02.23 2016

PLEASE COME IN

March 4th – March 27th, 2016

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Opening Friday, March 4th   7pm – 10pm

PLEASE COME IN is conceived as a porous environment, in which visitors weave across boundaries between the work of art and the surrounding space, penetrate immersive interiors, and transgress frames. Featuring five artists – Keenan Bennett, Stephanie Elden, Olivia Jones, Daria McMeans, and Yue Nakayama – the exhibition is a web of things that alternately enclose the viewer and open onto their environment.

In her essay “Too Much World: Is the Internet Dead?” artist and critic Hito Steyerl writes that “cinema has exploded into the world to become partly real.” In PLEASE COME IN, artists figure this explosion via screens that surround and interrogate as agents; surreal objects that make room for the viewer or impose themselves on lived space; and constructed environments that are brief alternatives to or escapes from apparent reality. While not all of the artists work directly with cinematic media, the featured videos, sculptural objects, and immersive installations all explore the confused distinction between our lives and their mediations.

Keenan Bennett’s research-based practice explores a nexus of concerns that include marginalized histories, monumentality, and youth subcultures. His immersive multimedia installations trace the cracks and silences of history and toy with the affects of absence and lack. Dense plays of light and shadow, symbolic imagery, and perceptual effects animate Bennett’s mythical, unlocatable situations.

Stephanie Elden’s “hoop house” characterizes her artistic trajectory, which foregrounds both the complex relationships and the innate tensions between natural and unnatural elements. In Elden’s artwork, manufactured space highlights dialectical processes between the artificiality of manmade materials and the organic fluidity of water.

Olivia Jones utilizes fabrics, wood, and steel, mining the aesthetic registers of industrial design and abstract art, to create works of art that fluidly combine architecture, sculpture, and painting. Jones’s alluringly tactile and formally rigorous objects unsettle their own visual appeal through odd contortions that evoke the uncanny.

Combining a minimal aesthetic with a near-documentary approach, Daria McMeans blends film’s stylistic classifications and opens up new relational modes by training the camera on herself and her own family. McMeans’s enveloping three channel installation provokes a range of emotions – from empathy to discomfort – as it mobilizes personal experiences and explores the possibility of conversations about race and lineage.

Yue Nakayama devises her visual literature based on her personal writings about politics, recurring ordinary or historical events, and mass media. Her images and performances are full of humor, an important trait in Nakayama’s art: firstly as an iconoclastic mechanism that challenges taboos against entertainment in contemporary art, and secondly as a disavowal of excessively deadpan topics.

PLEASE COME IN is the third exhibition in the Incubation Series, a curatorial collaboration between graduate students in the Fine Arts and History of Art programs at the University of Pennsylvania.  The Incubation Series takes its name from the idea that graduate school is a laboratory where one can test out new ways of thinking. Fostered by Keenan Bennett, Haely Chang, Kirsten Gill, and Hilary R. Whitham, the program aims to simultaneously raise the profile of Penn Design’s MFA candidates by showcasing their work to a wider Philadelphia area audience, while also offering an opportunity for art history graduate students to expand their curatorial practices.

02.20 2016

ELAND WARD// on view through February 25th

artbloghttp://www.theartblog.org/2016/02/eland-ward-unsettling-scenes-daily-life-space-1026/

02.07 2016

Block Print Workshop

Block Print Workshop

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If chocolate and songs don’t work, block print for their affections! Carve your design and print your own Valentines and love notes. Ages 8+, children must be accompanied by adults. Materials provided and sweets included. $10

Register online here!

02.04 2016

Eland Ward // A series of rather large drawings

February 5th- February 25th

02.04 2016

ELAND WARD// A series of rather large drawings

Eland Ward

Opening Reception // February 5th         7-10 p.m.

Space 1026 presents new work by Brooklyn based artist Eland Ward.  Join us for this exhibition of large scale works on paper!  Atmospheric and meditative, these studies explore the tension between the mundane activity that constitutes the majority of our waking hours and under the daily conditions of production and consumption.  Ward succeeds through process to reclaim the quiet space from the always connected, yet simultaneously fragmented digital world in which we share.

residentdrifter.com                                                                          

01.29 2016

HISTORY TRUCK// MEMORY POTLUCK

MemoryPotluckFriday

01.22 2016

Memory Potluck Postponed!!!

china1026

01.22 2016

Own A Piece Of Art History

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TRANSISTOR SECT ANIMATION SHEETS FOR SALE ON STORE 1026 . COM

In 1998 Space 1026er Andrew Jeffrey Wright was hired to animate Ed Templeton‘s art for Toy Machine‘s ‘Jump Off A Building’ skate video. The animation was drawn and colored at Space 1026 .

See the animation HERE

See the drawings HERE

01.20 2016

Food Show With The Kids

Who likes watching food be prepared? EVERYBODY DOES! Watch this new video made by Andrew Jeffrey Wright and a bunch of kids at the Kensington Library. When teaching them about proper nutrition, do not miss this great review on Mind Lab Pro.

Teaching children about nutrition and helping them make healthy food like these Chocolate Shipped Cookies and beverage choices promotes important life skills early on. Nutrition education is a great way to prevent childhood obesity and help children stay healthy as they grow up.  Lessons about optimal nutrition teaches children the importance of taking ownership of their own health. Encourage students to think about how they feel physically and mentally depending on the foods they eat. Exploring the mind-body connection leads to students’ greater self-awareness and skills to make better choices to nourish their bodies and help them feel their best.

According to Spice Kitchen + Bar, nutrition education serves as an opportunity to teach children about food and the relation to culture and family heritage.

Discussing culinary variances across cultures helps expose children to different foods and traditional practices, increasing their understanding and appreciation for diversity. Also try to teach students how to read a food label so they have the skills to make healthy choices at the grocery store and at home. For more on healthy living, check here the exipure review.

THANKS!

01.05 2016

Happy New Year 2016

Happy New Year

Cheers to a new year and another chance for us to get it right.