Three exhibitions: Eric Eley: Coincident Disruption, Marilyn Jolly, Melba Northum and Susan Sitzes: Transience: Imperfect, Impermanent, Incomplete, and Walter Nelson: Graffiti on Aspen Trees – Nature vs. Man

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Date/Time
Date(s) - 14 Jan 2012 until 18 Feb 2012
5:30 PM - 7:30 PM

Location
The McKinney Avenue Contemporary (The MAC)

Category(ies)


 

The MAC |McKinney Avenue Contemporary

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE MAC CONTACT:

LauraLee Brott at 214.953.1212 / lbrott@the-mac.org or macmembership@the-mac.org

www.the-mac.org

THE MAC ANNOUNCES THREE NEW EXHIBITIONS:

ERIC ELEY: COINCIDENT DISRUPTION

TRANSIENCE: Imperfect, Impermanent, Incomplete - an exhibition by marilyn jolly, melba northum and susan sitzes

WALTER NELSON: Graffiti On Aspen Trees – Nature vs. Man

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

The MAC is proud to present three new exhibitions in January 2012. Eric Eley: Coincident Disruption; a collaborative exhibition by Marilyn Jolly, Melba Northum and Susan Sitzes titled Transience: Imperfect, Impermanent, Incomplete; Walter Nelson: Graffiti on Aspen Trees – Nature vs. Man.

An opening reception with the artists will be held Saturday, January 14, 2012 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm at The MAC galleries, located at3120 McKinney Avenue, in the Uptown District of Dallas. Exhibitions will be on view through February 18, 2012.

 

Large Gallery

Eric Eley

Coincident Disruption

Coincident Disruption, a large scale installation by Dallas based artist Eric Eley, employs historical camouflage strategies and impromptu construction techniques to create an aerial landscape.  The installation is an investigation of concealment and explores hiding as an act of avoidance rather than ambiguous visibility. A network of patterned skeletal structures will be suspended from the ceiling of the Large Gallery, supporting an expanse of hand-made twine and fabric nets.  Its improvisational geometric architecture is a means to obscure what happens in the space beyond, rather than below, the surface.  Coincident Disruption explores visual and architectural camouflage as an act of faith, more psychological than physical, in its protection.

Eric Eley received a BFA fromSyracuseUniversity,Syracuse,New York, and has a MFA from theUniversityofWashington,Seattle,Washington.  In the time between his degrees, Eric spent two years as an artist-in-residence at the Archie Bray Foundation inHelena,Montanawhere he received the Taunt Fellowship.

Eley’s work is represented by Platform Gallery,Seattle, where his most recent solo exhibition was in September of 2010.  He also mounted solo exhibitions at Art Agents Gallery inHamburg,Germany, Gallery4Culture and the Hedreen Gallery at theLeeCenterfor the Arts, both inSeattle.  Eley’s work has been included in group shows in the Kunsthaus Hamburg, Outdoor Sculpture Projects at Volta03 inBasel,Switzerland, and Open Space at Art Cologne inCologne,Germany.  He has installed a publicly commissioned work atHarborviewMedicalCenter, inSeattle, and recently installed his first permanent outdoor sculpture at the corporate headquarters of Amazon.com.

 

Square Gallery

Marilyn Jolly, Melba Northum and Susan Sitzes

Transience: Imperfect, Impermanent, Incomplete

Transience: Imperfect, Impermanent, Incomplete, an exhibition of work by Marilyn Jolly, Melba Northum and Susan Sitzes, exemplifies each artist’s close affinity for found and collected materials that reflect a sense of time. The mixed media of two-dimensional and sculptural works directly reflects the artists’ alignment with the Japanese worldview and aesthetic of Wabi-sabi. Wabi-sabi is a complicated sensibility that is often centered on the acceptance of transience and appreciation of beauty that is imperfect, impermanent or incomplete.

The materials employed in Transience: Imperfect, Impermanent, Incomplete range from discovered objects in nature to industrial castoffs and the general detritus of daily living. Whether using the materials as found or more intentionally manipulated, there is a poetic editing and re-arranging, with the goal of getting to the true essence of the object or thought.

About the Artists

Marilyn Jolly, Melba Northum and Susan Sitzes have gained familiarity with and responded to each other’s work for several years as friends and colleagues. They share a strong design aesthetic and responsiveness to the materiality of objects that often drives their work.

Marilyn Jolly lives inDallas,Texas. She earned her MFA in Painting at theUniversity ofOklahoma in 1983. Her work has been exhibited in numerous regional, national and international exhibitions including the Centro Cultural Paraguayo-Americano,Asuncion,Paraguay in 2004 and 2005 and the Santa Reparata International School of Art,Florence,Italy in 2007 and 2004. Jolly has shown work in the Texas/Oklahoma region for the past 25 years including solo exhibitions at theGalvestonArtsCenter,Galveston,Texas, The Leslie Powell Gallery inLawton,Oklahoma and Conduit Gallery inDallas,Texas. Jolly is currently an Associate Professor of Painting at theUniversity ofTexas at Arlington, Arlington,Texas.

Melba Northum is a mixed-media artist living inArlington,Texas. She is currently an Instructor of Art atTarrantCountyCollege and previously taught ceramics atTexasChristianUniversity,Ft. Worth,Texas and as an Assistant Professor in the foundation program at theUniversity ofTexas atArlington,Arlington,Texas. She has an MFA in ceramics and drawing from the UNT College of Visual Arts and Design and a BFA in the same from the TTU School of Art, Lubbock. Northum has an extensive national, international, and regional exhibition record and has work in the collection of the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington DC.

Susan Sitzes is a metalsmith, sculptor, educator and interior designer living and working in the DFW area.  Sitzes has an MFA in Metalsmithing and Jewelry Design from theUniversity ofNorth Texas inDenton,Texas and a BFA in Interior Design fromTexasTechUniversity inLubbock,Texas. Sitzes has taught as Assistant Professor of Metalsmithing and Jewelry Design at The University of Texas atArlington,Arlington,Texas. She has exhibited her sculptures regionally and nationally including Third Space Gallery inDallas,Texas, Bolivar Street Gallery in Sanger,Texas andFirehouseArtCenter inNorman,Oklahoma. Sitzes has worked on a wide range of interior projects and is currently designing and making limited-edition jewelry and small-to-medium scale sculptures.

 

New Works Space

Walter Nelson

Graffiti on Aspen Trees – Nature vs. Man

Graffiti on Aspen Trees – Nature vs. Man, an exhibition of photographs by Walter Nelson, investigates man’s presence and effect on nature. The act of scaring on aspen trees, inflicted by nature or man, begins with the slightest scratch. The image remaining on the bark of an Aspen tree is called an Arboglyph, commonly found in the Pacific Northwest and Western United States. Arboglyphs were first produced by Basque sheepherders in the 1800′s.  During the life cycle of an Aspen tree, any scaring brings about a mutational healing process that continues until the tree beings to deteriorate and die, similar to the human body. The intent of Graffiti on Aspen Trees – Nature vs. Man is to consider the pain that man projects from the self onto the natural environment. These photographs expose the beautiful qualities in healing rituals that both humans and nature endure.

Walter Nelson is a photographer, painter and sculptor living and working inAbiquiu,New Mexico. Nelson has a BS in Mammalogy and Geology fromMidwesternUniversityinWichita Falls,Texasand studied Oceanography atTexasA&MUniversityinCollege Station,Texas. Nelson employs his scientific knowledge to observe environmental trends and translate them into visual art forms. Nelson has exhibited extensively inNew MexicoandTexasincluding the Greaswood Gallery inMarfa,Texas, Galleria Arriba inAbiquiu,New Mexicoand Afterimage Gallery inDallas,Texas. Nelson has work in many private and public collections including the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, The Santa Fe Museum of Fine Art and the Bank of America Corporation.

 

About the MAC

Established in 1994, The McKinney Avenue Contemporary (The MAC) is a nonprofit organization that stands as aDallasadvocate for creative freedom offering the opportunity for experimentation and presentation of art in all disciplines. It supports the emerging and established artist role in society providing a forum for critical dialogue with their audiences. This relationship is cultivated through education and innovative programming. The MAC is a member of Dallas Art Dealers Association and The Uptown Association.

 

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