Thursday, May 03, 2012

Immaculate Canvas installation snapshots

Show entrance with Work It, mixed media on canvas, 2011
installation view: (L-R) Tribute Series pieces on shelves; Shineela; Shakayla—Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!

CeeGee!, acrylic & spray paint on linen, 4.75"x4.5", 2009 and
We Can Take It Slow, mixed media on canvas,  60"x72", 2012
Without a Doubt, acrylic & ink on canvas, 50" x 51", 2012

wall of drawings, 2010-2012

Porkchop Aspirations (Tribute Series), mixed media on canvas,  7"x8.5", 2012


Thank You, darling, mixed media on canvas, 4"x7.5", 2010Steppin' Out, mixed media on canvas, 8"x7", 2012
Oh, Calm Down. mixed media on canvas, 11.25"x7.5"x6", 2012(all from the Tribute Series)


Yes, But Try to Not..., mixed media on canvas, 80"x48", 2012
HutceeKa, mixed media on linen, 32"x33", 2011
You Know the Way,
mixed media on canvas, 28"x35", 2011

Friday, April 20, 2012

Immaculate Canvas Opening

pianist Adam Marks, artist Kate Van Steenhuyse, vocalist Jennifer Beattie

Thank you to all who came out to celebrate the opening of Immaculate Canvas and to see the first *asterICT performers, Jen Beattie & Adam Marks. We had a wonderful event—thank you for your support.

If you missed us at the opening, the gallery will be open next weekend for the Final Friday gallery crawl. Stop by & see us!
NakedCity Gallery, 121 N Mead between Douglas & 1st Street

more images coming soon!
NakedCity Gallery Manager Lindsey Herkommer;  Work It, mixed media on canvas, 2011;  Kate Van Steenhuyse 






Tuesday, April 03, 2012

exhibitions, performances, essays...


For the current issue of
NakedCity magazine, Lindsey Herkommer has written an insightful, thoughtful, and down-to-earth essay about my new work. 

Please join us this Friday, April 6th for the opening reception 
from 8-10, with a special performance at 8:15.







Click here for the remainder of the article.












Opening reception and performance!

We at CreativeRHINO are thrilled to have this opening for my exhibition also be the first event in our new *asterICT Visiting Artist Series:

FRIDAY, APRIL 6TH 8-10 PM
NakedCity Gallery, 121 N. Mead, between Douglas & 1st in Old Town


Jennifer Beattie mezzo-soprano, and Adam Marks, piano, present a program of songs by Claude Debussy, William Bolcom, Aaron Copland, and others. The program, which will be presented in the gallery alongside Van Steenhuyse’s work, plays on the ideas of the artist’s creative process and style. 


Audience members will have the opportunity to hear a French song, for example, that uses a variety of abstract musical ‘colors’ to create a vivid scene.   William Bolcom’s “Angels are the Highest Form of Virtue’ expresses the sentiment that the little things are what make the world truly beautiful.  The songs range from funny to poignant, and will temporarily turn the gallery into a world of multi-sense artmaking.


Friday, March 30, 2012

Pop the Artist interview

The very talented Emilie Harkin has an arts site called Pop The Artist. I was honored to be her latest featured artist profile:

Kate is telling me how she titles her paintings. “If there was a conversation with the piece,” she says, “then it’s something I would say or it would say to me.” She pauses. “I don’t think of them as people.” This is followed by a short laugh. “But I kind of do.” more

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Full Fathom Five installation shots

What a great time we had in NYC—thanks to all for coming out to the opening & celebrating with us.
Thank you to our hosts at Jenkins Johnson Gallery! The gallery has some great installation shots of the show as well as images from the entire series of mine on their website (some of the work isn't even on view in person).

I have some exciting things coming up in the spring, stay tuned!

my wall from the front entrance

Max & Jess at the opening

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Full Fathom Five opening November 3rd!

If you are in New York, or the general area, come have a drink with us & celebrate!

Monday, September 19, 2011

Re-visiting, re-thinking, re-engaging

A recent discussion with a curator for an upcoming show has left me reflecting on some drawings that I haven't thought about in a long time. It is such a treat to have an outside voice plant a seed in your brain which then makes you see your own work in a new way.

The upcoming exhibition (details soon once things are more finalized) has me thinking of transformations. The curator was interested in some drawings from 2007 from a series called "World Machines." The larger drawings use notational and gestural marks collaged together to form teeming masses—mechanisms that make me think of the movie Brazil—that teeter between a state of potential rebirth or decay. The smaller works are a bit looser/lyrical with ink washes in addition to the collaged marks.

Reflecting back is of course making me think about my current work in new ways. I'm working primarily on unstretched canvases and planting suggestions of structure within them by adding chunks of wood stretched within the fields (see Sattha's Mmmm... as an example). I hadn't thought about this work in terms of transitions before but now I see that the idea is very relevant. I have always liked my work to feel like it's caught in the process of becoming; not yet fully matured and retaining a sense of potential energy. This often makes for a fairly awkward object... and I like that too. It's as if I'm creating adolescent artworks—all knees & elbows—makes for some fun angles!

Some images from the World Machines series, all from 2007:

World Machine #1, 18x24

World Machine #2, 18x24"

World Machine #3, 18x24"

World Machine #5, 18x24"

World Machine #7, 18x24"

World Machine #8, 18x24"

World Machine #9, 18x24"

World Machine #10, 18x24"

World Machine #11, 18x24"

World Machine #12, 18x24"

Machine Garden, 40x42"

Machinescape, 58x42"

Sky Net Machine, 54x42"

Convergence Machine, 42x41"

Formulation Machine, 50x42