Sep 21 2018
-
Nov 10 2018
Recast: Curated by Mary Urbas

Recast: Curated by Mary Urbas

Presented by Artists Archives of the Western Reserve at Artists Archives of the Western Reserve

Title of Exhibition: Recast: Curated by Mary Urbas
Dates:  September 21st – November 10th, 2018
Campus-Wide Opening Reception: Friday, September 21st, 5:30 – 8:00pm
 

The Artists Archives of the Western Reserve is proud to begin the Fall season with Recast: Curated by Mary Urbas, the follow-up exhibition to 2016’s popular Ceramics Invitational.  The event will be celebrated with a campus wide opening reception on Friday, September 21, 5:30 – 8:00pm which includes the Sculpture Center’s premiere of Swing States: Recent Perspectives in Glass Sculpture from the Middle West.

 

Recast is part of a larger, regional showing of ceramic artists known as Clay 5: A Clay Tour through Northeast Ohio, featuring 5 exhibitions, 3 curators and the work of both national and local creators. Clay 5, the brain-child of curator Mary Urbas, highlights the volume and diversity of area talent. Urbas also emphasizes the role of the Cleveland Institute of Art in the formation of Northeast Ohio’s clay community, noting that all 3 Clay 5 curators have CIA ties: Val Grossman (’12), Faculty Emeritus Judith Salomon and Urbas herself, who graduated in 1980.

 

Urbas explains, “My fascination with clay started when I was a student at the Cleveland Institute of Art… I took a hand-building class with Judith Salomon [whose work will be displayed in Recast].  I was intrigued by the alchemy, the chemistry of taking dry raw materials, adding water, creating a three-dimensional object, and then firing it in a kiln. I distinctly remember that moment… pulling the red-hot piece out… laying it in a nest of combustible materials, watching it catch fire, squelching the flames and containing the smoke. I was hooked!”

 

Urbas’ selections for Recast reflect this love of process. “I chose artists who honor their craft and incorporate the many different techniques of surface embellishments and various glaze applications, into ceramic art that will be hand-built, wheel thrown or sculptural in design.”  Urbas also added, “I wanted to take advantage of a different venue; to curate and design an installation that featured Ohio artists who don’t regularly show in this area, and I wanted to help bring some new visibility to their work.”

 

Among these rarely exhibited artists is Kimberly Chapman, a 2012 CIA graduate who returned to school after two decades in marketing to pursue a fine art degree.  Chapman’s haunting, post-modern objects juxtapose the traditional medium of porcelain with jarring, contemporary subjects like drug-addiction, gun violence and homelessness.

 

Richard Schneider, another lesser-shown artist, has been producing since the 1970’s, though his work has not been exhibited for some time.  Schneider’s art joyfully turns on its head the notion of clay as a functional medium, interrupting the surfaces of his work with unexpected and whimsical objects.  Schneider’s piece, Chili Peppers, features a neon cow-splotched platter with a collaged pyramid chained to its surface.  A row of sculpted ducks swim serenely by on the vessel’s lip, observing the irreverence with a tranquil grace.  Other Recast artists who do not typically show in Cleveland include Sarah Clague, Tom Radca and the late David Batz.

 

The Recast roster of artists will also be rounded-out by area heavy-hitters such as William Brouillard, Stephanie Craig, Michael W. High, Todd Leech, James Leslie, Jenny Mendes, Seth Nagelberg, Sandy Miller, the late Archived Artist George Roby and Judith Salomon.

 

Clay will also be on display at the Valley Art Center (Woodfired Ceramics of Northeastern Ohio: Curated by Judith Salomon, September 4 – October 10),  the Gallery at Lakeland (Made of Clay: Curated by Mary Urbas, September 20 – November 2), Article/Art in Cleveland Gallery (Ceramic Invitational: Curated by Mary Urbas, October 5 – November 2), and Brick Ceramic and Design Studio (Susan Gallagher: Curated by Val Grossman, October 5 – November 2).

 

Both reception and exhibition are free and open to the public.  Gallery hours: Wed – Friday: 10am – 4pm, Saturday: 12pm – 4pm.  Ample free parking in AAWR’s adjacent lot and on East 123rd Street.

Featured Image: Jenny Mendes, Platter, Ceramic

About the Artists Archives of the Western Reserve:  The Artists Archives of the Western Reserve is a unique archival facility and regional museum that preserves representative bodies of work created by Ohio visual artists and, through ongoing research, exhibition and educational programs, actively documents and promotes this cultural heritage for the benefit of the public.

 

The Artists Archives of the Western Reserve would also like to thank Ohio Arts Council, Cuyahoga Arts & Culture, Ohio Art Dealers Association, the George Gund Foundation, the Bernice & David E. Davis Foundation, the William Bingham Foundation and the Zufall Foundation for their continuing support.

Admission Info

Free Admission

Phone: 2167219020

Email: info@artistsarchives.org

Dates & Times

2018/09/21 - 2018/11/10

Location Info

Artists Archives of the Western Reserve

1834 East 123rd St, Cleveland, OH 44106