Two Art Exhibits - Mythos and Time Lapse
10/15/2008
All Day
Contact:
Location:
Ingram Studio Art Center Gallery Space 204
Category:
Open to the Public
An exhibit of video art curated by Amelia Winger-Bearskin and another of photographic imagery by artist Blue Mitchell will open Oct. 15 at the E. Bronson Ingram Studio Art Center at Vanderbilt University.
The exhibits are free and open to the public 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. The opening reception is also free and open to the public.
Mitchell’s show, "Mythos," blends reality and fantasies in dream-like scenarios. The Portland, Ore., artist presents his work on wood panels covered with gloss instead of matted and framed behind glass.
The "Time Lapse" show is a single-projection video presentation put together by Winger-Bearskin, a video-performance artist and senior lecturer in the Vanderbilt art department. The works of several artists including Winger-Bearskin will be displayed one after the other in the style of film screenings and time-lapse photography.
Time Lapse is third in a series of four exhibitions: Time Travelers, Time Machine, Time Lapse, and Time Lapse: Antenna, curated by Amelia Winger-Bearskin.
Amelia Winger-Bearskin is a Video/Performance Artist who is currently teaching at Vanderbilt University in the areas of Video, Performance and Drawing. She is a featured artist for the Perpetual Art Machine [PAM], a video collective and online community based in New York City. She is currently working on a show about the Hermitage (Andrew Jackson's local homestead) with fellow faculty member Carlin Wing, which will be shown during Black History Month (February) at the Scarett Bennet Center in Nashville, TN.
For more information on the Department of Art at Vanderbilt, see http://www.vanderbilt.edu/arts/index.html.
Vanderbilt University, Department of Art
Space 204 - Ingram Studio Art Center
1204 25th Ave. South at Garland
Nashville, TN 37240
The exhibits are free and open to the public 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. The opening reception is also free and open to the public.
Mitchell’s show, "Mythos," blends reality and fantasies in dream-like scenarios. The Portland, Ore., artist presents his work on wood panels covered with gloss instead of matted and framed behind glass.
The "Time Lapse" show is a single-projection video presentation put together by Winger-Bearskin, a video-performance artist and senior lecturer in the Vanderbilt art department. The works of several artists including Winger-Bearskin will be displayed one after the other in the style of film screenings and time-lapse photography.
Time Lapse is third in a series of four exhibitions: Time Travelers, Time Machine, Time Lapse, and Time Lapse: Antenna, curated by Amelia Winger-Bearskin.
Amelia Winger-Bearskin is a Video/Performance Artist who is currently teaching at Vanderbilt University in the areas of Video, Performance and Drawing. She is a featured artist for the Perpetual Art Machine [PAM], a video collective and online community based in New York City. She is currently working on a show about the Hermitage (Andrew Jackson's local homestead) with fellow faculty member Carlin Wing, which will be shown during Black History Month (February) at the Scarett Bennet Center in Nashville, TN.
For more information on the Department of Art at Vanderbilt, see http://www.vanderbilt.edu/arts/index.html.
Vanderbilt University, Department of Art
Space 204 - Ingram Studio Art Center
1204 25th Ave. South at Garland
Nashville, TN 37240

