(re)vision

(Thursday) (Sunday)

School of Visual Arts presents “(RE)VISION,” an exhibition curated by the inaugural class of the MA Curatorial Practice program. The exhibition will be on view Thursday, April 9, through Sunday, April 26, at a special exhibition space located at 1199 First Avenue, New York City.School of Visual Arts presents “(RE)VISION,” an exhibition curated by the inaugural class of the MA Curatorial Practice program. The exhibition will be on view Thursday, April 9, through Sunday, April 26, at a special exhibition space located at 1199 First Avenue, New York City.In Sophocles’ play Oedipus Rex, the prophet Tiresias is a blind man who is able to see the truth. Oedipus himself only becomes wiser after physically blinding himself. This paradox, found in the roots of Western culture, is an early example of our ambiguous relationship to vision. As the inaugural class in MA Curatorial Practice, we decided to start at the beginning. What is vision, and how do we convey it?Adding the prefix "re" imbues the word "vision" with another level of meaning, speaking to our need to look again, and to look further. It puts intentionality into the act of looking. Revision is against our nature, especially in this information age when the impulse is to look once and move on. We are future-oriented beings, constantly imagining and planning our next steps. In order to grow in the future, however, we need to assess our past and present. Revision as an act obliges the subject to stop, to stay for a while, to look around. This will lead to a deeper understanding of where we stand and who we are. Art can, ideally, hold us in this state of prolonged looking. This is our goal with "(RE)VISION," an exhibition that invites the viewer to look, and to look again.The artists included in the exhibition all question, in different manners, our various ways of seeing. Some of the artists are concerned with finding ways to represent what is normally invisible to the eye, others with how to create optical illusions. Our faces and eyes are interfaces for communication, and this concept has a strong presence in this exhibition. Playing with this idea, some works in the show reflect and re-configure the viewer’s face through different lenses and filters. This raises questions of how we see ourselves and others, as well as what our relationships to each other are. The post-Internet era has generated an image-saturated virtual reality that has transformed the way we use our eyes. How will we use them in the approaching age of hyperreality? The more we see, the more we know? Or are we just as blind as Oedipus, with functioning eyes?The site of "(RE)VISION" is itself a place in transition between its former use by LensCrafters, a retailer of prescription eyewear, and a future tenant. With the intervention of the exhibition, we are revising the potential of the space, opening up possibilities to envision transitional use for artistic platforms and to turn vacancy into a resource to be explored.Participating artists include: Rollin Beamish, Uday Dhar, Ryan Foerster, Omer and Tal Golan, Fiorella Gonzales-Vigil, Hhu, Daniel Lopera, Mary Mattingly, Caleb Nussear, Demetrius Oliver, PARRATORO, Farideh Sakhaeifar, Marvin Touré, Elizabeth Tubergen, Carrie Elston Tunick and James Tunick.Curated by MA Curatorial Practice class of 2015: Lal Bahcecioglu, Maya Castro Gutiérrez, Kayla Fanelli, Mohammad Golabi, Allison Peller, Manuela Reyes, Lalita Salander, Ana Sophie Salazar, Marie Vigneau and Danielle Whalen.Additional support for this exhibition provided by Stonehenge, IMC Lab + Gallery and No Longer Empty.

School of Visual Arts - SVA
209 East 23 Street
l 800.436. New York
United states
Array
http://www.sva.edu/events/events-exhibitions/revision

Tags

Art, Gallery, New York,

Selection of further exhibitions in: United states

24.01.3086 - 24.03.3086
Mexican and Latino Art Museum | San Francisco | In Association With The Smithsonian Institution - Th
Fort Mason Center, 2 Marina Blvd., Building D
San Francisco

Read more >>










(re)vision School of Visual Arts - SVA Main address: School of Visual Arts - SVA 209 East 23 Street l 800.436. New York, United states School of Visual Arts - SVA 209 East 23 Street l 800.436. New York, United states School of Visual Arts presents “(RE)VISION,” an exhibition curated by the inaugural class of the MA Curatorial Practice program. The exhibition will be on view Thursday, April 9, through Sunday, April 26, at a special exhibition space located at 1199 First Avenue, New York City.School of Visual Arts presents “(RE)VISION,” an exhibition curated by the inaugural class of the MA Curatorial Practice program. The exhibition will be on view Thursday, April 9, through Sunday, April 26, at a special exhibition space located at 1199 First Avenue, New York City.In Sophocles’ play Oedipus Rex, the prophet Tiresias is a blind man who is able to see the truth. Oedipus himself only becomes wiser after physically blinding himself. This paradox, found in the roots of Western culture, is an early example of our ambiguous relationship to vision. As the inaugural class in MA Curatorial Practice, we decided to start at the beginning. What is vision, and how do we convey it?Adding the prefix "re" imbues the word "vision" with another level of meaning, speaking to our need to look again, and to look further. It puts intentionality into the act of looking. Revision is against our nature, especially in this information age when the impulse is to look once and move on. We are future-oriented beings, constantly imagining and planning our next steps. In order to grow in the future, however, we need to assess our past and present. Revision as an act obliges the subject to stop, to stay for a while, to look around. This will lead to a deeper understanding of where we stand and who we are. Art can, ideally, hold us in this state of prolonged looking. This is our goal with "(RE)VISION," an exhibition that invites the viewer to look, and to look again.The artists included in the exhibition all question, in different manners, our various ways of seeing. Some of the artists are concerned with finding ways to represent what is normally invisible to the eye, others with how to create optical illusions. Our faces and eyes are interfaces for communication, and this concept has a strong presence in this exhibition. Playing with this idea, some works in the show reflect and re-configure the viewer’s face through different lenses and filters. This raises questions of how we see ourselves and others, as well as what our relationships to each other are. The post-Internet era has generated an image-saturated virtual reality that has transformed the way we use our eyes. How will we use them in the approaching age of hyperreality? The more we see, the more we know? Or are we just as blind as Oedipus, with functioning eyes?The site of "(RE)VISION" is itself a place in transition between its former use by LensCrafters, a retailer of prescription eyewear, and a future tenant. With the intervention of the exhibition, we are revising the potential of the space, opening up possibilities to envision transitional use for artistic platforms and to turn vacancy into a resource to be explored.Participating artists include: Rollin Beamish, Uday Dhar, Ryan Foerster, Omer and Tal Golan, Fiorella Gonzales-Vigil, Hhu, Daniel Lopera, Mary Mattingly, Caleb Nussear, Demetrius Oliver, PARRATORO, Farideh Sakhaeifar, Marvin Touré, Elizabeth Tubergen, Carrie Elston Tunick and James Tunick.Curated by MA Curatorial Practice class of 2015: Lal Bahcecioglu, Maya Castro Gutiérrez, Kayla Fanelli, Mohammad Golabi, Allison Peller, Manuela Reyes, Lalita Salander, Ana Sophie Salazar, Marie Vigneau and Danielle Whalen.Additional support for this exhibition provided by Stonehenge, IMC Lab + Gallery and No Longer Empty. Book tickets