Showing posts with label opening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label opening. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2013

Perfect Specimens: Photo Exhibition by Mark Kessell, Last Rites Gallery, NYC

I just found out about "Perfect Specimens," an interesting looking exhibition featuring work by one of our favorite Observatory presenters Mark Kessell. The opening reception is free and open to the public and will take place tomorrow night--August 17th--from 7-11 PM, at Last Rites Gallery in New York City; the exhibition will be on view through September 21st. Full details follow; all images ©Mark Kessell; more details below:
Perfect Specimen: Photos by Mark Kessell
August 17-September 21
Last Rites Gallery
Hours: Tues-Fri 2-9pm, Sat 2-9pm, Sun 2-6pm
Phone: 212.529.0666
Location: 511 W. 33rd Street, between 10th & 11th Avenues (3 blocks from Penn Station), 3rd floor, New York, NY 10001
Last Rites Gallery presents Perfect Specimens, a solo exhibition by New York photographer and artist Mark Kessell. For Kessell, art is truly a matter of life and death. Kessell, who trained as a physician, has spent the last two decades interrogating our existence through works that focus closely on the human life cycle, a universal yet intensely personal issue. Perfect Specimens explores the fundamental processes of human becoming and unbecoming, documenting what he describes as a species portrait, a map of our existence from the first stirring of life to the final phase of post-mortem decay.

These eleven works, images of the not-quite-born and the not-entirely-dead, drawn from a total of thirty-nine in the series, represent specific moments in the cycle. Initially created as daguerreotypes - a historical photographic process known as much for its potentially lethal toxicity as for its weirdly reflective surface - these works now appear as large-scale prints that allow viewers to delve deeply into both the subject and themselves.

Kessell poses a simple question: "When does being human begin and end?" As the fetuses and dying faces of Perfect Specimens illustrate, the answer is elusive. For many, the issues are moral and ethical, but this artist's approach is purely analytical.

Despite its capacity to provoke complex and sometimes disturbing emotions, Perfect Specimens is not intended to shock. Instead, its forthright depiction of the human life cycle allows space for personal reflection, an acute awareness of a shared experience. It is a chronicle of the finite nature of life.

At times, Kessell has shown us that horror, from a certain dark perspective, can be a form of entertainment - we see this, for example, in his movie-poster image for Eli Roth's Hostel - but Perfect Specimens offers no such escape. In this artist's uncomfortable perception, the human animal lives its life without drama and without significance. We come. We go. We leave barely a trace.

From our tenuous beginning to our irrevocable end, Mark Kessell's lyrical but clear-eyed gaze shows us the triumphs and horrors of being human. He brings grace and beauty to the complex questions of our existence.

Watch Mark Kessell's interview on YouTube here.

About the Artist
Originally trained as a medical doctor, Mark Kessell has been a professional photographer since graduating from the School of Visual Arts in 2000. After initially working as a daguerreotype artist, his practice has expanded to include installation, animation and sound as well as photography. His work focuses on the intersections between art, science and technology, with a particular emphasis on the construction of human identity. His works have been featured in a range of newspapers and magazines, and have served as illustrations for movie posters. He has been featured in the documentary feature film "Artists and Alchemists," as well as in the New York Times. His works are held in major collections worldwide including Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Museum of Fine Art Houston, the International Center for Photography and George Eastman House.
You can find out more by clicking here.

All images by Mark Kessell Images, top to bottom:
  1. The Residue Of Vision
  2. Continuing To Act
  3. The New New

Friday, January 25, 2013

Morbid Anatomy Library Now Hosting Regular, No-Appointment-Necessary Open Hours: Every Saturday from 2-6 PM!


Beginning tomorrow--Saturday, January 26th--the Morbid Anatomy Library (pictured above) will be open to the public, with no appointment necessary, on Saturdays from 2:00 - to 6:00 PM. So come on by for a perusal of the stacks and a gander at our human skeleton, tatty taxidermy, ex votos, magic lantern slides, post mortem photographs, wax embryological models, and unclassifiable curiosities!

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photos of The Library by Joanna Ebenstein.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Morbid Anatomy Library No Appointment Open Hours, Saturdays January 12 and 19, 2-6:00 PM

For the next two Saturdays--January 12th and 19th--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting no-appointment-necessary open hours from 2:30 - to 6:00. So come on by for a perusal of the stacks and a gander at our human skeleton, tatty taxidermy and wax embryological models.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Joanna Ebenstein.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours, This Sunday, January 6, 1:30-6:00 PM

This Sunday the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting no-appointment-necessary open hours from 1:30- to 6:00. So come on by for a perusal of the stacks and a gander at our human skeleton, tatty taxidermy and wax embryological models.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Joanna Ebenstein.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours, This Sunday, December 30th, 1:30-6:00 PM

This Sunday, the newly post-Hurricane Sandy re-built Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will hosting no-appointment-necessary open hours from 1:30- to 6:00. So come on by for a perusal of the stacks and a gander at our human skeleton, tatty taxidermy and wax embryological models.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Joanna Ebenstein.

Friday, December 14, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours, This Sunday, December 16th, 1-4:30

This Sunday, the newly post-Hurricane Sandy re-opened and re-built Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will hosting no-appointment-necessary open hours from 1- to 4:30. So come on by for a perusal of the stacks and a gander at our human skeleton, lots or art, taxidermy and wax embryological models.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Joanna Ebenstein.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Sunday, October 21, From 1-6


This Sunday, October 21, the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours from 1 to 6. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks and and rifling through the drawers.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Friday, September 7, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Weekend, September 8th and 9th, 11-7, As Part of the Brooklyn Museum's "Go" Open Studio Project

This weekend--Saturday September 8th and Sunday September 9th--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be open from 11-7 as part of the Brooklyn Museum's Go Open Studio Project. So please stop by for a perusal of the stacks, a turn through the drawers, and a conversation with the lovely and very clever Morbid Anatomy Library interns Kelsey Kephart and Dru Munsell.

The Morbid Anatomy Library is located at 543 Union Street at Nevins, Brooklyn, buzzer 1E. To view a map, click here. To For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here. For more about the Go Open Studio Project--and to see a full list of participating artists--click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

"Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses: Visions of Death Made Beautiful in Italy" Exhibition Opening Party, This Thursday, September 6







This Thursday, if you are in London or environs, please join Morbid Anatomy and The Last Tuesday Society for a free and gin-drenched opening party for my new exhibition "Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses: Visions of Death Made Beautiful in Italy"! Full details follow. Hope very much to see you there!
"Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses: Visions of Death Made Beautiful in Italy" Exhibition Opening Party
Date: Thursday September 6
Time: 6:00-8:00 PM
Location: The Last Tuesday Society
Address: ***Offsite at 11 Mare Street, London, E8 4RP

Admission: FREE
Produced by Morbid Anatomy
Click here to download Invitation
This Thursday, September 6, if you find yourself in London town, please join us for an opening party for an exhibition of photographs by Joanna Ebenstein of the Morbid Anatomy Blog, The Morbid Anatomy Library and Observatory with waxworks by Eleanor Crook and Sigrid Sarda.
In her many projects, ranging from photography to curation to writing, New York based Joanna Ebenstein utilizes a combination of art and scholarship to tease out the ways in which the pre-rational roots of modernity are sublimated into ostensibly "purely rational" cultural activities such as science and medicine.Much of her work uses this approach to investigate historical moments or artifacts where art and science, death and beauty, spectacle and edification, faith and empiricism meet in ways that trouble contemporary categorical expectations.In the exhibition "Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses" Ebenstein turns this approach to an examination of the uncanny and powerfully resonant representations of the dead, martyred, and anatomized body in Italy, monuments to humankind's quest to eternally preserve the corporeal body and defeat death in arenas sacred and profane.The artifacts she finds in both the churches, charnel houeses and anatomical museums of Italy complicate our ideas of the proper roles of--and divisions between--science and religion, death and beauty; art and science; eros and thanatos; sacred and profane; body and soul.
In this exhibition, you will be introduced to tantalizing visions of death made beautiful, uncanny monuments to the human dream of life eternal. You will meet "Blessed Ismelda Lambertini," an adolescent who fell into a fatal swoon of overwhelming joy at the moment of her first communion with Jesus Christ, now commemorated in a chillingly beautiful wax effigy in a Bolognese church; The Slashed Beauty, swooning with a grace at once spiritual and worldly as she makes a solemn offering of her immaculate viscera; Saint Vittoria, with slashed neck and golden ringlets, her waxen form reliquary to her own powerful bones; and the magnificent and troubling Anatomical Venuses, rapturously ecstatic life-sized wax women reclining voluptuously on silk and velvet cushions, asleep in their crystal coffins, awaiting animation by inquisitive hands eager to dissect them into their dozens of demountable, exactingly anatomically correct, wax parts.
You can find out more about the show here, and view more images by clicking here.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Exhibition and Event Series, Viktor Wynd Fine Art/Last Tuesday Society, London, September 2012







As mentioned in a recent post, beginning in just a few days, Morbid Anatomy will be artist-in-residence at Viktor Wynd Fine Art and The Last Tuesday Society in London, England. The residency will span the entire month, and will include an exhibition (photographs from which you see above), as well as a full month's worth of "Morbid Anatomy Presents" programming that will include some seriously amazing lectures, a screening, a "Congress for Curious Peoples" symposium, and a field trip to the rarely open-to-the-public St Bartholomew's Hospital Pathology Museum where I will also give a lecture on the art and history of anatomical museums.

The exhibition, "Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses: Visions of Death Made Beautiful in Italy," will open with a party next Thursday, September 6 and will premiere a new body of work based on my latest obsession: the through-lines connecting the beautiful, immaculately preserved corpse found in both  the churches and enlightenment-era anatomical museums of Italy. The exhibition, which will feature my own photographs and waxworks by the über-talented Eleanor Crook and Sigrid Sarda. You can download a postcard invitation which contains full information by clicking here.

I have just created pages for each event, which you can find at the Morbid Anatomy Facebook page by clicking here. The list also follows here, for your convenience:

FULL LIST OF EVENTS
Monday, 3rd September 2012, 7 PM
Granta Magazine - Medicine Issue Launch

Tuesday, 4th September 2012, 7 PM
Robert Marbury - Rogue Taxidermy in the Digital Age

Wednesday, 5th September 2012, 7 PM
Dr Sam Alberti of The Hunterian Museum on the History of Medical Museums
Thursday, 6 September 2012, 6-8 PM
Opening Reception for "Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses: Visions of Death Made Beautiful in Italy," Sponsored by Hendricks Gin
Saturday, 8th September 2012, 11 AM - 5:30 PM
'Congress for Curious People' Seminar - London Edition

Monday, 10th September 2012, 7 PM
Ronni Thomas and The Real Tuesday Weld - 'Midnight Archive' screening

Tuesday, 11th September 2012, 7 PM
Martin Clayton on Leonardo Da Vinci and Dissection

Wednesday, 12th September 2012, 7 PM
Curious Cafés of the Belle Epoque with Vadim Kosmos

Monday, 17th September 2012, 7 PM
Gemma Angel on the History of Human Tattoos

Wednesday, 19th September 2012, 7 PM
Field Trip to St Bart's Pathology Museum with Lecture by Joanna Ebenstein

Thursday, 20th September 2012, 7 PM
Paul Craddock - History of Blood Transfusions

Tuesday, 25th September 2012, 7 PM
Dr. James Kennaway - Bad Vibrations

Wednesday, 26th September 2012, 7 PM
Dr. Pat Morris - Extreme Taxidermy: Elephants and Humans

Thursday, 27th September 2012, 7 PM
Royal Raymond Rife and his Oscillating Beam Ray with Mark Pilkington

Sunday, 30th September 2012, 7 PM
Eleanor Crook on Plastic Surgery of the World Wars
You can find out more about the exhibition here and more about the events here. All of the above images are drawn from the exhibition "Ecstatic Raptures and Immaculate Corpses: Visions of Death Made Beautiful in Italy," opening at Viktor Wynde's Fine Art on September 6th with a reception from 6-8, and will be on view through the end of the month. And a special shout out to Jessica Pepper, who so expertly and beautifully retouched these images.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours Tomorrow, Saturday August 25, From 1-6


Tomorrow--Saturday August 25--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours from 1 to 6. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks, and enjoy the company of lovely Morbid Anatomy Library intern Kelsey Kephart.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Friday, August 17, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Saturday From 1-6


This Saturday, the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours from 1 to 6. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks, and enjoy the company of lovely Morbid Anatomy Library intern Kelsey Kepharthttp://barnard.edu/admissions/connect/tour-guides.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Anthropomorphic Insect Shadowbox Workshop with Former AMNH Senior Insect Preparator Daisy Tainton at Observatory: Open Slots for This Saturday's Class!

Anthropomorphic Insect Shadowbox by Daisy Tainton, teacher of Saturday's workshop
I am very excited to announce a few open slots in this Saturday's long sold-out Anthropomorphic Insect Shadowbox Workshop with Former AMNH Senior Insect Preparator Daisy Tainton, part of The Morbid Anatomy Art Academy at Observatory. Full details for the class follow; send an email to morbidanatomy [at] gmail.com to be added to class list. First come, first served!
Anthropomorphic Insect Shadowbox Workshop with Former AMNH Senior Insect Preparator Daisy Tainton
With Daisy Tainton, Former Senior Insect Preparator at the American Museum of Natural History
Date:
This Saturday, May 12
Time: 1 - 4 PM
Admission: $65

***Must RSVP to morbidanatomy [at] gmail.com to be added to class list
This class is part of The Morbid Anatomy Art Academy
Rhinoceros beetles: nature's tiny giants. Adorable, with their giant heads and tiny legs, and wonderful antler-like protrusions. If you think they would be even more adorable drinking tiny beers and holding tiny fishing poles, we have the perfect class for you! In today's workshop, students will learn to make--and leave with their own!--shadowbox dioramas featuring carefully positioned beetles doing nearly anything you can imagine. An assortment of miniature furniture and foods will be made available to decorate your habitat, but students are strongly encouraged to bring any dollhouse props they would like to use. 1:12 scale is generally best.
Daisy Tainton was formerly Senior Insect Preparator at the American Museum of Natural History, and has been working with insects professionally for several years. Eventually her fascination with insects and  love of Japanese miniature food items naturally came together, resulting in cute and ridiculous museum-inspired yet utterly unrealistic dioramas. Beetles at the dentist? Beetles eating pie and knitting sweaters? Even beetles on the toilet? Why not?
You can find out more about this class here, and more about The Morbid Anatomy Art Academy by clicking here.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours Weekends Throughout March!


Special alert--thanks to 2 terrific interns, The Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be open for drop-in visits weekends through the end of March; Saturday hours will be 1-6, while Sunday hours will be 12:30 to 6. So feel free to stop by and meet our charming interns, peruse the stacks, and get to know our latest addition.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Sunday!


This Sunday--February 19th--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours from 12:30 to 6. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks and to meet our latest addition.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Saturday!


This Saturday--January 14--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours from 2 until 6 PM. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks and to meet our latest addition.

For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

"Object Migration" Opening Reception, Proteus Gowanus, Tomorrow Night (January 12), 7pm


I have gotten a sneak peek of the new exhibition "Object Migration" at Proteus Gowanus, which officially opens with a reception tomorrow night at 7 PM. From what I have seen thus far, this is a pretty exciting exhibition, a real ode to material culture with lots of intrigue and surprises. Hope to see you at the opening, for which full details follow:
Proteus Gowanus
Thursday, January 12
7pm
543 Union Street Brooklyn

Join us for wine and conversation at the opening of the Object Migration exhibition. This show is a transitory museum of terrestrial transitions with over 50 objects and their migratory stories brought to us by you, our friends and collaborators. Some objects speak of intensely intimate moments while others tell geologic tales of perfect indifference.

When we think about migration (as we have been doing all year), we tend to focus on people and creatures, the mobile inhabitants of the planet. But life and motion create products and byproducts: tools, waste, the implements of culture. These are often the things that drive us onward in our migrations. Their stories are ineluctably connected with our own. At the points where our stories intersect with objects, much is revealed, not only about our personal trajectories but also about our precarious relationship with the environment.

We sent out the following message: “Do you have an object whose story you would like to share? An heirloom, an artwork, a toothbrush, a stone? An object which has inspired you, dominated you, educated you, exalted or degraded you? For our second exhibition of the Migration year, we invite you to lend us your object and include with it everything you know about it. We are especially interested in the part of the story that is the object’s alone: it’s history as material, as an economic entity, as waste, or as the impetus for other migratory tales.”

This query brought us over 50 objects which are the jumping off point for a three-month exploration of Object Migrations.

The objects on display range from a 50 million year old “dinosaur fart” (or gas bubble) to a collection of wild bird’s stomach contents collected in the early 20th C for “scientific” purposes. There are also talismans, mundane objects with secret meanings, things of beauty and much more.

We will view them as independent beings with stories of their own, stories that began before the object’s encounter with its current owner and that will likely continue long after they part. The stories may migrate into the economic, the industrial, the political, the historical, the geologic, the environmental and so on as visitors add to the stories on display with information they may have about the object in question.
    More can be found here.

    Tuesday, January 3, 2012

    "Lunation: Art on the Moon" Opening Party, Observatory, This Saturday, January 7


    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!

    LUNATION
    Art on the Moon
    Observatory's first group-curated show • January 7 – February 26, 2012

    Opening 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 PM

    Artists 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

    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!
    You can find out more about Observatory--including directions--by clicking here.

    Thursday, December 8, 2011

    Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Sunday!


    This Sunday--December 11th--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours from 2 until 6 PM. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks and to meet our latest addition.

    For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

    Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart

    Wednesday, November 30, 2011

    Morbid Anatomy Library Open Hours This Weekend!


    This weekend--December 3rd and 4th--the Morbid Anatomy Library (seen above) will be hosting open, no-appointment-necessary drop in hours! On Saturday the 3rd, open hours will run from 12:30 to 6, and on Sunday the 4th from 3 until 6 PM. So feel free to drop in for a perusal of the stacks and to meet our latest addition.

    For more about the Morbid Anatomy Library and for directions and other such information, click here.

    Photo of The Library by Shannon Taggart