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    Hypothesis

    Process in Science and Art
    Hypothesis

    Hypothesis: a suggested explanation for a group of facts or phenomena, either accepted as a basis for further verification (working hypothesis) or accepted as likely to be true.

    Hypothesis: Process in Science and Art
    is a multi-disciplinary exhibit and an experiment highlighting the connections between the scientific and artistic processes.

    Exhibit Dates: August 19-October 21, 2010
    Public Reception: Thursday, August 19, 6-8 pm
    Gallery Hours: Tues-Friday, 12-6 or by appointment.

    The hypothesis is the heart of the exhibit — positing that processes followed by artists and scientists have much in common. Hypothesis explores these scientific and artistic processes and is itself an experiment.

    UCCS Anthropology, Chemistry, and Geography faculty are partnering with artists who have responded to the faculty’s research and data in sculptural and video installations. Process is examined through both the faculty’s research and the artist’s finished work, bringing about greater understanding of the inherent connections between the scientific and creative processes.

    Curated by Daisy McConnell, co-director of GOCA, the opening of Hypothesis coincides with the Grand Reopening of the Science Building (newly renamed “Centennial Hall”) at UCCS. The Gallery of Contemporary Art at UCCS is located in the newly renovated Centennial Hall. Highlighting the interconnectedness of the arts and the sciences is the basis for this experimental exhibit.

    HYPOTHESIS LECTURE SERIES

    A series of lectures will accompany the exhibit. Each lecture will feature a faculty member and the artist partnered in the exhibit speaking individually about their work, then coming together to discuss the interconnections between their respective processes.
    All lectures are free and open to the public, 7 pm
    Location: Centennial Hall Auditorium (adjacent to GOCA 1420 entrance)

    September 30 Scott Johnson & Curt Holder (Geography & Environmental Science)

    October 7 Erin Elder & Minette Church (Anthropology)

    October 14 Chris Coleman & Brandon Vogt (Geography, GIS Mapping)

    October 21 Kim Abeles & Janel Owens (Environmental Chemistry)

    ARTIST BIOS

    Kim Abeles is an artist who crosses disciplines and media to explore and map the urban environment and chronicle broad social issues. The Smog Collector series brought her work to national and international attention in the art world, and mainstream sources such as Newsweek, National Public Radio, CBS Evening News, and The Wall Street Journal. A mid-career survey curated by Karen Moss and sponsored by the Fellows of Contemporary Art for the Santa Monica Museum, Kim Abeles: Encyclopedia Persona A-Z, toured the United States and South America, and was awarded the Best Regional Museum Show category for 1993-94 by the International Association of Art Critics. She continues to exhibit internationally, including recent projects in Vietnam, Thailand, Czech Republic, England, and China. She represented the U.S. in both the Fotografie Biennale Rotterdam and the Cultural Centre of Berchem in Antwerp. Her work is in numerous private and public collections including the Museum of Contemporary Art; United States Information Agency; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Yucun Art Museum, Suzhou, China; Sandwell Community History and Archives, U.K.; and is archived in the library collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Cooper-Hewitt Publication Design Collection of the Smithsonian. Abeles work was awarded grants from the Andy Warhol Foundation and Peter Norton Foundation and fellowships from J. Paul Getty Trust Fund for the Visual Arts, Pollack-Krasner Foundation, and the California Arts Council.

    Chris Coleman received his BFA in his native state from West Virginia University in 2001 and his MFA from New York State University at Buffalo in 2003. A number of his undergraduate years were devoted to studying Mechanical Engineering, knowledge that he brings to bear in his installations. His work includes sculptures, performances and videos as well as interactive installations. Coleman was twice a participant in the VIPER Basel Festival in Switzerland and has had his work in exhibitions in Singapore, Finland, Sweden, Italy, Germany, France, China, the UK and Latvia. In North America he has had solo shows at Big Orbit in Buffalo NY, Pratt at Munson Williams Proctor in NY, and NE plus Ultra in Toronto as well as exhibitions at the Albright Knox in Buffalo NY, Spaces Gallery in Cleveland OH, and other shows in Minneapolis MN, Austin TX, and New York City to name a few. He currently resides in Denver, CO and is an Assistant Professor at the University of Denver.

    Erin Elder is an independent curator, writer, and teacher interested in collaboration, sense of place, and expanded notions of culture. Her research has focused on Drop City, the first of the ‘60s era artist-built communes and she continues to research and write about the countercultural activities of the American Southwest. She has produced projects with a variety of institutions including Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Württembergischer Kunstverein, Creative Time, the Center for Land Use Interpretation, and the University of Houston. In 2009, Erin co-founded PLAND, an off-the-grid residency program near Taos, New Mexico where she is now based. Erin holds dual self-designed BAs from Prescott College and an MA in Curatorial Practice from California College of the Arts. She enjoys hiking, hot springs, and building forts.

    Scott Johnson was born in 1969 and grew up in the Colorado Rockies. He obtained his BFA from The University of Colorado at Boulder and his MFA from Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia. His work as an artist has been informed by such as experiences as herding cows on the Navajo Reservation, traveling upon the Silk Road and living in Venice, Italy. He presently teaches at The Colorado College in Colorado Springs.

    FACULTY BIOS

    Minette Church, PhD., Associate Professor of Anthropology is an anthropological archaeologist. Her research focus is on the nineteenth and early twentieth century United States West, where she explores Plains-Southwest interactions along the Santa Fe Trail, and the precedents for and ramifications of such interactions through time. She is particularly interested in archaeological expressions of gender, class, nationality, and ethnicity at several scales, from that of individual sites to cultural landscapes. She has pursued similar interests in western Belize, Central America, on Caste War era Maya village sites. Minette earned her B.A. in History and Anthropology in 1987, at the University of Colorado, Boulder. After three years of private sector archaeology on pre-Columbian sites across the west, she earned her M.A. in 1991, a Certificate in Museum Curatorship in 1992, and her Ph.D. 2001, all at the University of Pennsylvania.

    Curt Holder, PhD., is Associate Professor of Geography at UCCS. Curt received his B.A. degree in geography from Clark University. After graduating from Clark, Curt developed an appreciation for the potential role of scientific knowledge in addressing community needs when he served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Guatemala (1988-1990). Curt worked on reforestation, soil conservation, and watershed management projects in Peace Corps, and following a two-year service, Curt received a M.A. degree in geography from the University of Georgia. Curt returned to Clark University for a Ph.D. in geography. Curt works at the nexus of hydrology, biogeography, and human-environment interactions in tropical montane cloud forests of the Sierra de las Minas Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala. Results from his studies have contributed to the theory of vegetation influences on watershed management by addressing the significance of fog precipitation in hydrological models. His current research focuses on three topical areas, including vegetation-atmosphere processes in tropical montane cloud forests, foliar biogeography and ecology, and human influences on forest change in Guatemala. 

    Curt is currently working on two major research projects: the first project was funded by the National Science Foundation and examines the significance of leaf water repellency, leaf optical properties, and photosynthesis of cloud forest and non-cloud forest species in order to expand existing hydrological and ecophysiological models for cloud forests. The objectives of this study are to define the spatial patterns of leaf water repellency between different habitats and to assess its importance in the overall water balance in cloud forests. With a clearer understanding of the interactive responses between leaf water repellency, gas exchange, and leaf optical properties among dominant species at a site and between sites, better models of forest hydrology processes can be formulated that incorporate leaf surface variables. As well as conducting extensive fieldwork on tropical ecosystems, Curt’s research experience also includes investigations of temperate forests. As a trained forest hydrologist and biogeographer, he relies on a multidisciplinary approach to address research questions that often requires a research team from various disciplines to understand relationships between social and physical processes. 

    Janel Owens, PhD., is Assistant Professor of Chemistry at UCCS. Dr. Owens graduated with a B.S. in Chemistry with Honors from Southwestern University, a small liberal arts college in central Texas, in 2003, and a PhD in 2007 from the University of California at Davis where she was part of the Agricultural and Environmental Chemistry graduate group. Postdoctoral research was conducted in a position at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.  Current research interests include the development of quantitative methods for the analysis of pharmaceuticals, personal care products, and nanomaterials in foods and environmentally relevant samples. Of particular interest is the interaction and effect of food components (such as polyphenolics or similar antioxidants) on the stability and bioavailability of such environmental pollutants.

    Brandon Vogt, PhD., is Assistant Professor of Geography at UCCS. He received his BS in resource management from the University of Missouri in 1992, his MA and PhD in Geography from Arizona State University in 2002. His current research is related to 1) sandstone weathering in southeast Colorado, 2) mapping Late Pleistocene glacial landforms on Pikes Peak, 3) pedagogy for classroom and field studies curricula in physical geography, and 4) cloud-to-ground lightning interactions with topographic high points in southeast Colorado. 

    David J. Weiss, PhD., is Associate Professor of Analytical Chemistry at UCCS. He received his B.S. in 1992 from the University of California, Riverside and his Ph.D. in 1997, from the University of Kansas. Postdoctoral research was conducted as a Fellow at the University of Kansas, 1997-2000. Dr. Weiss’ research involves the development of enzyme based biosensors for diagnosis and monitoring diseases such as PKU, and developing new capillary electrophoresis methods for the analysis of pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, and chemical warfare agents.

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    William Wylie

    American Places
    William Wylie
    August 6, 2010 12:00 pmtoOctober 22, 2010 12:00 pm
    August 6, 2010 12:00 pmtoOctober 22, 2010 12:00 pm

    In the exhibition American Places William Wylie focuses on the concept of place; how we respond to the landscape, how we move from the general to the specific in our personal associations with it, and how our lives are interwoven into the histories of places. In his work over the past twenty years, Wylie has balanced a striking formal sensibility with a dedication to a documentary role for his photography. In this respect, his photographs are marked by both intensity and dispassion. He writes: “The landscape is a visual presentation of forces at work, from the biological and geological to the human. As an artist I am interested in the evocative quality of that presentation. I make photographs not only to honor what is in front of the camera but also to invoke a sense of inclusion (my own and hopefully an audience). The act of attention is a way of connecting and photography is a tool that supports our involvement with the world. “

    For the two bodies of work represented in this exhibition Wylie used a landscape feature to create an itinerary by which to document the place, in both cases a pathway. One is a river, the Cache la Poudre River in northern Colorado, the other a two-lane highway, Route 36, traversing northern Kansas from border to border. By using an established geographical reference as a trajectory into the landscape Wylie accepts his route as a given. Concomitantly, these photographs document the personal experiences of the photographer. He spent four years working on each project, traveling (and in the case of the Poudre River, walking) the entire lengths of the commons. With this in mind, they can’t be viewed as only referencing the places themselves but also as locating a moment in time when a specific individual stood in front of a subject that mattered. That relationship is always paramount in Wylie’s images.

    Riverwalk (1994-1998) is a collection of 49 photographs documenting the landscape surrounding the watershed along the Cache la Poudre River in Colorado. Both a Wild and Scenic River and one of the most polluted in Colorado, the place is being developed at a rapid pace. At the same time, Wylie attends to the river itself, its shifting flow and fluctuations in light, as well the manner in which it has shaped the environment through which it passes. The publication Riverwalk (UPC, 2000) won the 2000 Colorado Book Award.

    Likewise, Route 36 (2004-2008) functions as both a program and a subject. Though Wylie’s images, we glimpse the Western prairie through the frame of trucking and agricultural industries. The turnouts and roadsides that draw his attention prove sparsely populated and largely neglected. His photographs are revealing not only of American spaces, but spatial practice: our production and consumption of space, our way stations and movement through it. This documentary series of photographs moves progressively westward, beginning at the Missouri River crossing, where oxbows form the platforms for the city of St. Joseph, and ending where the two lanes of Route 36 disappear into Interstate 70 at Byers, Colorado, within sight of the Rocky Mountains. These photographs document not only a geographical landscape, but a social one as well, recording a particular moment in the history of vernacular culture. Route 36 has just been released by Flood Editions.

    As the poet Merrill Gilfillan has commented, “It seems continually necessary to reassert that landscape study and its reflective arts are anything but passive disciplines, that civilization in a sustaining, daily sense emerges most surely from good relations with one’s surroundings (the perfect word) and the inner landscape of possibility held in the head and heart.” (Merrill Gilfillan will be participating in an artist discussion with William Wylie in September, details will be announced shortly.)

    ARTIST BIO

    William Wylie received an MFA from The University if Michigan in 1989. He has published four books of his photographs, Riverwalk (University Press of Colorado, 2000), Stillwater (Nazraeli Press, 2002), Carrara (Center for American Places, 2009), and Route 36 (Flood Editions, 2010) all concerned with landscape and place. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in photography in 2005 and a Colorado Individual Artist Fellowship in 1998. His photographs and films have been shown both nationally and internationally, including A Complex Eden at The Museum of Fine Art, St. Petersburg, FL, 100 Great American Photographs at The Amon Carter Museum. Fort Worth, TX, and Forged Power at Arizona State University Art Museum. His work can be found in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, National Gallery of Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, and Yale University Art Museum, among others. He lives in Charlottesville where he teaches photography at the University of Virginia.

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    4X4

    4 artists, 4 curators
    4X4
    April 30, 2010toJuly 9, 2010

    AT GOCA121 | 121 S. Tejon St. | Suite 100

    4×4: 4 artists, 4 curators developed out of a series of conversations between four local contemporary art curators. After many informal discussions about artists and exhibitions we decided to explore further the similarities and differences of our curatorial approaches by collaborating on a project featuring four Colorado artists.

    While the artists are diverse in their chosen media and conceptual choices, taken as a whole, 4×4 challenges the viewer to consider space, scale and stories and ask questions about the relationships between objects, between object and space and between local visual arts institutions.

    CURATORS
    Caitlin Green (GOCA)
    Blake Milteer (Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center)
    Jessica Hunter Larsen (The I.D.E.A. Space at Colorado College)
    Holly Parker (Smokebrush Gallery & Foundation)

    ARTISTS
    Andrew Beckham
    Carol Golemboski
    Kate Petley
    Stacy Steers

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    FREE CANDY!

    ...and the 2010 UCCS Senior Art Exhibition
    FREE CANDY!
    April 23, 2010 2:00 pmtoMay 21, 2010 2:00 pm

    FREE CANDY! is the annual Visual and Performing Arts exhibition highlighting work from 2010 graduating seniors. The exhibition is planned and executed from start to finish by the visual art students as part of their professional development course and is the sampling of work from 10 students working in sculpture, drawing, painting, digital media, video, and photography.

    FEATURED ARTISTS
    Laura Bearl
    Jen Blair
    Lisa Cross
    Tracy Falsetto
    Tiffany Gray
    Frankie Medeiros
    Emily Morgan
    Daniela Oettinger
    Gretchen Piper
    Monica VanConant
    Tim Winkelbauer

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    1440: Moan

    Pleasure and Pain
    1440: Moan
    March 4, 2010
    6:00 pmto9:00 pm

    Taking inspiration from a sound that straddles pleasure and pain, Moan features art work in a variety of media by UCCS Visual Art faculty and students as a part of the City Dionysia Festival. A maelstrom of violence, The Bacchae is a potent source for examining the heart of revelry, intoxication, and vengeance. Opening reception: March 4, 6 – 9 pm. Closing reception (with a live performance of excerpts from the Bacchae score): April 2, 6 – 9 pm.

    COMPLIMENTARY PARKING IN LOT 3 PROVIDED BY UCCS PARKING SERVICES.

    Featuring work by:

    Carol Dass
    Aaron Graves
    Claire Rau
    Kim Lovelace
    Corey Drieth
    Laura Bearl
    Erik Schubert
    Taylor Stamp
    Mariya Zvonkovich
    Amber Marchlowska
    Matt Barton
    Courtney Matthews
    Olivia Lundberg
    Elizabeth Raitz
    Pauline Foss
    Brett Wilson
    Valerie Brodar
    Dom Puleo
    Erin Elder
    Lisa Cross

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    AWOL: Rotozaza

    ETIQUETTE, GURUGURU and WONDERMART
    February 6, 2010 from 4pm - 7 pm at Shuga's (702 S. Cascade Avenue)
    AWOL: Rotozaza
    February 6, 2010
    4:00 pmto7:00 pm

    The Gallery of Contemporary Art and THEATREWORKS are proud to host the world premier of the ENTIRE Autoteatro Series by Rotozaza, a UK-based performance group. Three works make up the series: ETIQUETTE, GURUGURU and WONDERMART.

    BUY TICKETS or call 719.255.3232 to make reservations.

    ETIQUETTE by Ant Hampton and Silvia Mercuriali
    Etiquette is a half-hour experience for two people in a public space. There is no-one watching – other people in the cafe or bar are not aware of it. You wear headphones which tell you what to say to each other, or to use one of the objects positioned to the side. There is a kind of magic involved – for it to work you just need to listen and respond accordingly. Etiquette is theatre at its most raw; it is live, insightful, philosophical and incredibly unique. The participants are both the actors and the audience, and the show offers the fantasy of being able to speak without having to think what to say.

    GURUGURU by Ant Hampton with Joji Koyama and Isambard Khroustaliov
    You have been told what to do every moment of the day, for years on end. The voice in your headphones has understood who you are and gives instructions which mirror what you’d be doing anyway. A life free of dither and uncertainty! In your job, this voice is a career-saver… but the day has come when you need to come ‘off the headphones’. You need help.

    Five audience-participants enter a brightly lit room and discover chairs positioned for them around a screen. As they each follow different instructions via headphones, they find themselves at the centre of an oddly familiar dystopia, and that they’re wearing headphones permanently, ‘for their own good’. Proceedings are led by an on-screen, animated character whose twin roles of marketing and spiritual Guru are confused by his reliance on untested and accident-prone technologies. The overproduced, digital sheen of this focus-group world begins to crack, as the group edge towards the dangerous situation of having to think for themselves. In true Rotozaza style, a beautifully orchestrated chaos develops, exposing today’s consumer-mad inability to distinguish between what we want, and what we need.

    WONDERMART by Silvia Mercuriali with Tommaso Perego and Matt Rudkin
    Wondermart takes a mischievous swipe at the dominance of supermarket culture and consumerism. This interactive audio tour takes you on a journey of rediscovery through the familiar surroundings of the supermarket. Wearing headphones and anonymous behind your trolley, you are guided around the aisles immersed in a private world, as the carefully constructed soundscape overlays a fictional world that blurs the real with the imaginary.

    Here’s what the press has to say:
    Wondermart is an absorbing journey into the heart of modern consumerism.” The List (Wondermart)

    “The concept is clever and the result an altered engagement with the commonplace.” Irish Times (Wondermart)

    “gripping… If the line between audience and performer seems blurred, Rotozaza’s Etiquette erases it entirely.” New York Times/Herald Tribune (Etiquette)

    “This is a magical, unthreatening experience… the act of relinquishing responsibility for thought, word and action is unique and the effect is unmissable.” British Theatre Guide (Etiquette)

    “Hugely entertaining… This smart, mysterious exercise in programmed thinking and collective chaos is strange but exhilarating.” The Times (GuruGuru)

    “You may find yourself frantically looking for yourself again in the moments after the performance has finished.” The Guardian (GuruGuru)

    MORE INFORMATION ON ROTOZAZA CAN BE FOUND ON THEIR WEBSITE: www.rotozaza.uk

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    AWOL: Bus Chronicles

    A public art installation by Valerie Brodar
    AWOL: Bus Chronicles

    The Gallery of Contemporary Art at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs (GOCA), the City of Colorado Springs and Mountain Metropolitan Transit are proud to announce a new public art installation, Bus Chronicles by renowned artist and UCCS faculty member Valerie Brodar. This project is part of the AWOL: Art Without Limits. A new program developed by GOCA to create new forums for discussion on art and culture through site specific installations, happenings and non-traditional exhibition spaces. Bus Chronicles will be the third project in this year-long series and is made possible, in part, by a generous grant from the Pikes Peak Community Foundation.

    Bus Chronicles is a collection of eighty poems composed in seventeen lines. Each chronicle is a fictional narrative based on unobtrusive and celebratory observations of passengers who ride the Colorado Springs Mountain Metropolitan Transit fixed route bus system. The project has two components, visual texts on the windows of each bus and an audio collage of the poems in the Downtown Terminal.

    Artist Statement
    The rich visual narratives shaped from the barest of essentials in Japanese Haiku and Félix Fénéon’s Novels in Three Lines are the inspiration for this series. Haiku’s seventeen morae and Fénéon’s three lines are sparse, evocative, and visually precise texts ripe with humor, sorrow, longing, and reflection. Each bus chronicle is a voyeuristic contemplation on isolation within a crowd; the mundane moments of reverie; and on the gender, ethnicity, age, disability, and class dynamics enveloped within the complex choreography between arrival and departure. This practice of everyday life is revealed in slender poetic gestures. The date, time, and geographic position are notated in order to demarcate the locus of a fleeting experience. A passenger’s physical characteristics, posture, clothing, personal artifacts, and actions while situated within the spatial constraints of the bus become the fertile ground on which to create the chronicles. Although based on actual observations each fictional narrative contemplates the routine and the deviant, the ethereal and the grounded, the known and the unknown woven into an intricate tapestry of movement, connection, and memory.

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    Intersections Film Festival

    6pm, October 16 - 9pm October 18, 2009
    Intersections Film Festival
    October 16, 2009toOctober 18, 2009

    IFF 2009 features award winning films and documentaries from Turkey, Iran, the Arab Middle East, and North Africa which explore the theme of women’s lives and experiences. The films document contemporary realities of the Middle East from honor killings to drug addiction and sexual abuse, from sharing intimate stories and frustrations in a beauty parlor to waiting for the return of one’s migrant working spouse. Experiences further include the challenges of pursuing one’s film studies in a war-torn city and getting married in a zone of conflict. Post-screening discussions/Q&As follow five out of the seven featured films and documentaries.

    IFF 2009 is part of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs (UCCS) support of cultural programming along the Front Range expanding an already vibrant fall film festival line-up. MORE INFORMATION.

    We are pleased to be working with:

    - ArteEast, a New York-based, international, non-profit organization supporting artists from the Middle East and North Africa
    - Moon and Stars Project, a non-profit organization promoting Turkish culture and arts
    - Fictionville Studio, LLC, a Brooklyn-based independent film production company
    - Arab Film Distribution and Typecast Films, Seattle-based
    - ANS International, Abdullah Oguz’s Istanbul-based production company

    The SCHEDULE

    Opening Night, Friday, October 16th at UCCS Dwire 121

    6 PM
    Opening Reception
    6:45 PM
    Welcome Statement – Dr. Carole Woodall, IFF Executive Curator
    7 PM
    Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis (France 2007), 95 minutes
    Discussion with Dr. Rashna Singh, Department of English / WEST at UCCS


    Saturday, October 17th at UCCS Dwire 121


    10:30 AM

    Hiba Bassem’s Baghdad Days (Iraq/UK 2005), 35 minutes
    Discussion with Dr. Aditi Mitra, Department of Sociology / WEST at UCCS
    Screening held in conjunction with the 4th annual Woman-to-Woman Dialogue Series “Women’s Experiences: Surviving and Thriving” sponsored by the American Association of University Women and the Matrix Center.
    Noon
    Yasmine Kassari’s L’enfant Endormi [The Sleeping Child] (Morocco/Belgium 2004), 95 minutes
    3 PM
    Abdullah O?uz’s Mutluluk [Bliss] (Turkey/Greece 2007) 126 minutes
    Discussion with Dr. Sölen Sanli, Department of Sociology at Metro State
    6 PM
    Hamid Rahmanian’s The Glass House (USA/Iran 2008), 92 minutes
    Q&A with director, Hamid Rahmanian, and producer, Melissa Hibbard

    Sunday, October 18th at the fine arts center

    4:30 PM in the Music Room
    Hany Abu-Assad’s Rana’s Wedding (Palestine 2002), 90 minutes
    Discussion with Dr. Livia Alexander, Executive Director of ArteEast
    6:30 PM in the Lobby
    Closing Reception
    7:30 PM in the Upper Gallery
    Nadine Labaki’s Caramel (Lebanon/France 2007), 95 minutes

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    Flaunt: Evolution

    UNDER the Colorado Ave. Bridge
    September 12.2009, 7 – 11 pm
    Flaunt: Evolution
    Presented by FutureSelf, the Gallery of Contemporary Art and THEATREWORKS
    September 12, 2009
    7:00 pmto11:00 pm

    This is it. The art show where Y-chromosomal Adam meets mitochondrial Eve, giving birth to a whole new class of aesthetic imaginings.

    It’s Flaunt “Evolution.” An exhibit that showcases the creations of three forward-thinking organizations–FutureSelf, the Gallery of Contemporary Art, and THEATREWORKS—in a quest to advance our species through original works whose ideological themes are life, growth, and sustainability. Live music, video art, performance art, dance, experimental music and fashion all have a place in this year’s event.

    As a nod to Flaunt’s origins the concept of “fashion show” mutates with a presentation that will emerge as the evening progresses. Flaunt’s original visionary, Jackie Goode of Idoru, will be on hand to choose members of the audience who truly manifest the Evolution of Fashion to take their turn on the catwalk. Dress to impress.

    Don’t be the missing link. Order your tickets online at FlauntSprings.com or reserve them by phone at 719.255.3232.

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    DISPLACEMENT

    Cinema Out of Site
    August 7 - 9, 2009 Lectures and Site-Specific Cinema
    DISPLACEMENT
    Image courtesy Jesse Kennedy.
    August 7, 2009 7:00 pmtoAugust 9, 2009 8:00 pm

    Displacement is the perfect marriage of a program and a project. The program, AWOL: Art Without Limits is about creating new forums for discussion on art through site specific installations, happenings and non-traditional exhibition spaces. The project, Displacement, is a conversation based on the art of displaced cinema. Both the program and project value the importance and effect of space, and both challenge traditional expectations of what an exhibition site can and should be. This project, a collaboration between GOCA and TIE, The International Experimental Cinema Exposition, will be presented on the top floor of the Kiowa & Nevada parking garage in downtown Colorado Springs. Lectures will be offered to further explore the discourse of expanded (or displaced) cinema, aural experimentation, spectatorship, the recontectualization of found-footage, and parkour (the art of movement).

    Displacement: Cinema Out of Site is collaboration and presentation of film works by contemporary Argentine and North American avant-gardists to encourage an intercontinental dialogue between artists. These artists, writers and curators are presenting moving image and sound creations on the concrete structure of a public parking garage. To understand the presentation and its relationship to parkour we must understand displacement. Rachel Cole, a participating artist, wrote “Place isn’t lost, it is rather “displaced,” undone, emptied of meaning of itself, a location without linear measurement.” Displaced is not misplaced. The cinema and this program are not lost; instead they have been stripped of popular expectations for what they should be. Many would say art should be in a gallery and film in a theater. This project uses an existing space, urban architecture, to redefine the viewer’s experience of the work presented.

    A series of three lectures featuring filmmakers, artists and curators accompany this one-night-only film presentation. Each lecture pairs two speakers each with keen insight into the philosophies and techniques explored through the films.

    AUG. 7 CITY HALL Council Chambers (107 N. Nevada Ave.)
    Christopher May and Jimmy Gable will discuss the notion of displacementand displaced cinema and the history and philosophy of parkour.

    Displacement occurs when the Id wants to do something of which the Super ego does not permit. The Ego thus finds some other way of releasing the psychic energy of the Id. Phobias may also use displacement as a mechanism for releasing energy that is caused in other ways. See also: Fantasy, Projection, Expanded Cinema, Curatorial Daydreaming, Surrealism.

    Parkour is a discipline, non-competitive in nature, with the focus on the ability to move over, below, around, through, or anything to get by an obstacle as quickly and as efficiently as possible, as if in pursuit, usually in an urban environment. It’s about having the control and the know-how to create movement through an environment efficiently.

    AUG. 8 GAY & LESBIAN FUND FOR COLORADO (315 E. Costilla)
    Pablo Marin and Gregg Savage will discuss found footage and people as instruments.

    Found-footage, the practice of recontectualization of someone else’s audiovisual materials, has certainly come a long way since its almost uncertain beginnings in the twentieth century. In perfect symbiosis with the groundbreaking concept of ready-mades in the field of art, this tradition surpassed practically every film frontier, from documentary to fiction, to find its true place within the avant-garde, where its nature is constantly redefined by both conceptual and technological possibilities.

    Making music from the sounds of traceurs in the field, Gregg will talk about the experience of creating the music and sound worlds for the event Displacement: Cinema Out of Site. He will explore why it is essential for techology and tradition to find a happy medium in creating art, why randomness and chaos are essential to creativity, and how the philosophy and inspiration of Parkour can be utilized in making music.

    AUG. 9 GAY & LESBIAN FUND FOR COLORADO (315 E. Costilla)
    Dan Mancini and Rachel Cole will discuss the Tetris Effect and on-site distraction.

    As a recurring practice parkour takes root in the mind. An apposite analogy is the Tetris Effect, wherein after extended bouts of Tetris, people consistently report seeing the entire world, buildings and cars, as tetrominoic pieces to be fit together. Similarly, through the proclivity of parkour, walls and railings that traditionally herd people around become open ended, a canvas on which to apply new physical rules. This phenomenon exemplifies the neroplasticity of the human brain, by which parkour literally amends a tracer’s perception of physical spaces, and even abstract ideas.

    Parkour and experimental film share the quality of continual disturbance: the land, the background, the scene, the figures enveloped in it are transiently in the frenzy of the un-locatable, fleeting present. Displacement asks us to locate ourselves and thus be physical, embodied, carnally un-whole as much as starkly self-conscious.

    PARTICIPANTS
    Christopher May is the founder and primary curator behind TIE, The International Experimental Cinema Exposition. In addition to his work with TIE, May has curated and presented a decade of film programs for museums, film societies and colleges including the Wexner Center for the Arts, the Austrian Film Museum, MALBA – Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires, ICA-Boston, Cinemateca Uruguaya, and San Francisco Cinematheque. His (Super-8 & 16mm) film work currently explores the sensually visceral qualities of cinema and their topographical relationships with sub-cultural landscapes.

    Pablo Marín was born in 1982 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Besides teaching and writing on avant-garde film (laregioncentral.blogspot.com) he’s a film/video curator and filmmaker. His films were premiered at several TIE festivals and tour programs and shown at International Film Festival Rotterdam, London Film Festival, Starting from Scratch (Netherlands), Pleasure Dome (Canada), Avanto Festival (Finland), no.w.here (England), amongst others. In 2009 he was invited as visiting artist to FAC’s Found-footage Workshop in Montevideo, Uruguay.

    Gregg Savage is a composer of guitar and computer music who enjoys challenging perceptions of harmony and dissonance. He brings his background in avant-garde sound art, film composing, and underground dance music to fuse together compositions from non-traditional sound objects. He has a BM from Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA where he studied guitar and music synthesis. His music was recently featured in the 3 panel film project Film (Parkour) in the Masterpieces of New American Avant-Garde Cinema program at the Austrian Film Museum. He lives in Colorado.

    Rachel Cole is a fiction writer who grew up in Denver and the Appalachians. She received a BA in English with a minor in Continental Philosophy from the University of Denver and is currently enrolled in the Literary Arts Program at Brown University. She is particularly fascinated by corporeal philosophy, 20th century to present studies in linguistics, the politics of territory, and trauma in contemporary art. Her interest in experimental film is the instability of images, the event of spectacle, and the intimacy of beauty which ignites the sensuality of binaries as much as the crisis of boundaries. A curated text project is forthcoming from zingmagazine #22.

    Jesse Kennedy is a writer and filmmaker. He currently works exclusively in Super 8, a format in keeping with his interest in what poet Eileen Myles has termed “pathetic technologies:” seemingly simple, neglected, and/or antiquated technologies (from conversation to VHS), through which one may, nonetheless, still explore the limits of the possible. He has a BA in Writing and Literature from Naropa University, in Boulder, CO. His poetry has appeared in Bombay Gin. His films have been previously exhibited by TIE. He currently lives in El Rito, New Mexico.

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    Events

    • SAY WHAT: poetry + art

      September 16, 2010, 6:00 pm

      This session of SAY WHAT pairs an artist talk from GOCA121 featured photographer William Wylie with a reading by Colorado poet Merril Gilfillan.

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    Upcoming Exhibits

    Hypothesis

    Hypothesis

    Process in Science and Art

    Hypothesis: Process in Science and Art is a multi-disciplinary exhibit and an experiment highlighting the connections between the scientific and artistic processes.

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