Next Kite, Next Weather
2014.05.16~2014.07.06
09:00 - 17:00
Venue: Gallery 402 When one focuses on visual representations of display and color, notions of reading these representations are simultaneously attended by attempts at their decryption. As an audience who encounters things that are fundamentally meant to be looked at, the specific relationship that we have with objects and our ability to decipher them comes into sharp focus. Next Kite, Next Weather encompasses drawing installation, painting and photography by Mark Geil and Chung-Fan Chang. In the exhibition, the messages extracted from displays encourage the viewer to interrogate what is real and who is the authority. The destiny and the purpose of these photographs, paintings and drawings are to be contemplated in so far as the information they convey and the broader implications they begin to reveal. Mark Geil’s work highlights visually and fundamentally how knowledge is conveyed through systems of museum display, using both historical precedent and contemporary practice. Through his photography, Geil seeks to visualize knowledge while Chang identifies the visual metaphor of color and its significance in society. Both bodies of work exhibit a unique internal logic. For Chang, this internal logic is the byproduct of the states of mindfulness of meditation that inhabit her artistic process. In Geil’s work, the stillness of the photograph and the stillness of the museum display become a
stillness doubled.” This synergy works to highlight both the knowledge these museum displays were meant to convey and the overarching machinery and politics of display. On the other hand, the fluorescent colors in Chang’s Kite series command the viewer’s attention and compel the audience to observe closely the saturated, luminous geometric shapes. The color is obsessive, disturbing yet demonstrates the authority to demand and attack the viewing experience. Chang’s neon color makes its demand yet the contrasting subdued hues of her landscapes yield another viewing experience. These other colors evoke one’s experience of looking at the same forest at different times of the day. These paintings fuse with the wall installation drawing in which the viewer is invited to an uncanny internal weather that runs through the constellation of marks. To the viewer, there is a particular direction and concentration in her mark making that somehow replicates the force of wind. These drawings have a sense of a band of wild horses running through them, kicking up a swirl of earth as they gallop across the wall. That weather is again organized and synchronized in Geil’s photography, in which the objects of collection and the tropes of display manifest phenomenal and complex information for the viewer to interpret. These collections and the mechanics of their display are the subject of an intense local curiosity. These museums are often specific to their region, much like the local weather is specific to a region. Geil’s photography depicts collections, dioramas, models and even buildings as displays which deliver a sometimes uncomfortable and visually challenging navigational experience for the viewer. Likewise, the neon color fields in Chang’s abstract landscapes serve as intruders to the surrounding. Intruders that cross-examine how fluorescent and artificial colors affect our vision and how that effect can be a signifier of conflict in society. As Geil identifies visual mysteries, Chang creates puzzles for the viewer through painting and drawing, which disclose the underling harmonies of this exhibition. This orchestration of tacit violence is organized the same way the wind is organized with its gusts, swirls or downdrafts. Chang’s drawing installation appears to be disordered when viewed closely but becomes beautifully organized when viewed at a distance. Her drawing and painting assemble historical concerns, social signifiers and meditative practice all into a singular voice. Geil’s photographs investigate the institutional organization of knowledge, the locality of American History and the anatomy of display. Ultimately Mark Geil and Chung-Fan Chang both propose questions and offer hope for the viewers to contemplate the weather of color, the wind in the drawings, the clouds in the drawings, the rain in the drawings, and the singular curiosity of photography.
Venue: Gallery 402 When one focuses on visual representations of display and color, notions of reading these representations are simultaneously attended by attempts at their decryption. As an audience who encounters things that are fundamentally meant to be looked at, the specific relationship that we have with objects and our ability to decipher them comes into sharp focus. Next Kite, Next Weather encompasses drawing installation, painting and photography by Mark Geil and Chung-Fan Chang. In the exhibition, the messages extracted from displays encourage the viewer to interrogate what is real and who is the authority. The destiny and the purpose of these photographs, paintings and drawings are to be contemplated in so far as the information they convey and the broader implications they begin to reveal. Mark Geil’s work highlights visually and fundamentally how knowledge is conveyed through systems of museum display, using both historical precedent and contemporary practice. Through his photography, Geil seeks to visualize knowledge while Chang identifies the visual metaphor of color and its significance in society. Both bodies of work exhibit a unique internal logic. For Chang, this internal logic is the byproduct of the states of mindfulness of meditation that inhabit her artistic process. In Geil’s work, the stillness of the photograph and the stillness of the museum display become a
stillness doubled.” This synergy works to highlight both the knowledge these museum displays were meant to convey and the overarching machinery and politics of display. On the other hand, the fluorescent colors in Chang’s Kite series command the viewer’s attention and compel the audience to observe closely the saturated, luminous geometric shapes. The color is obsessive, disturbing yet demonstrates the authority to demand and attack the viewing experience. Chang’s neon color makes its demand yet the contrasting subdued hues of her landscapes yield another viewing experience. These other colors evoke one’s experience of looking at the same forest at different times of the day. These paintings fuse with the wall installation drawing in which the viewer is invited to an uncanny internal weather that runs through the constellation of marks. To the viewer, there is a particular direction and concentration in her mark making that somehow replicates the force of wind. These drawings have a sense of a band of wild horses running through them, kicking up a swirl of earth as they gallop across the wall. That weather is again organized and synchronized in Geil’s photography, in which the objects of collection and the tropes of display manifest phenomenal and complex information for the viewer to interpret. These collections and the mechanics of their display are the subject of an intense local curiosity. These museums are often specific to their region, much like the local weather is specific to a region. Geil’s photography depicts collections, dioramas, models and even buildings as displays which deliver a sometimes uncomfortable and visually challenging navigational experience for the viewer. Likewise, the neon color fields in Chang’s abstract landscapes serve as intruders to the surrounding. Intruders that cross-examine how fluorescent and artificial colors affect our vision and how that effect can be a signifier of conflict in society. As Geil identifies visual mysteries, Chang creates puzzles for the viewer through painting and drawing, which disclose the underling harmonies of this exhibition. This orchestration of tacit violence is organized the same way the wind is organized with its gusts, swirls or downdrafts. Chang’s drawing installation appears to be disordered when viewed closely but becomes beautifully organized when viewed at a distance. Her drawing and painting assemble historical concerns, social signifiers and meditative practice all into a singular voice. Geil’s photographs investigate the institutional organization of knowledge, the locality of American History and the anatomy of display. Ultimately Mark Geil and Chung-Fan Chang both propose questions and offer hope for the viewers to contemplate the weather of color, the wind in the drawings, the clouds in the drawings, the rain in the drawings, and the singular curiosity of photography.
Mark Geil Born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Mark Geil received his BA from The Evergreen State College and an MFA in Photography from the University of New Mexico. He has exhibited his work at galleries and museums across the United State. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Art at Jackson State University in Jackson, Mississippi. EDUCATION 2009 MFA, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM Photography 2001 BA, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA Liberal Arts with an emphasis in Photography TEACHING EXPERIENCE 2010-Now Assistant Professor of Art, Jackson State University, Jackson, MS 2007-2009 Instructor of Record, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 2004-2006 Extended Education Photography Instructor, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA EXHIBITIONS 2014 Natural World, The Center for Fine Art Photography, Fort Collins, CO, Juror: Susan Spiritus PhotoSpiva 2014, Spiva Center for the Arts, Joplin, MO, Juror: Dornith Doherty Who We Aren’t: National Juried Exhibit, Union Street Gallery, Chicago Heights, IL, Jurors: Paul Klein and Patrick Earl Hammie 2013 Jackson State University Faculty Show, Mississippi Center for the Arts, Jackson, MS 2012 WinterTide, The Fine Art Center of Hot Springs, Hot Springs, AR SPESC Member’s Exhibition, Visual Arts Center, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS Coup d’Espace: Palimpsest, Washington Project for the Arts, Washington, DC, Curators: Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones The Surrealist Influence on Contemporary Photography, The Hideout Theatre, Austin, TX Mississippi Art Faculty Juried Exhibition, The Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, Laurel, MS, Juror: Miranda Lash Right Here Over There, Lexington Art League, Lexington, KY, Juror: Becky Alley
Mark Geil Born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Mark Geil received his BA from The Evergreen State College and an MFA in Photography from the University of New Mexico. He has exhibited his work at galleries and museums across the United State. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Art at Jackson State University in Jackson, Mississippi. EDUCATION 2009 MFA, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM Photography 2001 BA, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA Liberal Arts with an emphasis in Photography TEACHING EXPERIENCE 2010-Now Assistant Professor of Art, Jackson State University, Jackson, MS 2007-2009 Instructor of Record, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 2004-2006 Extended Education Photography Instructor, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA EXHIBITIONS 2014 Natural World, The Center for Fine Art Photography, Fort Collins, CO, Juror: Susan Spiritus PhotoSpiva 2014, Spiva Center for the Arts, Joplin, MO, Juror: Dornith Doherty Who We Aren’t: National Juried Exhibit, Union Street Gallery, Chicago Heights, IL, Jurors: Paul Klein and Patrick Earl Hammie 2013 Jackson State University Faculty Show, Mississippi Center for the Arts, Jackson, MS 2012 WinterTide, The Fine Art Center of Hot Springs, Hot Springs, AR SPESC Member’s Exhibition, Visual Arts Center, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS Coup d’Espace: Palimpsest, Washington Project for the Arts, Washington, DC, Curators: Steven H. Silberg and Neil C. Jones The Surrealist Influence on Contemporary Photography, The Hideout Theatre, Austin, TX Mississippi Art Faculty Juried Exhibition, The Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, Laurel, MS, Juror: Miranda Lash Right Here Over There, Lexington Art League, Lexington, KY, Juror: Becky Alley
Chung-Fan Chang chungfanchang@gmail.com
chungfanchang.com Born in Taipei, Taiwan, Chung-Fan Chang received her BFA from the Taipei National University of the Arts and an MFA from Savannah College of art and Design. Chang explores and investigates in painting, works on paper and installation to communicate her vision of beauty that reflect issues within the society and daily life experience. Her Kite series presents the fusion of traditional Chinese landscape composition with geometric plans to address disharmony and conflict viewing experience. Chang is currently an Assistant Professor of Art at Jackson State University in Jackson, Mississippi. Chang lives and works in Taiwan and the United States. Education: 2010 MFA, Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD), Atlanta, GA 2007 BFA, Taipei National University of the Arts, Taipei, Taiwan Solo Exhibition: 2014 Kite: The Act of Drawing, Gallery 130, The University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS
2013 Kite: Reborn, Miller Art Gallery, Meridian Community College, Meridian, MS 2012 Kite: Suspended | A Drawing Installation, Arts Center of Mississippi, Jackson, MS 2011 Kite | A Drawing Installation, Arts Center of Mississippi, Jackson, MS 2010 Kite, Dewberry Gallery of SCAD, Atlanta, GA
2009 Visiting Artist Series, Lamar Dodd School of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, GA Selected Group Exhibitions: 2014 Live Amateurs, MINT Gallery, Atlanta, GA Visual Artists Fellowship Exhibition, Mississippi Arts Commission, Jackson, MS 2013 SECAC Juried Exhibition, Gatewood Gallery, Greensboro, NC Horizon Realm: Taiwan Contemporary Art, Tenri Cultural Institute, New York, NY Kite: Relocated, Liudong Gallery, Xizhi, Taiwan
6x6x2013, Rochester Contemporary Art Center, Rochester, NY FATE Biennial Exhibition, Alexander Hall Gallery, Savannah, GA 2012 Jackson State University Faculty Exhibition, Jonson Hall Gallery, Jackson, MS Delta Rising, Ellis Theater Gallery, Cleveland, MS MACAA Juried Exhibition, Elaine L. Jacob Gallery, Detroit, MI Remembering, Attleboro Arts Museum, Attleboro, MA
Mississippi Art Faculty Juried Exhibition, Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, Laurel, MS
Jackson Public Art Commission, Jackson, MS 2011 Encore 2011, ACA Gallery & Pei Ling Chan Gallery, Atlanta & Savannah, GA Emerging Artist Award, Swan Coach House Gallery, Atlanta, GA Spectrum, Gutstein Gallery, Savannah, GA Art In Mind, the Brick Lane Gallery, London, UK Drawing Connections, City Gallery Chastain, Atlanta, GA Movers & Shakers, The Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia, Atlanta, GA
2010 Permanent Collection, SCAD, Hong Kong, China QUADRENNIAL: Greater Decatur (QGD 2010), Dalton Gallery, Decatur, GA Awards/ Honors: 2013 Visual Arts Fellowship, Mississippi Arts Commission, Jackson, MS 2012 Best of Show, Mississippi Art Faculty Juried Exhibition, Lauren Rogers Museum of Art,
Laurel, MS 2011 Encore Award, Savannah College of Art and Design, Atlanta, GA 2010 Finalist, The 2011 Forward Arts Foundation Emerging Artist Award, Atlanta, GA
Chung-Fan Chang chungfanchang@gmail.com
chungfanchang.com Born in Taipei, Taiwan, Chung-Fan Chang received her BFA from the Taipei National University of the Arts and an MFA from Savannah College of art and Design. Chang explores and investigates in painting, works on paper and installation to communicate her vision of beauty that reflect issues within the society and daily life experience. Her Kite series presents the fusion of traditional Chinese landscape composition with geometric plans to address disharmony and conflict viewing experience. Chang is currently an Assistant Professor of Art at Jackson State University in Jackson, Mississippi. Chang lives and works in Taiwan and the United States. Education: 2010 MFA, Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD), Atlanta, GA 2007 BFA, Taipei National University of the Arts, Taipei, Taiwan Solo Exhibition: 2014 Kite: The Act of Drawing, Gallery 130, The University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS
2013 Kite: Reborn, Miller Art Gallery, Meridian Community College, Meridian, MS 2012 Kite: Suspended | A Drawing Installation, Arts Center of Mississippi, Jackson, MS 2011 Kite | A Drawing Installation, Arts Center of Mississippi, Jackson, MS 2010 Kite, Dewberry Gallery of SCAD, Atlanta, GA
2009 Visiting Artist Series, Lamar Dodd School of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, GA Selected Group Exhibitions: 2014 Live Amateurs, MINT Gallery, Atlanta, GA Visual Artists Fellowship Exhibition, Mississippi Arts Commission, Jackson, MS 2013 SECAC Juried Exhibition, Gatewood Gallery, Greensboro, NC Horizon Realm: Taiwan Contemporary Art, Tenri Cultural Institute, New York, NY Kite: Relocated, Liudong Gallery, Xizhi, Taiwan
6x6x2013, Rochester Contemporary Art Center, Rochester, NY FATE Biennial Exhibition, Alexander Hall Gallery, Savannah, GA 2012 Jackson State University Faculty Exhibition, Jonson Hall Gallery, Jackson, MS Delta Rising, Ellis Theater Gallery, Cleveland, MS MACAA Juried Exhibition, Elaine L. Jacob Gallery, Detroit, MI Remembering, Attleboro Arts Museum, Attleboro, MA
Mississippi Art Faculty Juried Exhibition, Lauren Rogers Museum of Art, Laurel, MS
Jackson Public Art Commission, Jackson, MS 2011 Encore 2011, ACA Gallery & Pei Ling Chan Gallery, Atlanta & Savannah, GA Emerging Artist Award, Swan Coach House Gallery, Atlanta, GA Spectrum, Gutstein Gallery, Savannah, GA Art In Mind, the Brick Lane Gallery, London, UK Drawing Connections, City Gallery Chastain, Atlanta, GA Movers & Shakers, The Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia, Atlanta, GA
2010 Permanent Collection, SCAD, Hong Kong, China QUADRENNIAL: Greater Decatur (QGD 2010), Dalton Gallery, Decatur, GA Awards/ Honors: 2013 Visual Arts Fellowship, Mississippi Arts Commission, Jackson, MS 2012 Best of Show, Mississippi Art Faculty Juried Exhibition, Lauren Rogers Museum of Art,
Laurel, MS 2011 Encore Award, Savannah College of Art and Design, Atlanta, GA 2010 Finalist, The 2011 Forward Arts Foundation Emerging Artist Award, Atlanta, GA
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