Artist Stephanie Syjuco to Transform Gallery at Amon Carter Museum of American Art with New Installation Challenging Mythologies of the American West

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Artist Stephanie Syjuco to Transform Gallery at Amon Carter Museum of American Art with New Installation Challenging Mythologies of the American West Artist Stephanie Syjuco to Transform Gallery at Amon Carter Museum of American Art with New Installation Challenging Mythologies of the American West Open January 2022, expansive multimedia exhibition Stephanie Syjuco: Double Vision deconstructs histories of settler expansion through works from the Carter’s collection Fort Worth, TX, July 27, 2021— The Amon Carter Museum of American Art (the Carter) today announced that artist Stephanie Syjuco will create an expansive multimedia exhibition in the Museum’s first-floor galleries, opening January 15, 2022. Stephanie Syjuco: Double Vision will present a newly commissioned, site-specific installation by the artist that uses digital editing and archive excavation to transform images of renowned works from the Carter’s collection and reconsider mythologies of the American West. Reframing iconic works by American artists including Albert Bierstadt, Frederic Remington, and others, Syjuco’s work will highlight the constructed nature of historical narratives and reveal how these works and their presentation can perpetuate colonial lore. New photographs by Syjuco will be mounted on two digitally altered landscapes rendered as murals on the gallery’s 50-foot-wide and 15-foot-tall walls with floor-to-ceiling fabric curtains that together create an immersive, 360-degree experience. “Since its founding, the Carter has worked with living artists to present the best of American art and creativity across media,” said Andrew J. Walker, Executive Director of the Carter. “Syjuco’s probing multimedia practice explores national identity and institutional storytelling and finds a natural match in the Carter’s world-class collection of art of the American West. Her installation will offer a thoughtful critique of the ways in which artists have participated in developing mythologies of the West and ask us to consider the role of museums in preserving, presenting, and interpreting their artworks.” The mural on the north wall will be a chromolithograph print from the Carter’s collection, The Storm in the Rocky Mountains (ca. 1868), by Bierstadt that has been doubled in places. A Rorschach-esque mirror of itself, the image underscores the projection of promise, fantasy, and opportunity historically placed on western land. Additionally, the mural image will extend beyond the border of the landscape to reveal color-management by both artist and museum—the printer’s color checking as well as a digital color bar from the Carter’s photo studio. Mounted on top of the vinyl mural will be images Syjuco took of White male hands depicted in works throughout the Museum’s western art holdings often in the act of controlling, whether pointing, grasping, or handling items such as reins, ropes, and weapons. The mural on the south wall will feature a different chromolithograph from the Carter’s Bierstadt holdings, The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak (1869). The image will be rendered in chroma key, a kelly-green color often associated with green screens, signaling space that will be manipulated in post- production. This vibrant tonal quality alludes to the pre-existing inhabitants, communities, and infrastructures that are “edited out” in many narratives of western settler expansion. On top of the vinyl, Syjuco will mount large printed photographs of Remington sculptures from the Carter’s collection that she will carefully stage to contain photographic and cataloging tools often hidden from public view—color correction cards, identification tags, and measuring devices. The works will be intentionally captured from rear angles against a dark black background to remove them—literally and metaphorically—from their customary pedestals. “Syjuco’s rigorous and responsive practice employs deep research, critical humor, and imaginative collaboration to investigate narratives of national and racial identity,” said Kristen Gaylord, Assistant Curator of Photographs. “Her site-specific work with the Carter collection will expose the multiple layers of ‘handling’ that contribute to an imperialist understanding of the West, from the artists’ fabrication of their artworks to the Museum’s staging and presentation of them. By bringing attention to the conventions and assumptions implicit in each of these platforms, she challenges us to consider what stories we tell about our nation, and what purposes and peoples they serve.” Stephanie Syjuco Stephanie Syjuco (b. 1974) works in photography, sculpture, and installation, moving from handmade and craft-inspired mediums to digital editing and archive excavations. Using critical wit and collaborative co-creation, her projects leverage open-source systems, shareware logic, and flows of capital in order to investigate issues of economies and empire. Recently, she has focused on how photography and image-based processes are implicated in the construction of racialized, exclusionary narratives of history and citizenship. From 2019 to 2020 she was a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow at the National Museum of American History in Washington, DC. She is featured in Season 9 of the acclaimed PBS documentary series Art21: Art in the Twenty-First Century. Recent exhibitions include Being: New Photography at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Public Knowledge, at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States, at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis; and Disrupting Craft: Renwick Invitational 2018, at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Born in the Philippines, Syjuco received her MFA from Stanford University and BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. She is the recipient of a 2014 Guggenheim Fellowship Award, a 2009 Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors Award, and a 2020 Tiffany Foundation Award. Her work has been exhibited widely, including at MoMA/P.S.1, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, ZKM Center for Art and Technology, the California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, the 12th Havana Biennial, and the 2015 Asian Art Biennial (Taiwan), among others. A longtime educator, she is an Associate Professor in Sculpture at the University of California, Berkeley. She lives in Oakland, California. Image: Works in progress by Stephanie Syjuco (details), vinyl with dye sublimation prints on aluminum, 2021, courtesy of Stephanie Syjuco About the Amon Carter Museum of American Art Located in the heart of Fort Worth’s Cultural District, the Amon Carter Museum of American Art (the Carter) is a dynamic cultural resource that provides unique access and insight into the history and future of American creativity through its expansive exhibitions and programming. The Carter’s preeminent collection includes masterworks by legendary American artists such as Ruth Asawa, Alexander Calder, Frederic Church, Stuart Davis, Robert Duncanson, Thomas Eakins, Georgia O’Keeffe, Jacob Lawrence, and John Singer Sargent, as well as one of the country’s foremost repositories of American photography. In addition to its innovative exhibition program and engagement with artists working today, the museum’s premier primary research collection and leading conservation program make it a must-see destination for art lovers and scholars of all ages nationwide. Admission is always free. To learn more about the Carter, visit cartermuseum.org. Media Contacts: Kathryn Hanlon-Hall / Francesca Kielb Resnicow + Associates [email protected]/[email protected] 212.671.5179 / 212.671.5152 Kimberly Daniell Head of Communications and Marketing Amon Carter Museum of American Art [email protected] 817.989.5067 ### .
Recommended publications
  • UCSC Biobibliography - Rick Prelinger 9/21/19, 0619
    UCSC Biobibliography - Rick Prelinger 9/21/19, 0619 Curriculum Vitae September 21, 2019 (last update 2018-01-03) Rick Prelinger Professor Porter College [email protected] RESEARCH INTERESTS Critical archival studies; personal and institutional recordkeeping; access to the cultural and historical record; media and social change; appropriation, remix and reuse; useful cinema (advertising, educational, industrial and sponsored film); amateur and home movies; participatory documentary; digital scholarship; cinema and public history; cinema and cultural geography; urban history and film; history, sociology and culture of wireless communication; media archaeology; community archives and libraries; cultural repositories in the Anthropocene. Research and other activities described at http://www.prelinger.com. TEACHING INTERESTS Useful cinema and ephemeral media; amateur and home movies; found footage; history of television; personal media; critical archival studies; access to cultural record EMPLOYMENT HISTORY Jul 1 2017 - Present Professor, Department of Film & Digital Media, UC Santa Cruz Jul 1999 - Present Director of Moving Images, Consultant, Advisor, and other positions (intermittent between 1999-2016). Currently pro bono consultant and member of the Board of Directors, Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. 1984 - Present Founder and President, Prelinger Associates, Inc. (succeeded by Prelinger Archives LLC) Fall 2013 - Spring 2017 Acting Associate Professor, Department of Film & Digital Media, UC Santa Cruz Oct 3 2005 - Dec 2006 Head, Open Content Alliance, a group of nonprofit organizations, university libraries, archives, publishers, corporations and foundations dedicated to digitizing books and other cultural resources in an open-access environment. OCA was headquartered at Internet Archive and supported by Yahoo, Microsoft Corporation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Fall 1998 - Winter 1999 Instructor, MFA Design Program, School of Visual Arts, New York, N.Y.
    [Show full text]
  • AMANDA CURRERI GALLERY REPRESENTATION Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA Born
    AMANDA CURRERI ACURRERIB@ GMAIL. COM / ACURRERI@ UNM. EDU WWW. AMANDACURRERI. COM GALLERY REPRESENTATION Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA Born: Boston, MA 1977. Lives in Albuquerque, NM. EDUCATION 2007 MFA in Painting and Drawing, California College of the Arts, San Francisco, CA 2000 BA in Sociology, Peace and Justice Studies, Tufts University, Medford, MA 2000 BFA in Painting and Drawing, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA SOLO PROJECTS & EXHIBITIONS 2019 WSMGR (Womens’ Suffrage Mobile Garment Rack), Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH 2018 COUNTRY HOUSE_, Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2016 The Calmest of Us Would Be Lunatics, Rochester Art Center, Rochester, MN (catalogue) 2016 Eff, Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2013 The Aunque, Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2010 Occupy the Empty, Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2007 Make New Friends, Romer Young Gallery, San Francisco, CA COLLABORATIVE EXHIBITIONS 2015 Demos: Wapato Correctional Facility, c3initiave, Portland, OR (Two-year public project as part of collaborative working-group, ERNEST; included gallery exhibition, artist book publication, print edition, video, and round-table event) SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2019 Archive as Action, Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati, OH (three-person exhibition) Queer California: Untold Stories, Oakland Museum of California, Oakland, CA Resistance, Morlan Gallery, Transylvania University, Lexington, KY 2018 Somatic Gesture, Minnesota Street Project, San Francisco, CA One Sentence Exhibition, curated
    [Show full text]
  • STEPHANIE SYJUCO B. 1974 Manila, Phillipines Lives and Works in San Francisco, CA Education 2005 Stanford University, M.F.A. 19
    STEPHANIE SYJUCO b. 1974 Manila, Phillipines Lives and works in San Francisco, CA Education 2005 Stanford University, M.F.A. 1995 San Francisco Art Institute, B.F.A. Selected Solo Exhibitions 2020 (Forthcoming) Stephanie Syjuco: Citizens, Hartell Gallery, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY (Forthcoming) Stephanie Syjuco: The Visible Invisible, Blaffer Art Museum, TX 2019 Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States, The Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, St. Louis, MO Stephanie Syjuco: Recent Work, University of Kentucky Art Museum, Lexington, KY Spectral City, RLWindow, RYAN LEE, New York, NY 2018 "I AM AN...,", Cantor Art Center, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 2017 CITIZENS, RYAN LEE, New York, NY Red Banner, RLWindow, RYAN LEE, New York, NY 2016 Neutral Calibration Studies (Ornament + Crime), Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco, CA Ornament + Crime (Redux), RLProject, RYAN LEE, New York, NY 2014 Market Forces, Temple Contemporary, Philadelphia, PA American Rubble (Lancaster Avenue), Haverford College, Ardmore, PA FREE TEXTS, Ulrich Museum of Art at Wichita State University, KS Modern Ruins (Popular Cannibals), Recology Artist in Residence Program, San Francisco, CA FREE TEXTS, Galerie Joseph Tang, Paris, FR 2013 RAIDERS, Ryan Lee Gallery, project space, New York, NY 2012 Montalvo Historical Fabrications and Souvenirs, project commission in collaboration with Michael Arcega as Las Marianas, Montalvo Art Center, Saratoga, CA RAIDERS Redux, Catharine Clark Gallery Project Space, New York, NY 2011 Currents Series: Stephanie Syjuco: Pattern Migration,
    [Show full text]
  • Widening Circles | Photographs by Reginald Eldridge, Jr
    JOAN MITCHELL FOUNDATION MITCHELL JOAN WIDENING CIRCLES CIRCLES WIDENING | PHOTOGRAPHS REGINALD BY ELDRIDGE, JR. Widening Circles Portraits from the Joan Mitchell Foundation Artist Community at 25 Years PHOTOGRAPHS BY REGINALD ELDRIDGE, JR. Sonya Kelliher-Combs Shervone Neckles Widening Circles Portraits from the Joan Mitchell Foundation Artist Community at 25 Years PHOTOGRAPHS BY REGINALD ELDRIDGE, JR. Widening Circles: Portraits from the Joan Mitchell Foundation Artist Community at 25 Years © 2018 Joan Mitchell Foundation Cover image: Joan Mitchell, Faded Air II, 1985 Oil on canvas, 102 x 102 in. (259.08 x 259.08 cm) Private collection, © Estate of Joan Mitchell Published on the occasion of the exhibition of the same name at the Joan Mitchell Foundation in New York, December 6, 2018–May 31, 2019 Catalog designed by Melissa Dean, edited by Jenny Gill, with production support by Janice Teran All photos © 2018 Reginald Eldridge, Jr., excluding pages 5 and 7 All artwork pictured is © of the artist Andrea Chung I live my life in widening circles that reach out across the world. I may not complete this last one but I give myself to it. – RAINER MARIA RILKE Throughout her life, poetry was an important source of inspiration and solace to Joan Mitchell. Her mother was a poet, as were many close friends. We know from well-worn books in Mitchell’s library that Rilke was a favorite. Looking at the artist portraits and stories that follow in this book, we at the Foundation also turned to Rilke, a poet known for his letters of advice to a young artist.
    [Show full text]
  • Community Conversations – San Francisco Museum of Modern
    NEH Application Cover Sheet (GW-254115) Community Conversations PROJECT DIRECTOR Dr. Dominic Willsdon E-mail: [email protected] Leanne and George Roberts Curator of Educatio Phone: 4153574101 151 Third Street Fax: San Francisco, CA 94103-3159 USA Field of expertise: Philosophy, General INSTITUTION San Francisco Museum of Modern Art San Francisco, CA 94103-3159 APPLICATION INFORMATION Title: Public Knowledge Grant period: From 2017-04-01 to 2019-03-30 Project field(s): Arts, General Description of project: SFMOMA is planning a new initiative entitled Public Knowledge which will convene artists, humanities scholars and diverse communities in an extended public inquiry into the cultural impact of urban change. The initiative will produce a series of public programs and publishing outputs extending over more than two years. Public Knowledge will be organized in collaboration with the San Francisco Public Library and will take place primarily at library branches in San Francisco’s neighborhoods, at a time when the city is undergoing profound changes to its public culture, brought about by the rapid growth of the technology industry. The goal of Public Knowledge is to: connect knowledge and understanding from the humanities to current conditions of urban change in US cities; encourage public dialogue, via the humanities, on the cultural impact of urban change; and create compelling and accessible ways to present this dialogue through the work of SFMOMA artists dedicated to public engagement. BUDGET Outright Request 460,000.00 Cost Sharing 383,860.00 Matching Request 0.00 Total Budget 843,860.00 Total NEH 460,000.00 GRANT ADMINISTRATOR Ms. Elizabeth Waller E-mail: [email protected] 151 Third Street Phone: 4153572865 San Francisco, CA 94103-3159 Fax: USA San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Public Knowledge Table of Contents A.
    [Show full text]
  • Michael Raymon Nemesio Libunao Arcega
    M I C H A E L A R C E G A 1769 OAKDALE AVE. SF, CA 94124 ⚫ [email protected] ⚫ WWW.ARCEGA.US …………………………………………………………………………………………………… CURRICULUM VITAE: Education: 2009 Stanford University, Stanford, CA, MFA degree in Art Practice 1999 San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, CA, BFA degree in Interdisciplinary Studies Solo Exhibitions: 2019 A Few Hours into the Future, Unicorn Centre for Art, Beijing, China 2018 Auspicious Clouds | Heavy Fog, Permanent public art commission, Chinatown- SFAC, San Francisco, CA 2018 Anting Anting | Magic Objects, Thacher Gallery at USF, San Francisco, CA 2017 False Falls: A Meditation on Truth, CCSF Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2016 A Scene from the Anthropocene, Linfield Gallery, McMinnville, OR 2015 ESPYLACOPA: a place, Johansson Projects, Oakland, CA 2015 Recologica: A Nacireman Excavation, Recology Artist in Residency Program, San Francisco, CA 2015 Baby, Corps of Rediscovery, Three Rivers Arts Festival, Pittsburgh, PA 2014 Baby (Medium for Intercultural Navigation), SFAC gallery window, San Francisco, CA 2014 Rerereading Arrangements, (in collaboration with Chris Brown) Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, CA 2013 Code-switching: Ya3ni, a conversation about things, Al Riwaq Art Space, Adliya, Bahrain 2012 Baby and the Nacirema, The Luggage Store Gallery, San Francisco, CA Montalvo Historical Fabrications and Souvenirs, (In collaboration with Stephanie Syjuco) Montalvo Art Center Project Space, Saratoga, CA 2010 Valencia Street Posts, Permanent public art commission- SFAC, San Francisco, CA 2010 omg, Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles, CA 2009 The Collaspe {sic}, Marx & Zavattero, San Francisco, CA 2009 Overlook, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, HI 2008 Misusefulness, Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, New York, NY 2008 FUTILITARIANISM, Nu’unanu Gallery at Marks Garage, Honolulu, HI 2008 Built for Life: Secret Deaths, B-So Space Gallery, CSU Chico, CA 2007 Homing Pidgin, de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA.
    [Show full text]
  • Screening Guide to Season Nine Art in the Twenty-First Century Screening Guide | 2
    Screening Guide to Season Nine Art in the Twenty-First Century Screening Guide | 2 Getting Started About This Screening Guide producing now. A biennial event for television, This Screening Guide is designed to help you Art21 produces a series of one-hour episodes plan an event using Season 9 of Art in the each season. Art in the Twenty-First Century Twenty-First Century. For each of the three is broadcast nationwide on PBS in the United Educators’ Guide episodes in Season 9, this guide includes: States and is distributed internationally. to Season Nine • Episode Synopsis Through in-depth profiles and interviews, the se- • Artist Biographies ries reveals the inspiration, vision, and techniques • Screening Resources behind the creative works of some of today’s — Ideas for Screening-Based Events most accomplished contemporary artists. Art21 — Screening-Based Activities travels around the world to film contemporary — Discussion Questions artists—from painters and photographers to Educators’ Guide — Links to Online Resources installation artists, video artists, and sound art- The Season 9 68-page color manual includes ists—in their own spaces and in their own words. information on artists, before-viewing, The result is a unique opportunity to experience while-viewing, and after-viewing discussion About Art21 Screening Events first-hand the complexity of the artistic process- questions, as well as classroom activities and Public screenings of the Art in the Twenty-First es—from inception to finished product—behind curriculum connections. Century series illuminate the creative process- today’s most thought-provoking art. FREE | art21.org/guides es of today’s visual artists in order to deepen audiences’ appreciation and understanding of contemporary art and ideas.
    [Show full text]
  • STEPHANIE SYJUCO Born in Manila, Philippines, 1974 Lives and Works in Oakland, California
    STEPHANIE SYJUCO Born in Manila, Philippines, 1974 Lives and works in Oakland, California EDUCATION 2005 MFA Stanford University 1995 BFA San Francisco Art Institute 1994 New York Studio Program, Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design (in affiliation with Parsons School of Design and NYU), New York, New York SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2021 Native Resolution, Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco, California Diversity Pictures (Multi-Ethnic People Smiling), University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii Vanishing Point (Overlay), Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, Maryland 2020 Stephanie Syjuco: The Visible Invisible, Blaffer Art Museum University of Houston, Houston, Texas 2019 Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, Missouri Stephanie Syjuco: Recent Work, University of Kentucky Museum of Art, Lexington, Kentucky 2018 I AM AN…, Cantor Arts Center, Stanford, California 2017 CITIZENS, Ryan Lee Gallery, New York, New York 2016 Neutral Calibration Studies (Ornament + Crime), Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco, California Ornament + Crime (Redux), Ryan Lee Project Room Gallery, New York, New York Dazzle Camouflage: Hiding in Plain Sight, Sun Valley Art Center, Sun Valley, Idaho 2014 Market Forces, Temple Contemporary, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania American Rubble (Lancaster Avenue), Haverford College, Ardmore, Pennsylvania FREE TEXTS, Ulrich Museum of Art at Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas Modern Ruins (Popular Cannibals), Recology Studio/Galley, San Francisco, California 2013 FREE TEXTS,
    [Show full text]
  • Stephanie Syjuco: Native Resolution March 6 – April 10, 2021
    Above: Stephanie Syjuco, Pileup (Brass Bells), 2021. Stephanie Syjuco: Native Resolution March 6 – April 10, 2021 Opening reception: Saturday, March 6 from 12 – 6pm; social distancing and health protocols are in effect San Francisco, CA: Catharine Clark Gallery continues its 2021 program with Native Resolution, a solo exhibition of new work by multi- disciplinary artist Stephanie Syjuco, on view March 6- April 10, 2021. Syjuco’s highly anticipated presentation expands on the artist’s research into the problematic construction of American history and concurrent histories of photography that inform deeply biased structures foregrounding whiteness as a normative subject. Borrowing from the visual language of photography, anthropology, and museum archives, Native Resolution examines how these disciplines go hand-in-hand with producing and proliferating images and documents of exclusion, generating a skewed collection that mirrors an American imagination built on ethnographic record and cultural Othering. Catharine Clark Gallery 248 Utah Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 TEL 415.399.1439 www.cclarkgallery.com 1 In technological terms, “native resolution” refers to the inherent amount of information in a digital image, a terminology that Syjuco also employs to consider how the American record, when looking outside of itself, is inherently a low-resolution, incomplete endeavor. At turns deflecting the viewer’s gaze or redirecting it onto the act of viewing itself, the works on view question the ability of the archive and photography itself to be neutral cultural narrators. By extension, Syjuco rephotographs national archives and institutional records as a means of examining how photography and imaging technologies created permanent historical value through flawed forms of knowledge.
    [Show full text]
  • The Bma Offers Visits by Appointment for Small Groups Beginning Saturday, February 6
    THE BMA OFFERS VISITS BY APPOINTMENT FOR SMALL GROUPS BEGINNING SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6 BALTIMORE, MD (January 29, 2021)—The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) today announced that small groups of up to eight people will be able to reserve time to see a limited selection of exhibitions and galleries from Saturday, February 6 through Sunday, March 7. Each group will have 90 minutes to see two exhibitions that opened in fall 2020 that will be closing in March: A Perfect Power: Motherhood and African Art (closing March 7) and Stripes and Stars: Reclaiming Lakota Independence (closing March 28). Beginning Sunday, February 17, visitors can also see Stephanie Syjuco: Vanishing Point (Overlay), a three-part installation presented in the front of the building, upper East Lobby, and European Art galleries rotunda. The museum remains otherwise closed to the public to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. A reopening date has not yet been confirmed. Small group reservations can be made online for BMA Members beginning Monday, February 1 and the general public beginning Wednesday, February 3 at artbma.org. The galleries will be open Wednesdays through Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and appointment times are 10 a.m., 11:45 a.m., 1:30 p.m., and 3:15 p.m. Outside, no reservation is needed to see the BMA’s Sculpture Gardens, which will continue to remain open Wednesdays through Sundays, from 10 a.m. to dusk, if weather conditions permit. Visitors can also see SHAN Wallace: The Avenue, a new five-part mural by the Baltimore-based artist that is covering the fence on the west side of the building.
    [Show full text]
  • STEPHANIE SYJUCO B. 1974 Manila, Phillipines Lives and Works in San Francisco, CA
    STEPHANIE SYJUCO b. 1974 Manila, Phillipines Lives and works in San Francisco, CA Education 2005 Stanford University, M.F.A. 1995 San Francisco Art Institute, B.F.A. Selected Solo Exhibitions 2022 (forthcoming) Stephanie Syjuco: Double Vision, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, TX 2021 Out of the Camera: Beyond Photography, Chapter Three: Stephanie Syjuco, Commons Gallery, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI Stephanie Syjuco: Vanishing Point (Overlay), Baltimore Museum of Art, MD 2020 Stephanie Syjuco: The Visible Invisible, Blaffer Art Museum, TX Stephanie Syjuco: Citizens, Hartell Gallery, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 2019 Stephanie Syjuco: Rogue States, The Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, St. Louis, MO Stephanie Syjuco: Recent Work, University of Kentucky Art Museum, Lexington, KY Spectral City, RLWindow, RYAN LEE, New York, NY 2018 "I AM AN...,", Cantor Art Center, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 2017 CITIZENS, RYAN LEE, New York, NY Red Banner, RLWindow, RYAN LEE, New York, NY 2016 Neutral Calibration Studies (Ornament + Crime), Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco, CA Ornament + Crime (Redux), RLProject, RYAN LEE, New York, NY 2014 Market Forces, Temple Contemporary, Philadelphia, PA American Rubble (Lancaster Avenue), Haverford College, Ardmore, PA FREE TEXTS, Ulrich Museum of Art at Wichita State University, KS Modern Ruins (Popular Cannibals), Recology Artist in Residence Program, San Francisco, CA FREE TEXTS, Galerie Joseph Tang, Paris, FR 2013 RAIDERS, Ryan Lee Gallery, project space, New York,
    [Show full text]
  • Stephanie Syjuco San Francisco, CA: Catharine Clark Gallery Presents Neutral Calibration Studies (Ornament + Crime), a Solo Exhibition Of
    Stephanie Syjuco San Francisco, CA: Catharine Clark Gallery presents Neutral Calibration Studies (Ornament + Crime), a solo exhibition of new work by Stephanie Syjuco. On view June 4 – August 27, Neutral Calibration Studies 2016, the exhibit features works across a wide swath of media that touch on the legacy of historical colonialism, fictional (Ornament + Crime) fabrications, and perceptual studies of photographic June 4 – August 27, 2016 “neutrality.” Syjuco employs unlikely materials with ingenious vision—found 3-D models, publicly-sourced audio Join us for an opening with the artist files, “ethnic” carpets downloaded from eBay, photo shoots on Saturday, June 4 staged with mass-produced fashion garments, and a large- from 3 - 5 pm scale “still life” installation—to create a perceptual clash that bridges historical representation with contemporary forms. Syjuco will be present for an opening reception on Saturday, June 4, from 3 – 5 pm, with an artist talk at 2:30 pm. Syjuco splits the exhibition into two sections: the front gallery focuses on a stark black and white palette, while the back gallery contains a physical collage of colorful images and objects that attempts to “color calibrate” itself against a giant neutral gray backdrop. In the black and white area, framed photographic images from the artist’s Cargo Cults series revisits historical ethnographic studio portraiture via fictional display. Syjuco used mass-manufactured goods purchased from American shopping malls and restyled them to highlight the popular fantasies associated with the current craze for ethnic patterns. Purchased on credit cards and returned for full refund after the photoshoots, the items hail from the distant lands of Forever21, H&M, American Apparel, Urban Stephanie Syjuco, Cargo Cults: Cover Up (2016).
    [Show full text]