia Museum in Spain, in 2009. I had seen the Guernica many times at the Museum of Modern Art, but this time it had a more profound effect on me. Dark imagery had always appeared in my previous paintings. After seeing the Guernica, I decided to make war, or whatever I could imagine that war looked like, as the subject of my work. What has resulted is a group of collaged and painted paper works. In these, distinct sets of imagery: observed, imagined, and the accidental spills of paint are torn, cut, and recombined over and over, many times, over a long period of time. The goal, the moment when the work is finished, is when all the elements collide and recombine to make a palpable feeling. These paintings are my continued attempts to see what WAR looks like to me, and they encompass terror, mourning, and loss.

Jeffrey Bishop
By nature I tend to work on multiple series that don’t necessarily cohere to a singular signature style. The Turks utilize the same constant irregular shape, hard of edge and spiky, perhaps comic, which I articulate in a variety of ways while retaining serial constancy. The Untitled watercolors were executed during an artist residency in Rome. They reflect a more intimate, atmospheric and whimsical approach to space. The Black and Green works employ a resinous surface that is poured and into which shaved charcoal is added. A migration occurs while the resin is setting up. The result conjures for me something both visceral and aquatic.

Chuck Webster
I work in paintings, drawings, collage and prints. I am interested in an image that engages the viewer on many levels. Forms are drawn from personal history as well as from shapes and phenomena that I observe in the world. I am interested in creating a narrative that comes from the work, my life, and the intersection of these with shapes, scale and color.
The work of making the picture and contacting the surface with the brush and hand leaves a journey of decisions, much as a well-worn tool contains the history of the touch and work of its owner.
I work on panels on an absorbent gesso. My surfaces are polished to a sheen that evokes encaustic paint and preserves gesture and glaze while showing a history of touch and work. I want the work to be both immediate and remote, as though you are encountering something for the first time that has been present in the world for 1,000 years.

Eddie Martinez
It’s easy to imagine Martinez standing with his nose nearly pressed into the wet canvas, craning his tall frame in order to examine an area where thick paint curls like breaking surf. We can imagine him deciding to act, and dragging a thick wet brush into more fresh paint with a decisive gesture. In that way his paintings evoke the memory of a host of heroic painters, and like those heroic modernists associated with the early to mid-twentieth century, Martinez uses his canvases to make paintings which flirt with abstraction, but keep one foot planted in the referential.
Martinez’s work is both less serious and more serious than his forebears. The less seriousness mirrors the central turn in philosophy and art over the past sixty years, which has been the cementing of the unconscious into every facet of human activity. The paintings are more serious in the sense that, once the subject is decentered, the topic shifts from the individual towards relationships and communication. You’ll notice that the figures in Martinez’s paintings aren’t isolated. They are either in relationship to one another, or looking pointedly out at you, or in the case of Sun Setter, deliberately looking away.
In a world that loves to talk about the death of painting, Martinez offers optimism to lovers of painting. Martinez’s paintings have their own internal logic, and the startling clarity of his vision creates a testimony regarding the way he sees the world. In the same way that the works of Van Gogh or de Kooning evoke worlds and change the way we see, by meeting our world and leaving a trace behind, Martinez also discloses a world. His work holds the potential for historical continuity with earlier traditions, while breaking from their fallacies and charting new territory.

Virginia Pierrepont
“A short trip can make an indelible impression and forever alter the everyday character of the senses. The sensory universe is assailed persistently with everything new. We are struck by the fresh qualities that form the individual nature of a new place. For an artist the challenge is a cognitive shift: how to adapt perception to the new dynamic.” – Fran Coleman, 2012
For me painting is a diary, an interpretive record of how I feel and react to my environment. I express a spectrum of emotions as well as intellectual processes in my canvases. Working in Plein Aire lends a more immediate connection to these perceptions and thoughts. Back in the studio, working from memory, the image is experienced and sensed once more through the filter of emotion and personal vision. The Natural world is reinterpreted through the passionate use of color, brush stroke and form. The act of painting is an additive and subtractive process. The landscape becomes layered with associative memories, as paint is scraped away or added, “I am interested in exploring how natural elements, such as time, distance, space, light, shadow and color coincide in a perceived image, and which element best expresses the essence of that image. The effect is truly sculptural: the layers of paint do not completely cover each other. Color radiates from underneath, like so many levels of the human experience, unseen but not forgotten.

Shari Mendelson
My current work is constructed from found plastic bottles and refers to sources as varied as the painting of Giorgio Morandi, ancient Greek, Roman and Islamic glass and ceramic vessels, Boli Figures from Mali and Egyptian Sculpture. I collect discarded bottles, cut them into pieces and use the parts to create new vessels and small sculptures. Some of my pieces are coated with mixed materials and/or glaze-like layers of polymers and paint, which vary the levels of transparency and opacity, emphasize or obscure the original material, and alter the visual and actual weight. Many of my works are based on specific pieces that I’ve admired for years at the Metropolitan Museum. Others are based on collected images or built more intuitively through the playful reassembly of the individual parts.
Using today’s trash as material for sculptures that refer to early works of art may seem incongruent, yet it enables me to comment on our current throw-away culture while investigating issues of authenticity, originality, material, history, culture and the relative value of objects.

Yoshihito Ito, Kazuya Kubo & Tim Ito of D2 Creations
D2 is a NYC based Japanese design collective specializing in interior decor and clothing. We call ourselves Creator. We aimed at playful creation with designs and art aspects. Main focus is on contemporary furniture and clothing applying existing items such as vintage, antique, and junk, by changing its function. In other words, utilizing wasted items and giving them new functions and new life. That gives us new finds and interests, and inspires us.



Inside-Outliers’ Alchemy: Working the Edges of Perception

April 4– April 21, 2012
Opening Reception: Wednesday, April 4, 6 - 9pm

M55 ART & Urban Studio Unbound are pleased to present

Inside-Outliers’ Alchemy: Working the Edges of Perception

Abigail DeVille
Stephen Woods

New York artists Abigail Deville and Stephen Woods flip the script with their offer of installed works exploring the unruly nature of histories personal and political, while simultaneously questioning the stability of our prescribed notions by employing iconographic imagery, objets en flux, and permutations of assemblage/bricolage, to impart meta-static statements which function and communicate on the edges of multi and cross – sensory perception.

Putting the tangible in service of the elusive, the works suggest a dynamic exchange questioning the reliability of the systems and sciences in our physical world, with a revisionist bent of the highest order.

How items- as – receptacles gather, hold, and release meaning, as well as serve as place markers for our experiences as individuals and societies at large alike, combined with an examination of the patterns of manifestation and process, the works imply an overarching, active trust in the mutability of the universe, an order in chaos if you will, and a willingness to walk the talk of pioneers demonstrating frontier genres.

Woods’ arresting “Empty Vessels Float” achieves a visual poetic stance in which the interplay of redefined axiomatic prose, along with iconographic and archetypal imagery, creates a metaphoric dialogueof refreshing, if divergent, relationship, and a definitively original language. The final visual resolution may be mined for conventional interpretation, or alternately, and preferably, stand alone successfully as a collaborative whole, unfettered by the trappings of process and meaning; and therefore surpassing the conversation or “noise” surrounding the work, and allowing the images to sustain.

“Invisibility Blues,” DeVille’s reprieve of her March 10, 2012, Dependent Art Fair install, is a second iteration exploring a legacy of social oppression, struggle and material poverty through the accumulated remains, or “intergenerational debris” Deville considers heirlooms; a domestic collectionfrom a Bronx apartment her grandmother left in December when she passed away. The artist herself occupied the apartment (which had been passed down through three generation as part of the larger narratives of the great migration Southern Blacks to Northern Cities and the new struggles presented to them through various inequalities) until evicted March 9, 2012. In this specific installation she has taken the broken pieces of yesterday’s life as a stand for the developments of a specific material culture in America over last forty years.The excess of historical material will result in a layered, densely expansive sculptural collage environment in which the disarray of excess reveals the impossibility of a consistent narrative

Background:
ARTIST’S STATEMENTS

Abigail DeVille
Through bricolage, painting, and sculpture, Abigail DeVille cobbles together a visual mass that speaks to the material culture of the present moment. She experiments using found and inherited domestic objects in order to make a connection to the universe. W.E.B. Du Bois’ concept of double-consciousness is the conceptual frame DeVille uses to deconstruct two spatial relationships: the claustrophobic space of the urban environment violently clashing with the infinite expanse of the universe. Black holes are an integral metaphor. DeVille warps the time of physical objects. Her objects speak to the physical infinite expanse of universal time and societal ills of the present moment. DeVille’s work is making the visible representation of the invisible.

Stephen Woods
My current work employs objects and images and their associated meanings, in favor over words, to create an original language of visual poetry as vehicle for learning and communication. The process originates with, and is fueled by, culturally and historically significant imagery, often of iconographic nature. I employ the images and objects collaboratively, using line and placement together with texture, color, shape, and variety in materials, to define relationships and create a visual dialogue, free from the limitations, tricky nuance, and potential misinterpretation and intangibility of words. As my work progresses, individual elements are becoming more liberated from their original functions within the pieces, and have evolved to serve purely as successful aesthetics, yet no less important to the work. Such is the case with the recurrent element of threads and wires, once crucial and interdependent connectors, and now more often, unencumbered by that particular function. New to the work is the incorporation of sound, to be digested and additive on a visceral, primal level of communication. The intention is to present relationships via divergent representations that ultimately surpass the conversation that generated them, resulting in images which stand unfettered from “noise”, and function as a settled whole.

© Kami Bacon 2012



EVENT HORIZON 2012 New Paintings by Japanese Guest Artist Shiro Sasaki

March 14 to March 31, 2012
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 15, 6 -8 pm

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

EVENT HORIZON 2012 New Paintings by Japanese Guest Artist Shiro Sasaki

On the 11th of March, 2011, a huge tsunami, unprecedented in the history of earthquakes in Japan, struck the northern part of our nation, killing about thirty thousand people. The scars of this tragedy remain vivid in our memories. This event generated confusion in the Japanese government and bought further impoverishment to our economy. Even so, this chaotic situation inspired some people to arise and begin the hard work of rebuilding the infrastructure of Japan, while addressing the stagnant politics of our country. The antagonistic feelings of hope for the future and despair for our losses coexist in every Japanese citizen as we try to re-build our beautiful nation once again.

Looking around the world, it is clear that people of many other nations are experiencing similar circumstances now. Never ending wars, collapsing economies, exploitation and oppression by profit fueled corporations, starvation, and poverty plague millions of people everywhere. Our media warn us constantly of exploding populations, natural and man made disaster, and frightful pandemics. We read of government corruption in many parts of the world. The destruction of our earth environment weighs heavily on us all. It seems that 99% of the people on this planet are suffering, both physically and spiritually, frozen at the cross roads of their civilizations.

Our top astronomers tell us that our physical space-time universe, once sucked into the cosmic black hole, will exist no more. Scientists call that border between the planes “Event Horizon”.

Facing this existential crisis, mankind must rally all of its willpower to create a new future. As an artist, I hope to call attention to the deep feelings that of people hold inside through these tense times. I believe that the artist’s subconscious mind is a micro entity which can reveal the unconscious flow or pattern of the present as a macro entity. I channel this anxiety into my personal visual language via paint and canvas.

About My Work

Flickering light seen through tree leaves, a forest which looks like a universe full of stars, a chair, a cloud, a seascape, a little girl, a human face and so on. Lately I have been working with my dream images as a motif for my new works, creating their images through colored dots and a ring application processes. Adding and subtracting, sometimes juxtaposing, the images’ counter-lines tend to be ambiguous and the works’ images as a whole become out of focus. I pay my best attention to obtain a subtle relationship between the parts and a whole of the image.

Having grown up in Buddhist environment, it is natural to say that I have been influenced strongly by the Buddhist view toward nature. According to Buddhism, nature is an energy field where everything, including our mind, is inseparable and mutually dependent. The border between mind and matter, unlike Cartesian dualism, is an ambiguous space. In fact they are replaceable with each other like both sides of a coin. This way of looking at nature will be seen in the Japanese traditional craftsman’s work ethic as well. The craftsman believes that he should become one with his tools while engaged in his work and believes his tools are his other self. They say that only those who have attained this state of mind can be called a maestro. This kind of view toward nature will be seen in the present day science, quantum physics, as well. For instance: we have in science terminology called “quantum entanglement”. Being proven through a number of experiments, physical events of the micro field correspond instantly, actually beyond speed of light, with those of macro field. Negating Newtonian cause and effect relations, it has proven the mutual dependence of micro and macro events. This mutual dependence will be seen in the relationship between our mind and physical matters as well. One Japanese scientist, long experimenting with the relationship between human consciousness and physical events of micro world, has succeeded in photographing a water crystal which changes its formation according to human words like “love” and “hate”. The result shows that in some way or another our conscious mind can activate physical matter in question. Our consciousness, along with unconsciousness, is literally affecting and is affected by the physical world. I believe, from this point alone, that quantum physics shares part of its ideology with that of Buddhism.

Standing somewhere between Buddhism and quantum physics, my life long theme for my works is to express the flowing mind of the universe with the essence of our age. It may be hard to attain, for it is like the action of man who is trying to create a picture on water while standing in the flowing river.

Shiro Sasaki. 2012



M55 Armory Week

March 5 to March 11, 2012
Opening Reception: March 8, 6 - 8 pm

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

M55 Armory Week

In collaboration with Armory Show Week, an exhibit of work featuring members of M55 Art will light up a stretch of gritty L.I.C. A quick subway hop from Manhattan brings visitors within easy reach of M55 Art plus MoMA PS1 and a thought-provoking view from the other side of the river.

Artists

John Beardman
Karen Gentile
Yosuke Ito
Iris Levinson
Alfred Martinez
Eileen Mislove
Carolyn Oberst
Virginia Pierrepont
Richard Pitts
Alice Plusch
Ed Rath
Judy Russell
George Schulman
Joyce Silver
Emily Stedman
Jeff Way



Night's Dream of Peacock Butterfly

March 4, 2012
Opening Reception: March 4, 6pm. 2012

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

Performance by Yuko Ueno
Collaboration x Marco Hall Fashion Show

Charity Event for Japanese Earthquake Disaster
Supporter Sponsor by American Dream Japanese Network

In 2007, I got inspired by Butterfly when I was in my hometown in Japan, and decided to start creating butterfly art named “Magical Butterfly” influenced by beauty and life of nature, with message to save them.

I create 3D mixed media Butterfly Installation by my original method of making them.

I was attracted to the beauty of butterfly wings. During the creation process, developed my own way of making the wings. Each butterfly piece has unique design, color and patterns from my imagination. Inspirations came from my dance background and passion for music. I have tried to infuse the work with the rhythms and flavors of different musical styles including: Jazz, Blues, Funk, Latin, Afrobeat, Afro Cuban, Latin Jazz, Mambo, Salsa, Dixieland, New Orleans Jazz, Big Bands with a touch of Carnival, Mardi Gra, Circus and Cabaret. For every unique musical sound, rhythm and style, there are as many varieties of butterfly, all uniquely beautiful and equally fragile, dancing midair in vibrant living color. Just as instruments of varying timbre, pitch and tone are combined to make music, butterflies of varying pattern, shape and color were combined to create a story in my art work. The story is life.

I would be happy if viewers could feel the beauty, strength, power and sprit of butterflies, and excitement through the rhythm and beat of the work. And Butterflies live a very short life but they live it fully and beautifully in harmony with the earth, the way nature intended. I probably make them telling myself not stop looking up and moving forward, and fly freely forever.

Yuko Ueno 2012



Paintings by Kim Sloane

February 15 – March 3, 2012
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 15, 6 -8 pm

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

Paintings by Kim Sloane

The work in this show is all a product of the imagination. The imagination is fed in three essential ways. One is the study of nature, drawing from the human figure or landscape, two is the history of art, and the third is poetry.

The art that has informed these paintings includes Minoan pots and larnake (sarcophagi), Greek pottery painting, Romanesque painting and sculpture, medieval and Persian manuscripts, and the moderns for whom all these were also compelling sources.

Themes are sometimes conceived in advance, and sometimes only emerge in the process of a painting. Often they will change as a painting develops. At other times they are unknown, and only reveal themselves after the painting’s completion. The image is a long time coming, and is never predetermined. It undergoes constant, often radical change.

Themes included in this group of work include the swimmer, or the body in suspension, and Herakles and the Lion, or struggle. The painting “Tuneless Numbers” is an image of Cupid
and Psyche, inspired by the ode of that name by John Keats. “Pale Flower” was Shelley’s epithet for Keats in his elegy on the death of Keats, “Adonais”. This is an example of a painting whose theme became known to me only after its completion. Both the figure and
the pale flower were there before I recognized my subject.

Somewhat more complex is the theme of the figure and the bear. The bear is the bear that visits my yard daily in early summer, but it is also the beast of the earth from the Book of Revelations who spits demon frogs from his mouth. He is angry at our destruction of his domain; we offer doves in supplication, knowing full well it is not enough.

Lovers, Boy Meets Girl, and Kissed by a Bird are celebrations of mysteries of love and of life.

Mr. Sloane has shown in New York and around the country in solo and group exhibitions. His work has been shown at, among other places, the New York Studio School, Dartmouth College, Maurice Arlos Gallery, Sideshow Gallery and the National Academy of Design Museum where he has twice won the Mikhail and Ekateryna Shatalov Prize. He is currently Associate Professor and Assistant Chair of Foundation at Pratt Institue. More information on the artist can be found at his website www.kimsloane.com.



Dynasty, gaps of a continuos by Mexican artist Jessica Salinas.

Feb 11, 2012
Opening Reception: Feb 11, 6pm

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

Dynasty, gaps of a continuos by Mexican guest artist Jessica Salinas
Sponsored by ConArte & NODAL ART Contemporary Latin American Art.

Power is the name given to a complex and strategic relationship in a particular society. Power means relationships; a more or less organized, hierarchical and coordinated network, carefully displayed on a particular social structure.

– Microphisics of Power. Michel Foucault. 1979

Dynasty, gaps of a continuous is a proposal by Jessica Salinas with an unusual topic in the scope of art, made up through an installation display complemented by multiple elements, structuring a whole discourse according to its meaning.

Using images of portraits in small format paintings profiling specific social key characters, and projecting videos and documents that establish positions of corporate and institutional relationships, Jessica displays models of social reference for established power networks whose engagement strategies can be recognize, as well as the economic and cultural fields where such things happens.

Francisco Benítez. February 2012.

Spanish:

“Dynasty, gaps of a continuos”

Poder es el nombre dado a una compleja relación estratégica en una sociedad dada. El poder significa relaciones; una red más o menos organizada, jerarquizada y coordinada, desplegada sobre una estructura social determinada.

- La Microfísica del Poder. Michel Foucault. 1979

El proyecto Dynasty, gaps of a continuos, planteado por Jessica Salinas, aborda una temática poco común en el ámbito del arte, a través de una instalación compuesta de múltiples elementos que al complementarse, estructuran un todo y dotan de sentido al discurso propuesto.

A partir de imágenes pinturas de formato minúsculo donde se perfilan retratos individuales o grupales de personajes sociales clave y de videos y documentos que establecen posturas y relaciones corporativas e institucionales, Jessica despliega modelos sociales referenciales para el establecimiento de las redes de poder, desde
donde se pueden interpretar las estrategias de relación y los diferentes campos – económicos, culturales- donde esto se sucede.

Francisco Benítez. Febrero 2012.



"Circulation" Michele Kong + Yosuke Ito

January 27 - February 11, 2012
Opening Reception: Thursday, Feb 2, 6 - 8pm

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

Circulation Michele Kong + Yosuke Ito

With upheaval spreading around the world, what can we make of our current global situation? Like looking in a mirror every morning, we may check numerous sources of information. On one hand, in Japan we witnessed that everybody could experience weakness, loss and suffering from unexpected circumstances – the great earthquake and tsunami. More recently we saw the Occupy protests spreading from Wall Street to locations all over the world. They seem to cry out for recovering some common ground, both material and spiritual.

These incidents show images in a mirror that is not always stable and flat. Fact was not reflected in the mirror, more perhaps somewhere between the incidents and the reflections. If the mirror that we look into each morning does not reflect fact, then is the mirror even real? Now, everything is in interconnected, circulating on a global scale and has the possibility to be upset.

Art has a function to rouse people to look at the structures of the current world and show something in between. This two-person show creates a dialogue and exchange of ideas between artists Michele Kong (NY) and Yosuke Ito (Tokyo).

This light-based exhibition is best viewed after sunset.

Michele Kong
For several years, Michele Kong created large-scale sculptural installations inspired by structures in nature and focusing attention on things found in plain sight. Such works have been included in exhibitions at a variety of art venues including: PS 1 Contemporary Art Center (NY), Bemis Center for Contemporary Art (NE), Arlington Arts Center (VA), Maryland Art Place (MD), Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts (DE), to name just a few. In 2009, Kong expanded her artistic practice and began experimenting with narrative in short video projects. Several fellowships including the Fine Arts Work Center, Yaddo, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and other programs supported this new body of work. Additionally a 2009 Creative Artist Exchange Fellowship, awarded by the Japan-US Friendship Commission/NEA, contributed to the production of collaborative works including the work on view in this exhibition, The Space Between.

Photo: The Space Between, 2010
Video stills from forthcoming two-channel installation (17 min., HDV).

Yosuke Ito
A Tokyo-based artist and international exhibitor, is interested in the mechanism of self-reflection. He refers to this process as a connection between gaze and glance to memory and record. As Artistic Director of the international exchange project, Puddles, Ito has collaborated with intermedia artist Phill Niblock, a Minimal sound master. The inspiration from these collaborations has broadened Ito’s work, reaching beyond the visual to include other senses. From 2009 at M55 Art, Ito develops his ideas into a visual narrative. The dispersal of light is transferred to the circular motion of propellers powered by solar cells, suggesting the far-reaching implications regarding current global environmental issues.

Photo: Lighting Loop 2010, M55 Art, New York



"PeopleOnProduce" Recent Works by Mike Petrakis

December 22 2011 – January 21 2012
Opening Reception: TBA

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

PeopleOnProduce Recent Works by
Mike Petrakis

“Every human’s start, is (he)art…”

“PeopleOnProduce” is an exhibition by Mike Petrakis, that reflects the human existence in controversy to art. The everyday life as a flood of reality elements surrounding us; icons, words, ‘products’ and things, filtrate by man and woman on any level of interaction, through all kind of relationships between genders.


Humans have become just simple “clients” of their own creations, people convincing people, showing and selling ideas and behavior patterns, types of life intoxicated by information and advertisement, through movies, magazines, and mass media, a repetition over repetition.

Institutions, religion, politics, nothing is new or different just continuing again and again in the same loop, ending in a merely entropy that leads to an aftermath of contradictions.
Mike Petrakis confront and make us reach out in to a new level of consciousness bringing this true in front of us with his art.

-The inundation of ‘lifestyle’

-People’s collision with themselves (he/she) and with the others

-Our escape from the nature

-People’s collision with technology evolution



“My art is inspired by a wide range of images and notions, from objects to words – coming from the massive world pop – mass cultures of previous and contemporary times. The modern world is illustrated more emphatically, the basic principles of consumerism, politics, lifestyle and of course personal experience.
According to my artistic beliefs, Art ought to be active and innovative, without a trace of repeated, static patterns. Art ought to be revolutionary, inspiring, awakening, urging people to follow it.“



Mike Petrakis powerful and unique visual language and innovative art – philosophy recharge any particular semiology and conveys in a smart and useful message by playing with ironic dispositions and configurations of reality elements and factors.
Bringing to the spectator a rich variety of artworks affected by the nowdays culture and ending in a contemporary diachronic value and focusing mainly on the concerns of all people worldwide.

After his many shows in Greece and world wide publications like Dazed & Confused magazine, and also his artwork Pop Corn put as a giant poster in the streets of New York and San Francisco, now the artist bring to M55 Art Gallery a more complete and deep picture of his work and art-philosophy.



“I believe that art, the last years is ‘asleep’ not taking a position in any of all our matters and must not decorate only your walls or your spaces, but your mind and soul as well…”

© Mike Petrakis 2011



“Duo Vision” Recent work by Alfred Martinez and Glenn Reed

November 30 - December 17 2011
Opening Reception: Saturday, December 3 6-8pm 2011

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present

“Duo Vision”

Recent work by Alfred Martinez and Glenn Reed

November 30- December 17 2011

Opening Reception: Saturday December 3 6-8pm

The art pieces for the “Duo Visions” exhibition uses the same process to achieve the art content as was used for the preceding “Digital Pilgrim” exhibition. Ideas formulated for those works involved telling visual stories through the media of painting and collage. The initial idea involved hiking the ancient 500-mile pilgrims’ route through northern Spain. I did just that, and worked daily photographing my encounters of people, locations, and the most intriguing Romanesque churches.

One challenge for me through the type of visual language I create is to make my work interesting. Aiming to be effective visually is the work of an artist, and it contributes I think towards conveying whatever one needs to say in art, clearly, precisely and even dramatically. I have been working multimedia for years by employing objects, photographs and audio in my paintings. Selecting to create in the collage format process has been revealing and exciting at the same time. Collage by its nature of process, allows materials and objects to come together and create new and unusual stories. A final challenge in this work was to create visual stories of the present about Romanesque art and places from the past.

In this exhibit I use collage with embedded digital frames to display multiple pictures in combination with laminated photographs. Max Ernst of the surrealist movement enjoyed selecting different types of printed images from magazines in order to use in his picture making process. I like to combine photographs with drawing, painting, impasto and even audio. The painted surfaces for these works are actually minimal. For this exhibit I work on a flat vinyl surface, adhering fragmented photographs and a digital frame into a composition of varying symbols. The pieces in this exhibit are individual 24” inch wide vertical units over 6’ feet in height draping to the floor from stainless steel towel racks. An important element for the pieces in this show is the grafting of consumer slide digital frames into my compositions. The digital frame is the contemporary reading magazine of today. Because one can look at different pictures singularly, grouped, and even stimulate movement as if turning pages; actually one is editing mixed information. The digital frame for the works in this exhibit add a three dimensional effect to the surface images. The flower shaped images I use give intense color to the compositions. The flowers also appear in detail on the digital frame screen adding information to the art’s content. Most of flower images I use are the result of photographs taken from the garden of Lorraine Messier, my wife. The digital frames provide music to help create the space presence of individual art piece.

This exhibit has been an opportunity to present work from specifically studying Romanesque relief sculpture. I walked for 15 days the pélerines’ le chemin route from Vézelay to Moissac France. It was a highly intense excursion that has led to the creation for the works in the Duo Visions exhibit. This work I hope invites the viewer to look at visual stories the way Romanesque Art was once looked at.

Alfred Martinez

Inspired by the beauty and symmetry in the shapes and ideas from cosmology, particle and astronomical physics, Glenn Reed’s hope is that his art is to some extent able to mimic that beauty and symmetry. The works are elegant, light, and balanced.
In general Glenn Reed’s work juxtaposes heaviness and lightness in the materials that are used. Pieces may be made from heavy raw materials such as concrete, cast iron, pipe, braided cable and chain, but also in the same works they may contain light, delicate and translucent materials such as thin wire, paper and Plexiglas. The heavy materials relate to the physical here and now, and the light materials imply cognitive energy. Some of the works are also physically heavy, yet are presented as very delicate and balanced. He uses spirals, springs and coils not only because of their metaphysical relation to infinity, but also because of the stored energy they possess.
Ideas and drawings for a work derive from contradictory interpretations of experiential knowledge of physical reality, including contemporary scientific models. For example, a favorite is a Zeno-like paradox: How can two perfect circles actually touch each other if they are continually turning in toward each other? No matter how close you zoom in on the two arced lines, they will continue to approach, but never converge. This prompts a further question: How could any two things touch?
Another important sculptural element in Glenn Reed’s work is tension or reserved force. The stored energy becomes a pictorial element that can be read or sensed by the viewer. It is another physical element along with physical form, gravity, light and empty space
Some of the wall pieces hang away from the wall and are sometimes perpendicular rather than flat against the wall, implying a sort of 21⁄2 dimensionality.

© Glenn Reed 2011



“Framework.” An Urban Studio/Art Collective collaboration.

November 9 - November 26 2011
Opening Reception: Thursday November 10, 2011 6-9pm

M55 is pleased to announce the upcoming exhibition “Framework.” An Urban Studio/Art Collective collaboration.

This exhibition seeks to explore alternative methods of portraiture, with a focus on the artist’s perceptions of their subject. Rather than limiting the work to traditional portraiture where the subject sits for the artist, participants were asked to investigate and highlight the unconventional approach.

In addition to creating a portrait, each artist was asked to create a “frame” that serves as an extension of the portrait itself, using materials that they associate with their subject. This component speaks to the concept of one’s psychological “framework” as seen thru the artist’s eye. Artists in this exhibition combine figurative, abstract, and mixed media elements to create the variety of portraits seen in this show.

Selected Artists: Greta Liz Anderson, Katrina Avino-Barracato, Mollie Bassett, Christa Brunks, Valentina Burzanovic, Pansum Cheng, Dimitri Dimizas, Crystal Fong, Kathleen Granados, Erica Geralds, Eric Gottshall , Faheem Haider, Young Eun Han, Cassandra Holden, Olga Kuznetsov, Christophe Lima, Victor Merriam, Yukiko Nakamura, Raisa Nosova, Lydia Pfeffer, Cristina Razzano, Emily Robinson, Regina Ruff, Julia Sinelnikova, Melissa Starke, Sarah Veloso, Lesley Wamsley & Hannah Wimpfheimer

Please join us on Thursday November 10th from 6-9pm for an opening reception. Exhibition will be on view through Sat November 26th 2011.



“ROCK ‘EM, SOCK ‘EM” Recent work by Carolyn Oberst

October 15 - November 5 2011
Opening Reception:

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to present:

“ROCK ‘EM, SOCK ‘EM”

Recent work by Carolyn Oberst

Opening Reception: Thursday, October 20, 6-8pm

October 19 – November 5 2011

The following paintings are all oil on gesso paper. I see them as both possible studies for larger wood pieces and also as paintings that stand on their own.

While the wood relief paintings are very labor intensive, requiring the painting of many small pieces on all sides, long hours of standing in front of a large (and scary) band saw, and assistance in screwing the work together, working with paper requires only a few different scissors and I can put the paintings together myself, with glue.

This additional way of working is allowing me to develop ideas more quickly, and still have the option of creating them as large-scale works. Even though they are not in bold relief, I feel these smaller collaged pieces convey the same message as the larger wood paintings.

Artist’s Statement Carolyn Oberst

Like the early Surrealists, I have been using images of toys to create an emotional impact. My new wood relief paintings, featuring bright colors and lively shapes employ a labor intensive and intricate wood relief technique. After cutting the wood shapes, each piece is painted separately with oil paint and then screwed onto a painted wood panel from behind.

This imagery and way of working allows me to make a comment on the tumultuous state of our contemporary life. The vintage toys refer to the fact that childhood, and, by implication, adult life as well, isn’t what it used to be. The days of growing up slowly have been supplanted by an overly busy lifestyle, more bombarded with input than ever before.

On the other hand, the complications, juxtapositions and multi-tasking we all experience, can be fun and interesting. Though challenging, our modern lives reflect a new, exciting cultural expansion. The colorful oil on wood relief and animated quality of these paintings captures the upbeat side of our new order. In this way I’m depicting both the positive and negative sides of this aspect of comtempoary life and expressing the contradictory state of our existence.



"People, Places, Flowers" New Work by Joyce Silver

September 28 - October 15 2011
Opening Reception: Saturday, October 1 2011

M55 ART 44-02 23rd Street Long Island City NY 11101
is pleased to presents:

People, Places, Flowers

New Work by Joyce Silver

September 28- October 15 2011

Opening Reception Saturday October 1 5-7pm

Artist Statement

I love working with collage because it gives me the freedom to cut up
work I’m not satisfied with
and reuse it in a new and unexpected way. The surprise delights me.
The human figure has been a
subject for artists for millennia. The drawings from models in this
show are examples of the pleasure
I get from this process of collage. From the ashes springs a renewal.

The solarplate etchings are a variation of my way of experiencing
making art. Usually etchings are
used as a way of reproducing the same image many times (a run) – often
up to 100 times. But, again,
I like the surprise of making each one different through change of
color, adding collage (Chincole), etc.
Both the daffodils and the beach scenes came as a response to the
exceptionally cold winter we had
this year. The first signs of the daffodils pushing up, sometimes
through snow, again signaled the promise
of renewal. And, a week’s escape to the Caribbean reaffirmed the
possibility of a lush fecundity that
invited a slow relaxation of body and mind.



EXPERIENCE Curated by Assa Bigger & Marcin Wlodarczyk

September 7 - September 24 2011
Opening Reception: TBA

M55 Art in Association With The Wrong Gallery is please to Present:

EXPERIENCE

Curated by Assa Bigger & Marcin Wlodarczyk

September 7 – September 24 2011

Experience is an exhibition in progress, where the curators treat the gallery as a canvas, creating a social place and shared environment where a vast range of people from all corners of life express themselves in their own unique way. The curators invite the participants only through a physical and personal meeting to join and create a 24 hr experience in the gallery. The meetings can be planned or random and accidental.

During the show, the gallery will transform itself into 24 hr time frame exhibitions.
Each day a different happening or event will take place at the gallery, the theme revolves around social aspects of The Practice of Everyday Life.

The exhibition would examines the ways in which people individualize mass culture, altering things, from utilitarian objects to street plans to rituals, laws and language, in order to make them their own.

Experience will be documented on a daily basis by the gallery staff; there will also be a site-specific photo installation by photographer Inbal Abergil, which will progress through the duration of the show.

The exhibition will open on Thursday September 7th with a site-specific installation by Olivia Kim, titled Travel To Your Unconscious Zone.

The last day of the show, Saturday September 24th, will conclude Experience with all participants presenting their work both virtually and physically in a festival of art, food and music.
For more information abouts special presentations, happenings and events contact:
Juan Gabriel Zorrilla Director M55 Art Gallery at info@m55art.org

Experience
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
For other uses, see Experience (disambiguation).
Experience as a general concept comprises knowledge of or skill in or observation of some thing or some event gained through involvement in or exposure to that thing or event. The history of the word experience aligns it closely with the concept of experiment.
The concept of experience generally refers to know-how or procedural knowledge, rather than propositional knowledge: on-the-job training rather than book-learning. Philosophers dub knowledge based on experience “empirical knowledge” or “a posteriori knowledge”.
The interrogation of experience has a long tradition in continental philosophy. Experience plays an important role in the philosophy of Søren Kierkegaard. The German term Erfahrung, often translated into English as “experience”, has a slightly different implication, connoting the coherency of life’s experiences.
A person with considerable experience in a certain field can gain a reputation as an expert.
Certain religious traditions (such as types of Buddhism, Surat Shabd Yoga, mysticism and Pentecostalism) and educational paradigms with, for example, the conditioning of military recruit-training (also known as “boot camps”), stress the experiential nature of human epistemology. This stands in contrast to alternatives: traditions of dogma, logic or reasoning. Participants in activities such as tourism, extreme sports and recreational drug-use also tend to stress the importance of experience.



Travel To Your Unconscious Zone

August 31 - September 3 2011
Opening Reception: Thursday September 1 6-8pm 2011

M55 ART in collaboration with The Wrong Gallery and the assistant of Bigger Design Studio is please to presents:

Travel To Your Unconscious Zone

A site – specific installation by Olivia Kim

August 31 – September 3 2011

Opening Reception: Thursday, September 1, 6-8pm

Artist Statement

“I have always questioned why people try to think in the defined, safe way. Why people say this is right and that is wrong? To find an ideal answer of my life which can support me forever while living in the world I kept thinking about in my teenage. But when I found that the answer is nowhere I experienced the feeling like I was disappearing. After the experience I got very interested in human mind, the infinity of human mind.
I do not pursuit just beautiful part of my work. It is more dark and ugly. So I like to work with unconscious of our mind. Sometimes they are disgusting but it is part of us. I rather confront it than convert it in the beautiful way. I do not like to say about where I got the ideas because it is very hard to deliver into visual, textual, and linguistic way. The ideas are not influenced outside world, it is from a mixture of different form of emotions. I always travel here and there in my mind. During the travel images, melodies, and motions flow into me, it does not care whether I want or not. I do not carry the idea books or sketch books with me. The ideas are dissolved deeply in me.
Since I stopped studying music in school I became totally free with the way to express ideas. I use any way which I think better fit with the ideas each time I start to carry on my new work. I do want to be defined as one sort of artist. I play piano, dance, do installation art, and paint. I just choose the way when I think it is needed.”

Olivia Kim, August 2011.



In the place we live A group exhibition A group exhibition of LIC artists Curated by Carolina Penafiel & Assa Bigger

July 21 - August 28 2011
Opening Reception: July 21 6-9pm 2011

M55 Art in Association With The Wrong Gallery
and the assistant of Queens Council on the Arts
are please to Present:

In the place we live

A group exhibition of LIC artists Curated by
Carolina Penafiel & Assa Bigger
July 21 – August 28 2011

Opening Reception Thursday July 21 6-9pm

From the time of the Internet, the idea of community has evolved to a different meaning of the original word, but there is still a need to bring back or maintain the sense of community where people engage in human interaction.
In this show we invite artist to explore with their own creative process the meaning of community, whether is working together or alone, using technology or not, the artist is invited to experiment with the original
meaning of community and engage the public to reflect on their own.
The exhibition will celebrate and capture the talent, creativity and spirit of LIC artists in a show that explores the significance of collaboration, social interaction and the sense of community. The exhibition
will showcase the diversity of all visual arts media (2D, 3D, Video/Installation and performance artists).
There are 3 venues for the exhibition. The main gallery space will be M55 Art gallery located at the Long Island City Art Center at 44-02 23rd Street.
We were fortunate to have the Henry DeFord III Gallery located at the CitiBank building One Court Square as a satellite project gallery for the exhibition.
The third exhibition space is The Secret Theatre Gallery located at the entrance lobby of the theatre.

Participated artists
Adam Handler, Adele Shtern, Amy Geller, Ana Sanchez, Anna Hernandez, Annalisa Iadicicco, Bertille De Baudiniere, Bonnie Rothchild, Braden Ruddy, Brittany Emerson, Cari Clare, Carla Cubit, Carol Crawford, Cristian Pietrapiana, Deborah Sherman, Dustin Klare, Edward Yujoong Kim, Eliot Lable, Elizabeth Larison, Ellen Mandelbaum, Eunnye Yang, Florina Sbircea, Ged Merino, Jay Yoon Kim, Jean-Marie Guyaux, Jesse Winter, Juan Gabriel Zorrilla, julie Williams, Karen Fitzgerald, Kristina Nazarevskaia, Lauren Koch, Lauren Nickou, Lexi Namer, Lilian R Engel, Mark Masyga, Mary Pinto, matti havens, Mihai Stancescu, Orestes Gonzalez, Paul Lambermont, Peter Rosenthal, Pho