Showing posts with label Milwaukee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Milwaukee. Show all posts

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Reviewed in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel



Review: Sonja Thomsen at Inova


I’ve seen it on so many antique shop shelves but never given a second thought to what we call it: milk glass.

On the one hand, the name given to these vases and little jars conjures the idea of essential, nourishing liquid. That perishable stuff that contains everything a new life needs; the endowment of mothers.

On the other hand, glass is a resilient and fixed material; something brittle, fragile and clear.
Then, when I consider what gives milk glass its particular opaqueness — the ash of bones — I begin to understand why it might attract an artist like Sonja Thomsen, whose work is up at Inova, 2155 N. Prospect Ave., as part of the Nohl Exhibition.

One of the most striking components of her installation is a grouping that features a series of photographs of tactile, bumpy milk glass objects that seem to sink into and become indistinguishable from their milky white ground and space itself.

Pasted flush against the wall, laid flat, is a tiny swollen pitcher with rows of little nodules and a candy dish shaped like a basket. Foreground and background commingle, as does what’s formed and flat, solid and not. We are invited to meditate on the conjuring nature of both photography and memory.
Each object isolated in a single photograph, these pretty domestic ornaments are like spirits of real things. Or perhaps of real bodies. By softening and subsuming these hard, inanimate objects, Thomsen enlivens them and gives them an almost fleshy presence. I am mindful of burned bone and the idea that women are vessels, too. I am mindful of the ways bodies are connected across generations.

Hanging in the space in front of these images like a witness is a photograph of a female form. It is a photograph of a woman with the surface of the photographic paper gently torn away from every part of the picture save the gown. Disembodied and white, with folds of fabric gently implying the body beneath, the image recalls classical sculpture and a certain timelessness.
But it’s familiar and universal enough to bring a mother, a sister or a friend to mind, too. The cotton nightgown, seen from the back and doused in sunlight and shadow, seems very everyday, very much of our moment.

Light penetrates the thin layer of photographic paper that remains and enshrouds this form -- which exudes absence -- in an ethereal light.

All of this is only a fraction of Thomsen’s installation at Inova, on view through Dec. 9, which represents new directions for a diligently experimenting artist.

In general, the work in the Inova show does not feel as resolved as "Lacuna," a remarkably strong, earlier series, but it also is in a state of becoming and feels more specific. It's a more singular line of inquiry to do with the body, women and time.

I find it fascinating that Thomsen, after years of exploring the elemental and complex nature of water in deep inky blue, reflective, abstract and liquid landscapes, is creating a fundamentally more physical, impenetrable, beautiful world of milky white today.

Watch "burning water" the "In The Making" video exploration of Thomsen's practice made with Jason Nanna. The video series showcased the work of local artists, who worked in collaboration with local filmmakers to produce short pieces for Art City. The exhibit is on view through Dec. 9. Installation views courtesy the artist.

Monday, October 08, 2012

Great opening

INOVA friday night October 5, 2012
The Greater Milwaukee Foundation's Mary Nohl Fellowship for Individual Artist's concluded its 2011 cycle with its grand group exhibition at INOVA in Milwaukee WI.  It was a fantastic night. Milwaukee showed up in droves.  I'm debuting four new works in this exhibition, vessel, trace of possibility, witness and nexus. Each of the new projects benefit from INOVA's elegant space and the paths viewers make between them. I will be posting short videos of the install during the show's run (through December 9, 2012) ... stay tuned.

trace of possibility, photo credit PJ Moody
trace of possibility, photo credit PJ Moody


trace of possibility, photo credit PJ Moody






view from inside trace of possibility, photo credit PJ Moody
trace of possibility, photo credit PJ Moody

Nexus, photo credit PJ Moody
Nexus, photo credit PJ Moody

Vessel, photo credit PJ Moody
Vessel, photo credit Art Elkon


Thursday, September 27, 2012

opening next week...




THE 2011 GREATER MILWAUKEE FOUNDATION MARY L. NOHL FELLOWSHIPS EXHIBITION, OCTOBER 5 – DECEMBER 9, 2012, Peck School of the Arts, 2400 E. Kenwood Blvd., Milwaukee, WI 53211

Established artists Nicolas Lampert, Brad Lichtenstein, and Sonja Thomsen and emerging artists Richard Galling, Hans Gindlesberger, Sarah Luther, and the American Fantasy Classics group (Brittany Ellenz, Liza Pflughoft, Alec Regan, Oliver Sweet) report in a year after being selected as 2011 Nohl Fellows as part of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Mary L. Nohl Fellowships for Individual Artists. The exhibition presents a range of new work in painting, photography, film, printmaking, and installation. This presentation will mark the ninth annual exhibition of fellowship winners at Inova and will be accompanied with a catalogue. The Greater Milwaukee Foundation Mary L. Nohl Fellowships for Individual Artists program is administered by the Bradley Family Foundation. The exhibition is guest curated for Inova by Nicholas Frank.

From Press Release...
SONJA THOMSEN “This has been an explosive and pivotal year of new endeavors,” declares Sonja Thomsen. She travelled to Iceland for her first international museum show; produced her first collaborative public art project in Milwaukee; participated in the birth of a collective; and relaunched her website to more accurately reflect the recent direction of her work. The fellowship award enabled her to hire studio assistants and expand into a second workspace, making it possible to investigate larger-scaled projects and three-dimensional works. Thomsen brings several of these new experiments into the gallery for the Nohl exhibition. Her first foray into sculpture, trace of possibility, is a steel and polycarbonate structure covered in silvery, reflective vinyl that stands 14 feet tall. It is placed in relation to witness, a large photograph on vinyl, and can be entered, like a mirrored cave, or circumambulated. Two new works, nexus, a changing series of archival pigment prints resting on an 8-foot wooden shelf, and vessel, nine small white-on-white still lifes on vinyl displayed with a larger, figurative image, some of its emulsion peeled away, attest to Thomsen’s belief in “the power of the sequence to carry content” and her related interest in installation. Britt Salvesen, writing in the catalogue, identifies trace of possibility as the pivotal work in Thomsen’s exhibition, functioning “metaphorically as a translation of the expansive landscapes she shot in Iceland, and as an imagined interior of the vessels she shot in the studio.” Salvesen notes that for Thomsen, “temporality is an artistic medium and a conceptual space….While time is the declared motif, even obsession, of many contemporary photographers, it is rare that an artist can get at its paradoxical nature, as if setting the clock to wind in both directions, or conjuring an hourglass to trickle sand upward and downward. Sonja Thomsen, in her exploratory, empathetic work, manages something like this.” Sonja Thomsen was born in Chicago in 1978. She received a BA from Kenyon College in 2000 and an MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2004. Exhibitions include the Reykjavik Museum of Photography, Iceland; Catherine Edelman Gallery, Chicago; the New Mexico Art Museum, Santa Fe; Silverstein Photography, New York; the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art; Cynthia Reeves Gallery, New York; David Weinberg Gallery, Chicago; Silver Eye Center for Photography, Pittsburgh; and the Haggerty Museum of Art, Milwaukee.
More about all of the artists in the show here

Saturday, August 11, 2012

week one of fabrication...

Orjan inspects layout

Claire Smith, the method to this madness... fabricator extraordinaire

end of day Thursday

end of day Friday

Friday, October 21, 2011

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Great pop up show...

at Milwaukee's defunct Grand Avenue Mall hosted by Parachute Projects...  Featuring the work of Colin Matthes (American) and Kati Heck (German)


Unfortunately the work is only up through today but I encourage you to make an effort a see this show. I think it is one of the best shows I have seen in Milwaukee in many years.  The individual works by these two talented artists are captivating both formally and conceptually.
“It looks at our shared (American and German) national histories and gets it all wrong,” says Matthes. “It tells bits of stories about our world today. These stories are filled with pigeons, turkeys, and questionable characters.”  via A.V. Club
On top of this is the context of the exhibition in the mall that once was a crown jewel of retail in downtown Milwaukee and now is an abandoned shell scarred with ugly attempts to reformat the architecture for big box stores. The exhibition is installed in three of the many empty store fronts of the 2nd floor of mall.  Milwaukee artists should follow the Parachute Project's lead and repopulate the mall with more events that call into question the relationship between art and retail and that promotes community verses exclusivity.
 







sorry about the low res iPhone pictures... does not do justice to the show!

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

photography week in Milwaukee

Tomorrow -April 6, 2011, 7pm - Nate Larson will be talking at UWM's Peck School of the Arts
Larson's photographic work uses visual and textual narrative to explore the way that individuals construct meaning in contemporary culture through the lenses of social networking, consumer behavior, organized religion, and other contemporary mythologies.
T-Rex and Space Book, Digital C Prints, 20" x 30" ea, 2008, Larson & Shindelman

THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 2011, 6:15pm - Colleen Plumb will be talking at the Milwaukee Art Museum
Join Chicago-based photographer Colleen Plumb for a lecture on her recently published book, Animals Are Outside Today, a photographic exploration of the human-animal relationship in contemporary society. A book signing will follow.
Radius Books presents:  Animals are Outside Today Colleen Plumb

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Alec Soth and Zoe Strauss?!?

Last week I had the pleasure to attend Alec Soth's lecture "The Paralyzed Cyclops in the Democratic Jungle" at the Haggerty Art Museum.  And tomorrow I have the opportunity to hear Zoe Strauss speak on a panel at the Milwaukee Art Museum!?

Two prolific conceptual artists in Milwaukee in two weeks... sweet.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Photography and Milwaukee...

this spring is packed full of great reasons to come visit Milwaukee...

Wednesday, January 26
Opening Lecture for "The Truth is Not in the Mirror" at the Haggerty Museum of Art
Alec Soth  The Paralyzed Cyclops
6 p.m.

Thursday, February 3 
Panel Discussion:
Evolving Practices in the Presentation and Care of Contemporary Photographs at MAM
Zoe Strauss, Michael Foley, Sherman Fairchild, Max Yela
6:15 pm


Wednesday, March 9
Lecture at the Haggerty Museum of Art
Kelli Connell and Will Steacy     
6 p.m.

Wednesday, March 30 
Lecture at the Haggerty Museum of Art
LaToya Ruby Frazier and Jesse Burke    
6 p.m.


Thursday, April 7 
Animals Are Outside Today - Lecture and Book Signing at MAM
Colleen Plumb
6:15 pm


Please let me know if you are heading to town for all or any of these events!

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Mark Menjivar in Milwaukee...

Midwife/Middle School Science Teacher | San Antonio, TX | 
3-Person Household (including dog) | First week after deciding to eat all local produce.
Mark Menjivar

Milwaukee is lucky to have photographer Mark Menjivar in town this week.  Mark will be giving an artist talk at UWM's Union Gallery on Thursday October 7 @ 7pm, about his project You Are What You Eat.  His project is part of the Conspicuous Consumption exhibition on view through October 15.  

Who: Mark Menjivar
Where: UWM Union Gallery, 2200 East Kenwood Boulevard, Milwaukee WI between Stowell Avenue on the east and Maryland Avenue on the west, on the east side of Milwaukee.
When: October 7 at 7pm
 

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Jones Island Water Reclamation Facility

Monday I took my students in the WATER course to tour the Jones Island Water Reclamation Facility. I am hoping it will help them contextualize their daily use of water and its connection to Lake Michigan.  It was a visceral experience, the sights, sounds and smells.  I took this short video of one of the water clarification pools toward the end of our tour. Hundreds of plastic bags clung to the pool as the water spilled over the edge - why aren't plastic bags banned? 

 

Friday, September 24, 2010

Milwaukee pride...

Thanks to Anne in KY I was tuned into this program about my hometown.  Listen to State of the Re:Union, Milwaukee City of Vision.  This city is small enough that I have a personal connection to each of these stories. Seeing home through new perspectives is always a good idea.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Back to School & Catching Up...

I apologize for the delay in posts this summer.  I am hoping to get back into the rhythm of a weekly update this fall.

I am back to teaching and pleased to be teaching two courses that I created at MIAD this fall, Historical Perspectives and an interdisciplinary course titled, Water.  They are two great groups of students and look forward to seeing their work evolve this semester.  I hope to share some of the treasures here as the semester progresses.

I am in the process of giving my website a bit of a face lift. Thanks to the good people at livebooks.edu I am now able to host video on the site, stay tuned for new video works to be posted here. 

PhotoMidwest is a month long celebration of photographic art held in Madison, WI, September 24 - November 9, 2010.  I will be on the other side of the table as a reviewer for the PhotoMidwest Porfolio Reviews, Saturday Sept 25.


   figure ground (2am), 2010  featured in CAS auction  (c) sonja thomsen

The motion sensitive light boxes from re:current, titled "figure ground," will be on view in two locations this fall:
  • The biennial faculty exhibition at MIAD opens next week and includes 2 "figure ground" pieces.  I will be teaching until 7 but will pop by from 7-8pm, if you're in town it looks like an interesting show this year.  
    • Opening Thursday, September 16 from 6-8pm,  MIAD 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee WI 53202
  • The Milwaukee Art Museum's Contemporary Art Society Auction features "figure ground" (2am), 2010.
    • Preview Party Thurs, Oct 14, 5:30–8 p.m. Gallery Talk  Tues, Oct 19, 1:30–2:30 p.m.
      CAS The Art Auction  Saturday, Oct. 23, 6 p.m., MAM 700 N. Art Museum Drive Milwaukee, WI 53202

    Friday, July 24, 2009

    Susana Raab in Milwaukee...


    Be sure to come to the Dean Jensen Gallery TONIGHT to meet Susana Raab!

    Susana Raab: Rank Strangers
    July 24 - August 29, 2009
    Dean Jensen Gallery
    759 N. Water Street
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin

    Opening Reception: Friday, July 24, 6-9pm

    Sunday, April 26, 2009

    ink on paper...

    I was honored to receive such an extensive review in print today. Thankfully, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has managed to keep their arts critic (unlike the Tribune). You can read it here.

    Friday, April 17, 2009

    Milwaukee's Spring Gallery Night...

    Spring Gallery night in Milwaukee is one of the most well attended event as many of us are itching to come out of hibernation and stretch our legs.

    Tonight be sure to stop by the Armoury Gallery, MIAD, the Haggerty Art Museum, Green Gallery and shoo (to see (h(om)e) of course!)



    detail of petrified, 2009 installed at Armoury Gallery

    Tuesday, April 14, 2009

    shooting (h(om)e)




    Photographing new bags by (h(om)e) this afternoon. You can see the new digs at shoo this friday night - April 18, 2009 Milwaukee's Spring Gallery night.