Embark Gallery Presents “Elizabeth Bennett: In Context”

For Immediate Release

July 10, 2018

Artist Elizabeth Bennett Uses Words to Create Humor and Poignancy

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In this Spotlight Exhibition, Embark presents the textual work of artist Elizabeth Bennett. In these works, Bennett explores the most effective means of giving language a physical form. Using various processes, materials, and scale, Bennett adds layers of meaning and power to concepts expressed in writing.

Several large banners of printed text have been soaked in water, obscuring and blurring certain parts. Bennett affixed these huge sheets of paper to a pier in Eastport Maine, allowing the tide to rise and melt the ink off of the paper. By allowing this natural process, the artist gives the powerful words new connotations. In Dr. King and the Declaration (pictured above) the ocean has significantly washed away the quotation on the right from the Declaration of Independence implying the wearing way of this truth, and echoing the silence spoken of by Dr. Martin Luther King on the left.

Left: Banana, 2017. Screenprint on brown paper bag.  Right: Product Haiku, 2017. Print.

Left: Banana, 2017. Screenprint on brown paper bag.  Right: Product Haiku, 2017. Print.

In the two series Grocery Stories and Product Haikus, Bennett’s search for meaning in the overwhelming banality of capitalism is taken to the point of comic absurdity. In the former, the humorous and self-deprecating text is screen printed on plain brown shopping bags. Placed on pedestals, the work juxtaposes the mundane encounters with the prestige of fine art exhibition. The posters created for Product Haikus pull images from advertising and rely on the farcical idea of making meaningful poetry out of brand name products.

In these and several other works, Bennett manipulates language and form to evoke both laughter and somber meditation from her viewers.

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Press Previews by appointment.

Opening Reception:  Friday, July 27th, 2018, 5-8PM

Hours: 1–6pm every Thursday-Saturday from July 28 - August 25, 2018

Media Contact:  Angelica Jardini | Curatorial Director | angelica@embarkgallery.com

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Embark Arts offers exhibition opportunities to current and recently graduated Masters of the Fine Arts students in the San Francisco Bay Area. We provide a space for an engaged community of artists, curators and scholars, and we aim to expand the audience for up and coming contemporary art. The juried exhibitions are held at our gallery in San Francisco at the historic Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture.

Embark Gallery Presents “Home | Maker: Reactions to Definement”

For Immediate Release

May 20, 2018

 

Opening Reception: Saturday, June 16, 2018, 5-8PM.

Home | Maker: Reactions to Definement

Ryan Carrington and Lynn Dau Explore the Nuances of Domesticity and Labor

Ryan Carrington. Bake Sale, 2017. Plywood, neckties, pie tins.

Ryan Carrington. Bake Sale, 2017. Plywood, neckties, pie tins.

In our second annual Spotlight exhibition, Embark is pleased to present the sculptural work of Ryan Carrington and Lynn Dau as they investigate notions of traditional gender roles through artistic labor, humor, and surreal presentations. Taking recognizable and arguably mundane objects and creating spectacles, Carrington and Dau tackle the promises and realities of the “American Dream” as it pertains to idealized family life and economic disparity.

Labor is essential to Carrington’s work, which is comprised of wood, brick and other materials obtained straight off the shelves of Home Depot. Carrington probes the distinction between Blue and White collar occupations by mimicking the labor-intensive work of construction, shining a spotlight on the performative nature of masculinity, and using the trope of the “uniform” to make dynamic connections that resonate across different communities.

Ryan Carrington. Oven Mitt, 2017. Brick and mortar.

Ryan Carrington. Oven Mitt, 2017. Brick and mortar.

Taking the familiar scene in Americana of the barbeque or backyard cookout as a starting point, Carrington creates a fantastical world by remaking objects out of unexpected materials and playing with size and form. For example, in Oven Mitt, the useful and protective tool is enlarged and carved out of brick and mortar. Though due to expert craftsmanship and finishing the glove still appears soft, the construction-like materials render it heavy and useless. The surprising juxtaposition lends levity to the piece, but there remains an underlying commentary on the weight of domestic labor.

Dau’s work moves us inside of the home, exposing the fallacy of “perfect family life” through her use of household items made to go awry. Silverware explodes out of pots and pans, with knives and forks even propelling themselves straight into the walls. The banality of housework, the endless and often thankless task of motherhood, and the shattered dream of a fairytale marriage are all conveyed.

Lynn Dau. Domestic Apocalypse, 2016. Found objects.

Lynn Dau. Domestic Apocalypse, 2016. Found objects.

In Domestic Apocalypse, the task of doing the dishes becomes a symbol for frustration. The scene is that of a natural disaster, caught at its apex, a detonating expression of underlying emotions and unsaid truths. In Dau’s surreal installations,  once one gets past the novelty of the impeccable creation, there is something almost sinister lurking underneath. Her work is both constructive and ruinous. Again we see the complexity of the themes of labor and societal expectations deftly captured in the manipulated objects.

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Press Previews by appointment.

Opening Reception: Saturday, June 16, 2018, 5-8PM.

Hours: 1–6pm every Thursday-Saturday from June 16 - July 14, 2018.

 

Media Contact: Angelica Jardini | Curatorial Director | info@embarkgallery.com

 

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Embark Gallery Presents “fieldnotes for useful light”

For Immediate Release

May 20, 2018

 

Opening Reception: Saturday, June 16, 2018, 5-8PM.

fieldnotes for useful light

A photographic exhibition by tamara suarez porras in collaboration with the Prelinger Library

tamara suarez porras. Untitled, 2018. Archival Pigment Print.

tamara suarez porras. Untitled, 2018. Archival Pigment Print.

Embark Gallery is pleased to present the work of tamara suarez porras as our second annual rendition of R&D Projects, a series of research-intensive postgraduate fellowships and summer solo exhibitions. This exhibition is a poetic photographic exploration of the Prelinger Library, an independent research library in San Francisco featuring image-rich historical ephemera from the 19th and 20th centuries.

What began as an investigation into photometry (the science of the measurement of light, in terms of its perceived brightness to the human eye) evolves towards something less tangible - a meditation on light as a signifier for time and space. In porras’ work, the light in the Prelinger Library becomes a metaphor for discovery. Like the revelations of research, the secret shadows of the Library unfolded sporadically, organically, and with serendipity, and became for the artist as fruitful for artistic consideration as the texts themselves.

                 tamara suarez porras. Untitled, 2018. Archival Pigment Print.

                 tamara suarez porras. Untitled, 2018. Archival Pigment Print.

Porras’ photographs are an archive of the ephemeral. The collection presents alternative ways in which to understand concrete truths, quantifying the affective qualities of light through captured moments, while reveling in their transitory nature. The works by porras will be accompanied by an ambient 2-channel sound installation by Portland artist Sei Harris, which considers the ways in which subtle shifts in sound, like light, can transform perception.

In tandem with the exhibition at Embark Gallery, porras will be presenting an evening of performance at the Prelinger Library alongside other West Coast artists Sei Harris, Pauline Gloss, and Prima Jalichandra-Sakuntabhai. Offerings will range from experimental electronic music, literary sound art, performative lecture to recontextualized archives. June 14, 2018 at 7PM. 301 8th St #215, San Francisco, CA 94103.

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Press Previews by appointment.

Opening Reception: Saturday, June 16, 2018, 5-8PM.

Hours: 1–6pm every Thursday-Saturday from June 16 - July 14, 2018.

 

Media Contact: Angelica Jardini | Curatorial Director | info@embarkgallery.com

 

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Now Accepting Submissions for Fall 2018!

Embark Gallery seeks work by local MFA students for 2 juried exhibitions. Any students currently enrolled in one of the following graduate programs or graduating in 2018 is eligible to apply: UC Berkeley, SF State, UC Davis, San Jose State, Stanford, CCA, SFAI and Mills. Applications are FREE through Submittable.


Taking Temperature

Exhibition Dates: September 7 - October 13

In partnership with The COAL + ICE Project, a documentary photography exhibition and climate festival coming to San Francisco this Fall, Embark Arts seeks artwork that responds to the environmental and political complexities of the climate change crisis. 

On both a personal and global scale, how have these shifts affected landscapes, cultures, and communities? What are the implications of living in a country whose government actively denies climate science? Possible themes include, but are certainly not limited to, extreme weather events, apocalyptic predictions for the future, public land use and regulations, and hope in the form of environmental activism. We would like to focus on how these issues can be addressed through a variety of art forms and as such we encourage artists working in all mediums, including performance, to apply. 

MANDATORY DATES:

Artwork Drop Off/Artist Meet Up: Sunday, August 26, 12:00PM-4:00PM

Opening Reception: Friday, September 7, 6:00PM-9:00PM

Artwork Pick Up: Monday, October 15, 10:00AM-5:00PM

 

APPLY HERE


Wave Forms

Exhibition Dates: October 26 - December 8

Embark Gallery seeks artworks that engage meaningfully with light and/or sound. This exhibition will ruminate on how these forces can be effective as the focus of a visual artwork, or how they can enhance a viewing experience. Artwork should capture the unique energy of light and sound waves, considering the vast diversity of both and/or how they can function together. Embark seeks a broad applicant pool for this show in order to demonstrate a variety of approaches to light and sound art, and as such encourage artists working in all mediums (including performance) to apply. 

MANDATORY DATES:

Artwork Drop Off/Artist Meet Up: Sunday, October 14, 12:00PM-4:00PM

Opening Reception: Friday, October 26, 6:00-9:00PM

Artwork Pick Up: Monday, December 10, 10:00AM-5:00PM

 

APPLY HERE

 

Please contact info@embarkgallery.com with any questions. 

Embark Gallery Presents “Deep Horizon”

Dionne Lee and Richard-Jonathan Nelson Explore the Black Body in the American Landscape

 

For Immediate Release: April 10, 2018

Opening Reception: May 5, 4-7pm

 

In the first ever Spotlight exhibition, Dionne Lee and Richard-Jonathan Nelson investigate the complex relationship between Blackness and nature. Considering histories of violence, the African diaspora, and the perceptions and realities of identity, Lee and Nelson explore the anxieties and trauma associated with the American landscape, and navigate us towards a deeper understanding of who is allowed to benefit from natural environments.

Richard-Jonathan Nelson. Rnelsonprint:  In a verdant eddy, I remembered I lost you, 2018. Digital print.

Richard-Jonathan Nelson. Rnelsonprint:  In a verdant eddy, I remembered I lost you, 2018. Digital print.

The Black body has become, through years of outward cultural control, synonymous with both toil and the land, but barred from communing with it. This has left many communities to be defined in the American imagination as urban, and as such, dynamically public in their existence. Lee and Nelson stake a claim to the solitude of nature and its potential as a tool for liberation, while acknowledging that at the same time, being alone and Black in the woods means, historically and quite literally, to be at risk for danger. Their work poses the question, “How does the Black body make a home among the soil, grasslands, and foliage of this country under a net of oppression?” Ultimately, through video, photography, and installation, this exhibition provides a new cartography for the safe travel of Black bodies through the terrain of modern wilderness.

Dionne Lee. collage_1-  of yard or field or hand or concern and promise, 2018.

Dionne Lee. collage_1-  of yard or field or hand or concern and promise, 2018.

About the Artists

Dionne Lee’s practice is based in photography, collage, and video, and engages ideas of agency and power in relation to the American landscape. A touchstone of her research is the history of black bodies on American soil. Specifically, in the labor directly engaged with the land during slavery, the repercussions of the false promise of land in the aftermath of Reconstruction, the synchronized passing of the Civil Rights Act and the Wilderness Act in 1964, up to the impact of urbanization and contemporary expectations of who willfully engages, thrives, and is safe within the foliage of America.

Born in New York City (1988) and based in Oakland, CA, Lee received her MFA from California College of the Arts in 2017. Her work has been exhibited at Aperture Foundation, the school of the International Center of Photography, and Rush Arts Gallery in New York City; Aggregate Space in Oakland; San Francisco Arts Commission, and Root Division in San Francisco. In 2011 Dionne was a Photography Fellow at The Camera Club of New York; in 2016 she was awarded the Barclay Simpson Award and was a Graduate Fellow at Anderson Ranch Arts Center.


Richard-Jonathan Nelson is a multi-disciplinary artist who uses textiles, video, and digital manipulation to create alternative worlds of speculative identity. His work is multi-layered, chromatically intense and mixes images of the natural world with reference to hoodoo, queer culture, and Afro-Futurism. He uses his constructed worlds to examine the overlapping spheres of culturally perceived identity and the emotional memory of what it means to be a queer black man. Thereby creating a limbic space free from the weighted excepted western cultural reality, and able to examine the unspoken ways systems of power persist. Nelson received his MFA from California College of the Arts in 2017 with a focus on textiles. His work has been exhibited at Southern Exposure, Embark Gallery, and Root Division in San Francisco, and Aggregate Space and Ctrl + Shift in Oakland, among others. Nelson received the Byron Meyer Scholarship in 2015 and is a 2017 Graduate Fellow at Headlands Center for the Arts.


Press Previews by appointment.

Opening Reception: Saturday, May 5, 2018, 4-7pm.

Hours: 1–6pm every Thursday-Saturday from May 5 - June 2, 2018.

 

Media Contact:

Angelica Jardini, Curatorial Director

info@embarkgallery.com


Embark Gallery offers exhibition opportunities to current and recently graduated Masters of the Fine Arts students in the San Francisco Bay Area. We provide a space for an engaged community of artists, curators and scholars, and we aim to expand the audience for up and coming contemporary art. The juried exhibitions are held at our gallery in San Francisco at the historic Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture.

Even Keel - A 3 Year Anniversary Celebration

This event is free and open to the public. Please RSVP HERE.

Thursday, March 29th, 6:00 - 10:00PM

Even Keel is the celebratory event marking Embark Arts’ 3 year anniversary. We are very proud that we have been able to keep Embark Arts on an even keel for the past three years and we know that with your support we can blow it out of the water in 2018! We look forward to celebrating with you!

For the occasion we have commissioned 5 artists to make artworks LIVE in the gallery from 7 to 8PM. The artworks they produce will repurpose a facet of Fort Mason's historic architecture, the hallway windows just outside of our gallery. This way, little by little we spread our creative endeavors beyond our gallery doors. 

Amber Imrie-Situnayake is a visual artist working in a hybrid practice using her own autobiographic story to investigate the cyclical nature of time, rural femininity, domesticity, rural American culture, nature connectiveness, and economic inequali…

Amber Imrie-Situnayake is a visual artist working in a hybrid practice using her own autobiographic story to investigate the cyclical nature of time, rural femininity, domesticity, rural American culture, nature connectiveness, and economic inequality. Imrie-Situnayake was born and raised off-the-grid (with no electricity or running water) in the Ozark Mountains of Northwest Arkansas. Amber is expecting to receive her MFA from Stanford University June 2018.

Matthew Floriani, born in Sebastopol, CA works predominantly in the mediums of painting, drawing, sculpture and ceramics, currently utilizing buildings as his main area of focus for mural painting. Residing in Oakland, CA, he uses found materials in…

Matthew Floriani, born in Sebastopol, CA works predominantly in the mediums of painting, drawing, sculpture and ceramics, currently utilizing buildings as his main area of focus for mural painting. Residing in Oakland, CA, he uses found materials in order to create large comforting and muddled installations of homes, also working with paints, and pen and ink to create bold works of memories, and finally clay to rework 2D paintings and drawings. Floriani has a Visual and Public Art degree from Cal State Monterey Bay, as well, he completed his MFA in studio art at Mills College in 2017. He has shown throughout California and Italy.  

Christopher Marin, from Lubbock Texas, creates works that run a narrative of what it means to be a man through the enlightenment of acknowledging and looking at differing angles of recent American History, while being cognizant that he is a pro…

Christopher Marin, from Lubbock Texas, creates works that run a narrative of what it means to be a man through the enlightenment of acknowledging and looking at differing angles of recent American History, while being cognizant that he is a product of his environment. His interest lies in relationships and showing the interaction of private and public life, and the concatenation of events and their permeable impression on his understanding of life in his hometown. Marin is completing his MFA at California College of the Arts.

Xiao Wang is a Chinese painter who lives and works in the US. He studied at Glasgow School of Art in Scotland where he received the BFA degree in Painting and Printmaking. He continued his study at San Francisco Art Institute and earned his MFA degr…

Xiao Wang is a Chinese painter who lives and works in the US. He studied at Glasgow School of Art in Scotland where he received the BFA degree in Painting and Printmaking. He continued his study at San Francisco Art Institute and earned his MFA degree in Painting. Wang currently lives and works in San Francisco, CA.

Amy Nathan is a multidisciplinary artist whose painted sculptures are guided by the meaning and the formal qualities of language and signs. She uses trompe l’oeil, patterning and camouflage in site-sensitive installations that repeat and rhyme, map …

Amy Nathan is a multidisciplinary artist whose painted sculptures are guided by the meaning and the formal qualities of language and signs. She uses trompe l’oeil, patterning and camouflage in site-sensitive installations that repeat and rhyme, map a space, and suggest text or narrative. She is the director of Underline Projects, a non-commercial, experimental gallery space in Berkeley, CA. She is currently an MFA student at Mills College in Oakland.

The party will take place amongst the artworks of our current exhibition Rule No Rule. 

Joseph Ferriso. Spiral Doorway, 2017. Acrylic on plywood.The West Coast art scene is famous for breaking, and re-making the rules. The same way that the advent of abstraction disrupted numerous art historical traditions, interdisciplinary art making…

Joseph Ferriso. Spiral Doorway, 2017. Acrylic on plywood.

The West Coast art scene is famous for breaking, and re-making the rules. The same way that the advent of abstraction disrupted numerous art historical traditions, interdisciplinary art making blurs and shifts the expected boundaries of each medium. This show embodies the freedom and fluidity of our local art institutions, showcasing joyously uninhibited work from the “Wild West.” While paying homage to precedents set in the 1960s and ‘70s by the folks of Ferus gallery, environmental land artists, and the Californian light and space movement, these artists reinvent the rules of presentation, technique and concept, with distinctly contemporary results.

Our 2017 Annual Year In Review Catalog will be release at Even Keel and our FLAT FILE Collection will be on display.

We will also have tickets to the San Francisco International Arts Festival and to the Art Market San Francisco at Even Keel.

Embark Gallery Presents “Rule No Rule”

8 Emerging Artists Showcase Unruly Creativity Encouraged by Interdisciplinary Graduate Programs

Joseph Ferriso. Spiral Doorway, 2017. Acrylic on plywood.

Joseph Ferriso. Spiral Doorway, 2017. Acrylic on plywood.

The West Coast art scene is famous for breaking, and re-making the rules. The same way that the advent of abstraction disrupted numerous art historical traditions, interdisciplinary art making blurs and shifts the expected boundaries of each medium. This show embodies the freedom and fluidity of our local art institutions, showcasing joyously uninhibited work from the “Wild West.” While paying homage to precedents set in the 1960s and ‘70s by the folks of Ferus gallery, environmental land artists, and the Californian light and space movement, these artists reinvent the rules of presentation, technique and concept, with distinctly contemporary results.


Amy Cella (SFSU) Inspired by the frontier mentality of the formative Pacific Northwest where communities felt they could pick and choose the best of the past without the hindrance of the weight of history, Cella’s work meditates on the ascendancy of the so-called “post-medium age” in contemporary art practice.

Yangyi Chen (SFAI) Chen pushes tactility and three-dimensionality into her photographic work, creating illusions with unexpected materials that redefine our sense of familiarity with the medium.

Joseph Ferriso (Stanford) Ferriso presents Spiral Doorway, an open ended sculpture with no fixed orientation or scale. Bearing no loyalty to the wall, floor or ceiling, this work represents freedom from restraint. As it’s reworked with every presentation, Ferriso also breaks conventional rules of exhibition and archive.

Sean Howe (Stanford) Howe makes paintings that fall somewhere between the classifications of figuration and abstraction. Using cues from geological and ecological sciences, and automatic drawing to push form, color, and texture, Howe creates abundant worlds with vast networks of referents that defy categorization.

Sean Howe. Swirly Gates, 2017. Gouache and gesso on plywood.

Sean Howe. Swirly Gates, 2017. Gouache and gesso on plywood.

Charmaine Koh (CCA) Hybridity is key to Koh’s work, which draws upon diverse influences, from anime, to family photographs, to computer color gradients. As an artist living in between borrowed origins, cultures, and countries, Koh playfully mixes seemingly disparate elements on the canvas so that they neatly co-exist.


Ans Li (SFAI) Li’s work explores the relationship between digital and analogue techniques, highlighting the failings of both while refusing to belong to either. Without ever using a camera, Li digitally designed her pieces, then printed them out on Polaroid film with a “digital-to-analogue” tool, then scanned them back to a digital form. The colors and geometry may appear retro, but Li’s process is oriented to technologies of the future.

Emily Meisler (SFAI) Exploring the natural and organic through sculptural forms, Meisler juxtaposes her subject matter with industrial materials like cement and wire that further abstract the original inspiration. This disparity highlights environmental concerns, though the sculptures themselves ironically appear extra-terrestrial, existing in a mysterious space between the naturally occuring and the manmade.

Leslie Samson-Tabakin (SFSU) Samson-Tabakin presents Enough Is Not Enough, a sprawling, text-based installation that acts as a mind map, encompassing both stream of consciousness and collected statements. Based on the concept of tautology (the idea of saying the same thing twice in different wording), this time- and site-specific work suggests that perhaps in our tireless search for clarity, new direction and originality, we are simply repeating ourselves.   

This show was juried by Elise Boivin, CEO and Founder of ArtlyOwl.com

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Embark Arts offers exhibition opportunities to current and recently graduated Masters of the Fine Arts students in the San Francisco Bay Area. We provide a space for an engaged community of artists, curators and scholars, and we aim to expand the audience for up and coming contemporary art. The juried exhibitions are held at our gallery in San Francisco at the historic Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture.

 

Press Previews by appointment.

Opening Reception: Friday, March 23, 2018. 6-9pm.

Hours: 1-6pm every Thursday-Saturday from March 24 - April 28, 2018.

 
Media Contact:
Angelica Jardini
Curatorial Director
angelica@embarkgallery.com

 

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