This Saturday at Observatory we will he hosting the opening party for Lunation, our first group-curated show. Admission is free, and the art will be intriguingly wide-ranging. I have a few pieces in the show, as do many other familiar faces.
Full details follow; hope very much to see you there!
You can find out more about Observatory--including directions--by clicking here.LUNATION
Art on the Moon
Observatory's first group-curated show • January 7 – February 26, 2012Opening Party: This Saturday, January 7th, 7–10 PM, FREE
Closing Party/Observatory's 3rd Anniversary Fundraiser: Saturday, February 18th, 8 PM/$20
Show Viewing Hours: Thursday & Friday 3–6 PM, Saturday & Sunday 12–6 PMArtists and scientists have always been attracted to the moon...
Our closest celestial neighbor, the earth’s little sister, the moon creates the tides and illuminates the woods at night. For centuries, humanity believed the moon provided a key into the invisible realm: it called out the beast within us, freeing us to act as wolves, to run, to dance, to chant—and sometimes (as in Duncan Jones’ Moon) to split in two, to find our double, our changeling moon-self.Is the moon home to life? Today we know it isn’t, but even as of 1830, speculation was rampant that the moon was inhabited by Christianized bat-people who worshiped in great ziggurats. (See The Sun and the Moon by Observatory alumnus Matthew Goodman for details.) Still, life comes to the moon. We know the moon contains frozen water, and we dream of using it as our jumping-off point for visiting even more alien vistas.
Down here, despite all the prowess and nuance of our latest telescopes, earthlings still look up naked-eyed with excitement at the full moon. Lovers and children gaze up at its slowly blinking façade in mute wonder. Artists portray the moon as a source of danger and power, and latter-day sorceresses and men of magic call up to that heavenly lamp, seeking to transcend the ordinary night. For them, the old myths have not changed so much: the moon is still a secret mirror, showing in pale light how the familiar contains always an element of the unexpected...
Artists Included
- Grace Baxter
- Jesse Bransford
- Susan Crawford
- Noah Doely
- Joanna Ebenstein
- Theo Ellsworth
- Michelle Enemark
- Ted Enik
- Jesse Gelaznik
- Ethan Gould
- Dr. Gary Greenberg
- Pam Grossman
- Maria Liebana
- Gerald Marks
- Chad Merritt
- Heidi Neilson
- G.F. Newland
- Rebeca Olguín
- Herbert Pfostl
- Kathryn Pierce
- Lado Pochkhua
- Dylan Thuras
- James Walsh
- Julianne Zaleta
LUNATION Dates to Save:
- Sat., Jan. 7 – LUNATION opening! Come drink wine with us and celebrate the many phases/faces of the moon—including ones you've never seen before
- Sat., Jan. 22 – Moon Magick ritual workshop presented by Pam Grossman of Phantasmaphile
- Friday, Feb. 17: The Moon and Its Closest Inhabitants: A 3D Slideshow with 3D Legend Gerald Marks
- Sat., Feb. 18 – 3rd Anniversary Observatory Fundraiser Party: Help support your favorite interdisciplinarian art, science, & occult event space!
1 comment:
That sounds terrific. I'm definitely going to try to make it there.
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