James Renwick Alliance Distinguished Artist: Chris Antemann

Chris Antemann, Covet, 2013

Chris Antemann, Covet, 2013

American ceramicist Chris Antemann was invited by the James Renwick Alliance (JRA) to be featured as part of the 2018 Distinguished Artist Series.  Join the JRA on March 10 & 11 for a lecture and workshop by Oregon-based sculptor Chris Antemann and find out more about her sexy and beautiful scenes in ceramics that depict the kind of parties that sadly, I’ll never be invited to. JRA.chris-antemann.renwick.katzen

 

 

Chris Antemann’s  figurative pieces offer a fascinating telescoping narrative — stories within stories, contemporary commentary layered onto 18th century pieces in traditional forms. Her collaboration with Meissen, the German porcelain factory, has produced a body of work with rich insight into our own culture, a vehicle for the artist’s “twisted tales” about domestic rites, social etiquette and taboos.

Artist Workshop:
Saturday, March 10  |  9:30am – 12:00pm
White Point Studio  |  3708 Wells Avenue, Mt. Rainer, MD
$50 members  |  $60 non members
$175 for all 4 workshops, members only

Chris Antemann will discuss her ceramic figures and her work with Meissen. The morning begins with a brief meet-and-greet with the artist over coffee and pastries. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to attend a potluck dinner with the artist on Saturday evening. Space may be limited.

Click HERE to jump to JRA online registration for the event.

Free Lecture:
Sunday, March 11  | 2pm – 3pm
American University Katzen Arts Center  |  4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC

Silvia Levenson @ Katzen Arts Center

Silvia Levenson @ American University Museum

Silvia Levenson “She Flew Away” cast glass, steel wire

Artist Silvia Levenson believes her work is an expression of her soul. She uses glass not for its natural beauty, but for its potential as a narrative medium. In her exhibition Identidad, (January 24 – March 15, 2015 at the American University Museum in the Katzen Arts Center), Ms Levenson channels her identity as a survivor of the Argentinian Dirty War and her emotional connection to the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo in order to push the bounds of her skills as a glassmaker and produce refined glass work. 

Silvia Levenson was born in Buenos Aires, the capital and largest city of Argentina. She and her family went into hiding for almost three years as political activists opposing the military dictatorship of General Jorge Rafaél Videla. In 1981, during the disappearances of the so-called Dirty War in Argentina, they fled the country and immigrated to Italy, where they eventually attained dual Argentine-Italian citizenship. Between 1976 and 1983, the Argentine military dictatorship kidnapped, tortured, and killed about 30,000 people known as “los desaparecidos” or “the disappeared.” Thirty percent of those kidnapped were young women, many with children by their side or in their womb. These children were later stripped of their identity and given up for adoption. 

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Levenson studied at the Martin Garcia School of Graphic Design in Buenos Aires. She acquired glass-making skills at the Musée-Atelier du Verre (Sars-Poteries/FR) at workshops with Antoine Leperlier (pâte-de-verre, 1991) and Vincent van Ginneke (casting, 1994). Silvia Levenson lives in Lesa/Italy and Buenos Aires. In 2004, Levenson received the Rakow Commission Award from the Corning Museum of Glass in New York.

The American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center presents a lecture titled “The Strange World of Silvia Levenson” featuring Washington Glass School Directors Tim Tate and Michael Janis to be held on Thursday, January 29, 2015, 6:00-7:00 pm at the Katzen Arts Center. 

RSVP by Jan 22, 2015 to museummembership@american.edu 

Identitdad by Silvia Levenson

January 24 through March 15, 2015

Katzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20016

Intowner Reviews Tate’s Sleepwalker @ American University Museum

The July issue of The InTowner features review by Tony Harvey

The InTowner 

Review of Tim Tate / Pete Duvall / Richard Schellenberg collaborative exhibition at American University Museum Pg 8, July, 2013

by Anthony Harvey

Washington’s studio glass art star Tim Tate continues to astonish museum goers with the quality and beauty of his innovative and increasingly complex glass art. Tate is now adding another level of challenge to his work through his recent collaborations with video and conceptual artists and photographers Pete Duvall and Richard Schellenberg. The rich results of this collaboration are on display in a current exhibition at the Katzen Arts Center.

Entitled “TimTate: Sleepwalker,” the show opens with Tate’s knockout 2012 Dada’s (or the Astronaut’s) Dream , a bouquet of electronic, video facial body-part flowers — primarily two inquiring eyes — irregularly arranged on a small steel post. He then moves immediately into his collaborative works with Duval and Schellenberg.

First up is a triptych of images titled: “I Was Not In My Right Mind”, which presents three characters performing hypothetical pieces that reconstruct scenes from Carol Reed’s famous film noir melodrama, The Third Man. Set in allied occupied Vienna at the end of World War II, Tate and a second actor play the parts of Harry Lime (Orson Wells in the film) and Holly Martins (originally Joseph Cotton). The film’s romantic interest, Anna Schmidt, played by Alida Valli, is the mystery presence. Wells and Cotton as marionettes are cleverly portrayed in Tate’s triptych as a pair of song and dance men, both  performing with canes — a riff no doubt on the running through dark streets and underground sewers that both do in the original film — with Schmidt, who has lost her lover Lime through the action of Martins, serving as the character in the triptych who plays the role of silence.

Tate’s “rosebud” is a thrown white ball first bouncing from right to left in the third panel, which uses the iconic Ferris wheel image of the film’s Viennese amusement park for its background, then through the second panel with its concluding film sequence of Schmidt walking down a tree-lined alleé, and finally to the first of the three triptych panels with our song and dance pair of Martins and Lime, whose jerky, puppets-on-a-string body movements are hilarious. The second panel also operates independently of the first and third, with Tate (as Lime) holding and intently viewing a pocket watch, seeming to time Schmidt’s long walk — or perhaps concerned about the timing of their respective flights from war-torn Vienna. As puzzling as it is engaging!

Black and white stills of objects in the triptych (and there must be a black rotary dial telephone somewhere in the triptych background’s flowing narrative) together with a pair of video boxes containing works called Portal of Light and Portal of Darkness provide further supporting context to the marvelous title work of the show —Sleepwalker. 

Joseph Cornell immediately came to mind as I began absorbing the lush visuals of this work. Cornell, an influential early filmmaker as well as the creator of extraordinary aesthetically infused art boxes, once asserted that until we are able to record our dreams, motion picture film will have to suffice. Tate would add video and electronic to Cornell’s medium, and Sleepwalker is a mesmerizing example of what can be artistically accomplished with existing media. Comprising a large rectangular screen on which a video of an attractive young woman with a glorious head of flowing hair is shown shifting her head from side to side as she sleeps and no doubt dreams with the physicality of a sleepwalker. Flanking her video are six smaller, oval screens, three hanging on either of the two side walls, each of which seems to play across the room against its opposite number. The farthest two appear to deal with gender — a somewhat abstract frontal view of a female form; across the way is a rear view of a more realistically depicted male nude. The middle two posit an amusement park’s Ferris wheel — urban pleasure — against the innocence of a foliage covered suburban house while the closest pair juxtapose a hand that is writing and then erasing on a blackboard the words, “I see how far I’ve wandered” with a mouth that is softly speaking into a rotary dial telephone receiver. Equally soft orchestral music lulls one into a relaxed state, music with which to fall asleep and yet to dream!

Two other videos complete the collaborative portion of Tate’s photographic/performance/electronic show. The first is of a boy’s dream of flying on Superman’s shoulders until the boy falls dead on the floor and Superman discovers that it is the boy’s energy and drive that allows him to fly — and the subsequent consequences of the boy describing his dream to his mother. The second involves a young woman throwing dice — perhaps a play on Mallarme’s famous 19th century poem “A Throw of the Dice Never Will Abolish Chance”. In this video, the number of dice is eventually increased to that of a Niagara of falling dice — to apparently no avail.My last encounter in the show took me to Tate’s glass and mixed-media work, specifically to a viewing of two of his terrific glass reliquaries. Both dramatically advance Tate’s multi-media creativity by incorporating miniature TV monitors playing poignant video narratives as the centerpieces of each of the reliquaries’ glass enclosed found, cast, and sculpted objects. The first of these, Dreams of a Lost Love Found, is especially engaging, with its character of a nude, sleeping boy depicted with a second figure — an apparition — rising from his bed and walking into the background only to return to the boy in the bed as a nude woman.

For the full newspaper pdf article – click HERE starting Pg 8.

photo by Pete Duvall

Tim Tate: Sleepwalkercontinues through August 11th.

American University Museum/Katzen Center

4400 Mass. Ave.

Tue.-Sun., 11am-4pm; Mon., closed

202-885-1300 • www.american.edu/museum