Exhibition

Ontario Museum of History and Art: 'We the People: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow' Exhibit to Question the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution

LP Aekili Ross, Silent Voices, 2016
Courtesy of Ontario Museum of Art

By The Pomonan
Published January 6, 2023 10:28 Am PST

We the People: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow,” a group exhibition that interprets the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution, is now on view at the Ontario Museum of History & Art.

"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."

Guest curators Riea Owens and Patricia Jessup-Woodlin selected 61 artworks is now on view in three of the museum’s galleries. The artworks question and interpret the Preamble’s complexities and contradictions. This is an excellent opportunity for the museum audience to view a vast diversity of art and artists representative of We the People”, said guest curator Dr. Patricia Jessup-Woodlin.

This exhibition intertwines a diverse artistic approach, including site-specific installations, multimedia works, and traditional media such as painting, photography, sculpture, printmaking, and collage, to challenge and engage the viewer on these political issues. Through the power of art, the exhibition hopes to inspire empathy, understanding, and a sense of shared purpose among its audience as we work together to create a more just and equitable society for all.

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS
Allyson Allen, Bill Anderson, A.S. Ashley, Christen Austin, Donna Bates, Jean Brantley, Gloria Cassidy, John Chang, Mary Chen, Mary Cheung, Rosy Cortez, Liz Covington, Jessica Cruz, Rick Cummings, Deserai Davis, Otha “Vakseen” Davis III, Mellyssa Diggs, Pam Douglas, George Evans, Karen Fiorito, Kathi Fox, Stefanie Girard, Stephanie Godoy, Sophia Green, T. Faye Griffin, Beihua Guo, Diana Elizabeth Hernandez, Jessus Hernandez, Linda Kaye, Won Sil Kim, Leah Knecht, Chad La Fever, Eileen Oda Leaf, Rose Loya, Julian Lucas, Cindy Macias, Victoria NaserSaravia, Riea Owens, Ann Phong, Mike Pitzer, Theresa Polley-Shellcroft, Hannah Raykhenberg, Humberto Reynoso, Natalie Rios, Phillip Risby, Bart Ross, LP Ækili Ross, Shira Seny, Amy Smith, S.A. Smith, Linda Ternoir, Sharon Terry, Lisa Tomczeszyn, Maryam Crogman, Kat Trevino, Ricardo Tomasz, Jerry Weems, Christopher J. Wesley, Dr. Patricia Jessup-Woodlin.

The artist reception will open Saturday, February 18, from 6 PM to 9 PM. In addition there will be a moderated conversation on March 4, 2023, from 2 PM to 4 PM, with guest curators Riea Owens and Dr. Patricia Jessup-Woodlin, and artists featured in We the People. The discussion will focus on artistic practices and perspectives about the Preamble’s phrase “We the People.” The Museum’s programs are held on-site and are free to the public.


About the Ontario Museum of History & Art

The Ontario Museum of History & Art The Ontario Museum of History & Art is located at 225 S. Euclid Avenue, Ontario, California 91762. Gallery hours are Thursday and Friday, Noon to 4 PM, and Saturday through Sunday, 11 AM to 5 PM. Admission is free. For more information call (909) 395-2510, email at MuseumInfo@ontarioCA.gov, or visit www.OntarioMuseum.org. The Ontario Museum of History & Art is a public-private museum operated by the City of Ontario with support from the non-profit Ontario Museum of History & Art, Associates.



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Yiwei Gallery Presents "I Am My Family" by Christian Fuchs

Christian Fuchs
I Am My Family
May 7 - June 19, 2022
Artist Reception: Saturday, May 7, 4-7 pm

Photography Christian Fuchs | Courtesy of Yiwei Gallery

“The tree is alive within me. I am the tree. I am my entire family.”

–– Alejandro Jodorowsky

Yiwei Gallery is pleased to feature Peruvian photographer, Christian Fuchs, who recreates images of his ancestors through self-portraiture. Christian takes on the role of his ancestors as a way to connect to his family, celebrate them, and help them live on. He has a part of everyone within his being and his family tree is still alive within him.


Christian Fuchs has been fascinated with his family since a young age living with his grandparents in Lima. He has memories of writing to his great grandmother in German who told him stories about her great grandmother. This fascination and desire to connect with his family and ancestors only grew stronger when he was introduced to five generations of family portraits. Christian recalls that, “As a child I looked at the portraits and played with them. If I didn't know the names of the characters, I invented them. I remember watching them for hours and feeling that they were watching me back. Sometimes I would talk to them, and that led to my reinterpretations of them.” After growing up and studying law, Christian found himself returning to the portraits of his ancestors again and again. In 2012 he began his lifelong project Transgenerational recreating an image of his fourth great grandmother, Luise Friederike Charlotte Eleonora Chee.

Photography Christian Fuchs | Courtesy of Yiwei Gallery

Fuchs's great-great-great-great-grandmother, Luise Friederike Charlotte Eleonora Chee, was his first recreation


When we look at Christian’s photographs, it is easy to mistake them as paintings due to their painterly quality and authentic look, but they are, in fact, photographs. The process for creating them is intensive, as Christian takes it upon himself to completely immerse in the person. From their clothes to their jewelry to their personality, he becomes the person––even using backdrops, makeup, and prosthetics to portray a truly accurate likeness.

Photography Christian Fuchs | Courtesy of Yiwei Gallery

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GENERATIONS by Scot Sothern

GENERATIONS | Scot Sothern

EXHIBITION DATES: May 14 – June 11 / by appointment 

ARTIST’S RECEPTION: Saturday, May 14, 6:00–9:00 PM / no appointment necessary 

THESE DAYS is pleased to present the exhibition Generations by Scot Sothern

In this exhibition, artist/writer Scot Sothern—best known for his controversial and lauded work LOWLIFE, photographs and stories of street prostitutes in and around Los Angeles during the 1980s—has compiled two bodies of work made nearly fifty years apart. Collected under the shared title GENERATIONS are Sothern’s earliest personal photographs, FAMILY TREE 1975 – 1980, and his most recent body of work, IDENTITY, both of which explore time, change, and the multi-directional evolution of America. 

GENERATIONS’ point of departure is FAMILY TREE 1975 – 1980. This series encapsulates some of Sothern's earliest personal photographs, which he began making soon after leaving the small Missouri Ozarks town where he was raised. In his late teens he left the confines of his father's portrait and wedding photography studio to chase the 1960s glorification of sex, drugs, and rock & roll. He worked as an itinerant photographer with a cache of gimmicks and a conman’s mindset. During this period he was also making photographs of characters he met along the way. In 1975, When Sothern began the FAMILY TREE series, complete strangers were more trusting of a person with a camera. Suspicion and mass antipathy had not yet blanketed the country, and a million-selfie-a-day habit hadn’t yet degraded the personal and sentimental value of the snapshot. The FAMILY TREE photos, shot on Kodachrome and printed as Cibachromes (both discontinued), combined with Sothern's written accounts of the interactions they document, are unique and meaningful stories of another time. These Days will publish a limited edition monograph of this series to coincide with the exhibition.

IDENTITY, Sothern’s newest and most original project, explores time and vast change from as far back as the American Civil War, with comparisons to the current American civil discord. Working with found antique, glass-plate ambrotypes and using Photoshop to print and size contemporary images, Sothern then physically binds these elements together to create small art works that are equally digital and analog—both handmade, and technologically advanced.

In the second half of the 19th Century professional photographers were few and far between. Using a wet-collodion process on glass and often guesstimating exposure times resulted in Ambrotypes that can be both stunning and flawed. The ambrotypes present people who are much like us but in a very different time. As in FAMILY TREE, comparisons to modern day selfies come to mind and force consideration of the relative value of a single image. While the social media selfie is shot for immediate and rapid consumption, these singular ambrotypes were originally greatly valued for their personal worth. Now altered they become objets d'art with meaning spanning generations and relevance in the contemporary world.

IDENTITY, the who and what we are, has never been more out of the closet. People young and old are declaring their previously covert sexual personas. We are as well living in a world of technology surpassing the imaginations of only a few years ago. This combination has contributed to a new social disintegration. Cutting edge advances, both socially and scientifically, are at odds with backward movements attempting to bring back good old days that in fact never existed. Xenophobia, white supremacy, and gender bashing have elbowed their ways into the forefront. Global Warming is at the brink of no return. America has never been as disconnected as in the immediate now. IDENTITY captures the contemporary zeitgeist.  

GENERATIONS doesn’t pretend to have the answers nor does it close any credibility gaps. This work, spanning three centuries, should help define with humor, pathos, politics and empathy who we have become. Who we need to be to move forward is up to the viewer.

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Writer/photographer/artist Scot Sothern grew up in his father’s portrait photography studio in the Missouri Ozarks in the 1950s and 1960s. A product of the sixties cultural revolution, he ran wild through the 1970s and supported himself as an itinerant portrait photographer. In the following years he took jobs here and abroad that kept him behind a camera and in the darkroom. By the 1990s he had become an autodidact writer as well. In 2010, at sixty, his first solo exhibit, LOWLIFE, photos and stories of life with street prostitutes, was held at the notorious Drkrm Gallery in Los Angeles. Scot’s first book of the same title was published in the U.K. by Stanley Barker in 2011. The British Journal of Photography called LOWLIFE, “the years’ most controversial photobook.” LOWLIFE immediately found its way into the international art photography community. This work along with other photography projects has since been exhibited in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, London, and Paris. Solo gallery shows have included Little Big Man Gallery in LA, Dan Cooney Fine Art in NYC, and Mindy Solomon Gallery in Miami. In 2013 Sothern began a biweekly column, Nocturnal Submissions, for VICE Magazine, and Curb Service: A Memoir, was published by Soft Skull Press. Writer Jerry Stahl called it “An absolutely amazing and essential book." STREETWALKERS, stories and photographs, was published by powerHouse Books in February 2016. “This penetrating book of photographs and text will haunt and challenge the viewer,” writes Roger Ballen.
BIG CITY
, a novel, was published in 2017 by Stalking Horse Press. Other books include SAD CITY published by Straylight Press, and A New Low and Little Miss by drkrm editions.

On View - ‘Time, Love and Gravity’ The Progress Gallery

‘Time, Love and Gravity’
On View through February 12, 2022
Opening Reception February 12 5 - 9p
The Progress Gallery

‘Time, ‘Love and Gravity’, an exhibition featuring the work of 22 artists and curated by Southern California artists Brandon Monk Munoz, Melinda Hagman, Michael Magoski & E.E. Jacks. This work explores a wide range of mediums, from painting to mixed media, film installation to neon, ceramic sculpture and large scale woodwork pieces. They were completed between the beginning of 2020 and 2022, a season of many questions and much introspection.

This exhibit is simply a momentary rest stop during our ongoing search for the timeless truths that connect us all.

We are born here on earth to die one day. The life we live in between is our art for others to interpret as we all add shape and form to the never ending narrative of Time, Love and Gravity.

Exhibition Statement here

Curators
Brandon Monk Munoz - Fine artist, woodworker, furniture builder, mentor, curator.
Melinda Hagman - Fine artist, painter, and curator.
Michael Magoski - Director of the Magoski Arts Colony, Fine Art Photographer, curator, writer and poet.
E.E. Jacks - Fine artist, painter, curator, juror, writer and poet.

Progress Gallery
The Progress Gallery is a non-profit art gallery in the Pomona Arts Colony, located in the basement of the 1931 Art Deco building that formerly housed the Progress Bulletin. The gallery features regional and collegiate level of emerging and established artists, and is available for use by colleges and qualified artists.

300 S. Thomas St.
Pomona, California
(415) 961-1855

Gallery Hours
Tuesday: 11am-5pm
Wednesday: 11am-5pm
Saturday: 5pm-9pm
Sunday: 11am-5pm
www.theprogressgallery.org
momo@theprogressgallery.com

"Knot" A Group Exhibition at MIM Gallery Los Angeles will Include a Series of Performances

Knot
October 1st – November 27th,
Opening on Friday, October 1st from 6-9pm

Group exhibition, “Knot”, including a series of performances
Press Photos
here

“Knot” denotes a cluster of persons or things, a group, a protuberant lump or swelling in tissue.

Iva Gueorguieva’s 25 ft. tapestry suspended on concrete and rebar runs the length of the gallery space splitting it in two, evoking the silhouette of a long dinner table; although the loose tapestry lacks rigidity, and a wine glass would instantly tip over and spill its nurturing contents. Gueorguieva has invited four artists: Elena Dorfman, John Emison, Josephine Wister Faure and Georgina Reskala to gather around this improbable table.

The work of this group of artists is intensely focused on physical manipulation and the disruption of surface. Through the act of interruption, the visual experience opens to the haptic, the historical and the metaphysical realms. Dorfman and Reskala crumple, prick and interfere with the photographic surface in various ways, each seeking, through intervention in materiality, evidences, echoes, whispers and glitches that marry the past with the present. Emison uses letter carving techniques to incise images in the flesh of found rocks, which are already sculpted and rounded by rivers and wind. Wister Faure pierces a wall with eyes that weep. Gueorguieva attempts to knot multiple iterations by which to visualize incomprehensible time, loss and memory. In each artist’s work, an oscillation of meaning is inherent, as are the ephemeral, the receding and the unwitnessable. The collective artworks offer suggestions through method, proximity, juxtapositions, reversals and repetitions.

K. N. O. T.
T. O. N. K
N O. T. K
K. O. N. T

-G.R

Notes on artists: 

Elena Dorfman crumples, nails, tears, punctures and physically alters the paper as a means to decorate, distort, or decimate. Looping continuously through analog and digital processes, Dorfman’s crumpled original objects are also preserved, though their state of precarity is visible. The evidence of destruction is in our hands but who, ultimately, is responsible?

John Emison painstakingly adds information. Self-taught, he carves into the surface of found boulders in order to contemplate life and death. Evoking round bellies, the surfaces he engraves seems to heave and breathe. The carefully incised and painted strips of geometric patterns are reminiscent of body piercings and flesh markings.

Josephine Wister Faure made Weeping Wall in 2015, in response to the terrorist shootings in her native Paris. The wall sheds tears that trickle silently down, a surrogate portrait, an impotent witness. Despite the artifice the rhythm of the holes’ insistent production is potent enough, a contradiction able both to condemn and to incite empathy.

Georgina Reskala conceals and reveals information by reducing legibility in the printing process through multiple impressions, mimicking the act of remembering and forgetting. Crumpling the paper prior to exposure further deforms the terrain. When Reskala prints on linen and unthreads, she re-enacts the way history gets passed on (adding, omitting), mixing absence for presences.

List of performers:

We have scheduled several performances during the 7-week course of the exhibition, providing further opportunities for shifts in focus, attention, and interpretation. With each happening the atmosphere will inevitably change, affecting the ambient qualities of the space, engendering varied and revived experiences around the works assembled in the exhibition.

October 1st:

Evening Star

A durational performance by Alison D’Amato in collaboration with John Emison
https://imaginedtheatres.com/the-sacred-something/

Bitch

Bitchcraft
https://bitchmusic.com/

October 23rd:

Net that Caught a Man

A performance by Barry Del Sherman and Jennifer Stefanisko

Sherman and Stefanisko explore the complications of wrongdoing remembered in a piece written by Wesley Walker

Michele O’Marah, Tim Jackson and Jonesy, film screening of Faustus’s Children (2006)
www.micheleomarah.com
klowdenmann.com/artist/jonesy/bio/

Dave Cull, poetry/ essay reading

Kelly Marie Martin and Erin Schneider folk duo

October 30th, 2021

Music and video screenings by Unthem collective

unthem.org

 

Artist Select Biographies:

Elena Dorfman (Born 1965, Boston, MA, ) has had her photographs and video installations exhibited in both the U.S. and worldwide at venues, including the Fondazione Prada, Milan, Italy; Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy; the Triennale di Milano, Milan, Italy; MoMA, New York, NY; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; Williams College Art Museum, Williamstown, MA; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA, and The Canadian Center for Architecture, Montreal, Canada. Her work is held in numerous collections including the Denver Art Museum, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Cincinnati Art Museum, Palm Springs Art Museum, Newcomb Art Museum of Tulane University, Williams College Art Museum, and the Bass Art Museum. She was a finalist for the BMW Prize, Paris Photo. Her work is the subject of three monographs, “Empire Falling” (Damiani, 2013), “Fandomania: Characters & Cosplay” (Aperture, 2007), “Still Lovers” (Channel, 2005).

www.elenadorfman.com

 

John Emison (born 1987 in New Orleans, LA; raised in Northern California) studied art and anthropology at Colgate University (BA 2009) and Brandeis University, and sculpture at Tyler School of Art and Architecture, Temple University (MFA 2014). Solo exhibitions include SPRING / BREAK Art Show, Los Angeles, CA; Ms Barbers (with Jamie Felton), Los Angeles, CA; and Central Park, Los Angeles, CA. Group exhibitions and projects include Dan Graham 3.0, Los Angeles, CA; Monte Vista Projects, Los Angeles, CA; PAM, Los Angeles, CA; Tiger Strikes Asteroid, Los Angeles, CA; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA; and 808 Gallery, Boston University, MA. In 2019 he received the Central Park Artist Award.

www.johnemison.org

 

Joséphine Wister Faure (born 1973, Paris, France) graduated from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux Arts of Paris. She has had several solo exhibitions at Until Then, Paris; Keystone Art Space, Los Angeles, CA; Denk Gallery, Los Angeles CA and Silencio Club, Paris. She has also taken part in various group exhibitions at Fondation d’Entreprise Ricard, Paris; Locust Art projects, Miami FL; Torrance Art Museum, Torrance CA, Brand Library Art Center, Glendale CA; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing and Neues Museum, Berlin.

www.josephinewisterfaure.com

 

Georgina Reskala (born in Mexico City, Mexican-Lebanese) Shortlisted for the Hariban Award in Kyoto Japan, 2017. Solo exhibitions include: PDX CONTEMPORARY ART, Portland, OR; K.OSS Contemporary Detroit, MI; The Meyer Simpson Library, Oakland, CA; Contornos, Mexico City; Quotidian, San Francisco, CA. Public collections: The Portland Art Museum; the Frye Art Museum (Seattle, WA); The Jordan Schnizter Museum of Art, University of Oregon; Cassilhaus Collection, Chapel Hill, NC and Museo Comunitario de Arte, Zacatecas, Mexico.

www.ginareskala.com

 

Iva Gueorguieva (born 1974, Sofia, Bulgaria) has had solo exhibitions and projects at UTA Artist Space, Los Angeles; Miles McEnery gallery, New York, NY; Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, Los Angeles, CA; ACME, Los Angeles, CA; Pomona Museum of Art, Claremont, CA. Her work is included in the collections of Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, MN; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, CA; University Art Museum, California State University, Long Beach, CA; Art, Design and Architecture Museum at UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA; Tang Teaching Museum, Saratoga Springs, NY and Benton Museum of Art, Claremont, CA. She was included in Variations: Conversations in and around Abstract Painting, curated by Franklin Sirmans, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA. She lives and works in Los Angeles.

www.ivagueorguieva.com

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Self Sovereignty - A Group Exhibition Curated by Jina Imani Celebrating Juneteenth

Untitled-1.jpg

Juneteenth is a celebration of the commemoration of the ending of slavery in the Unitedly States. To honor the lives of those who have come before us and those who are here.

Self Sovereignty a group art exhibition curated by Jina Imani in collaboration with Music Changing Lives and Catalyst Cares will feature 12 talented artists the Inland Empire and other areas of Southern California.

The Juneteenth celebration will take place on Friday, June 18th from 5-9 with a Block Party and Saturday, June 19th from 11am to 4pm with a festival thrown by the city of Long Beach. Works of art will be on view both days. There will be live music, face painting, arts and crafts and fun for the whole family, all ages are welcome. Music Changing Lives and Catalyst Cares invite you to celebrate Juneteenth with us! Sign up now on eventbrite.com/e/self-sovereignty.


Participating Artists

Mariah Green @mariahgreenarts
Jonah Elijah @jonah.elijah
Juwaun Mccary @jaavreates
Duan Kellum @duan_and_only
Orson Woodcock @artwork_by_orson
Amina AmXn @aminaamxn
Xavier Williams @yo_zay
Sara Edwards @sarasunshines_
Alexandra Yvonne @alexandrayvonne
A’Kailah Byrd-Greene @artbyakailah
Leila A. @Leilaa.creates
Jina Imani @jinaimani
Dj- @naythan2it

Yiwei Gallery Presents For the Sake of…the Artifice!

See_me_as_i_do_edited.jpg

Yiwei Gallery is pleased to present the American debut exhibition of Oakland-based Chinese artist Zhang Mengjiao. This exhibition includes two latest photography series from Zhang, Flat Power, and We Don’t Speak the Same Language, along with a unique sound installation. 

Investigating how beauty was portrayed in traditional Chinese archives, and how it is conceived in Chinese social media today because of globalization, Zhang realizes that the gaze and constraint on women have remained the same. In Flat Power, Zhang makes masks from materials that represent the idea of beauty and transforms this performance into a 2D photograph.  By presenting beauty as a constructed idea, she asks the question of how one can subvert the dominant discourse. 

Brought back to a zoo by her childhood nostalgia, Zhang did not feel the same about these idealized human-constructed habitats for animals anymore. In We Don’t Speak the Same Language, Zhang turns the lens to the artificial landscapes in a zoo and explores deeper how artifice emerges from a photographic process.

Zhang Mengjiao received her MFA degree from San Francisco Art Institute in 2020. She works with photography, sculptural installation, and performance video. Zhang’s practice often looks inward at her own identity as a woman of color, Chinese immigrant,  artist, and human, and outward at social issues. 

Yiwei Gallery Presents
For the Sake of…the Artifice!
June 18 - July 3, 2021

Curated by Yiwei Lu

Kylin Gallery
8634 Wilshire Blvd,
Beverly Hills, CA 90211



To make an appointment, visit here
For inquiries, please contact YiweiGallery@gmail.com