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Impact of Art and Artists in Metro Phoenix's Growth |
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Christina Ramirez, 9 to 5, 2006. Tinted and sanded polyurethane on panels, 120”x96”. Courtesy of the artist.
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TEMPE, AZ.- Works that explore the role of art and visual culture in Phoenix's development as a city defined by astronomical growth, geographic limitations, desert environment and its active arts community, will be featured in New American City: Artists Look Forward at the Arizona State University (ASU) Art Museum, Sept. 9 - Jan. 27, 2007.
The exhibition will feature works by 23 Maricopa County artists who explore media, processes and styles that comment on the here and now. Works from this select group of artists will range from installations of land art and art with new technologies to painting and photography that reflect personal impressions of living and working in the Phoenix metropolitan area, as well as broader questions and aspirations for the future.
"The works from this exhibition will shed a new light on the growth of Phoenix, and the effects that this growth has and will have on all aspects of our lives," said Marilyn Zeitlin, ASU Art Museum Director.
In conjunction with New American City: Artists Look Forward, ASU Art Museum will employ non-traditional outreach programs to engage a broader audience in conversations about the possibilities and opportunities to integrate art in the development of Phoenix and support the growth of a vibrant artist community. These will include:
* Networking and professional programs to benefit artists and design professionals living in Arizona's Maricopa County, including legal clinics and programs on copyright and leasing agreements;
* Art InterAct, an innovative video project in which local high school students interact with artists and art professionals, create three-minute video pieces of their interpretation of New American City, and showcase their works in an awards night at the ASU Art Museum;
* City tours that explore a diverse range of urban art spaces with an onboard expert guest lecturer, such as visits to a working farm that doubles as an artist's canvas, artist-generated developments, and studio/warehouse districts;
* Lectures by national leaders in urban issues and the arts with local leaders as respondents, funded by the Maurice R. and Meta G. Gross Foundation;
* Book signings and discussions with local leaders in urban planning, architecture, development and arts issues.
"In New American City, the artists re-imagine the possibilities of art as we re-imagine our city," said Heather Lineberry, ASU Art Museum senior curator.
ASU Art Museum curators Heather Lineberry and John Spiak reviewed 150 artist proposals, visited more than 80 artist studios, and met with mayors, civic leaders, urban planners and activists as part of the research for the exhibition. The final 23 artists, whose names were announced on May 6th, each will contribute something uniquely reflective of the rapid growth of the city. Among the artists:
* Matthew Moore, a fourth generation Arizona farmer, will feature a re-creation on his family farm of an entire subdivision using his crops;
* Kade Twist, a member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and director of policy for the Nation Media and Technology Network, will contribute a poetic piece about urban Native American populations;
* Wellington Reiter, dean of ASU College of Design, known for his role in crafting a vision for development of downtown Phoenix, will contribute drawings; and
* The collaborative team of Sherrie Medina (artist), Liza Cohen Hita (psychologist), Ernesto Fonseca (architect) and Sherry Ahrentzen (architect), will present an installation that explores "place attachment" in the complex environment of Guadalupe, a neighborhood just south of Tempe.
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