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Edgemont Art Department

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Museum Mondays! conversation with artist, Kara Walker

June 3, 2020

Kara Walker explores the raw intersection of race and gender in her work, crafting vivid psychological narratives from a contemporary perspective on historical conditions. Over the past two decades, Walker has unleashed the traditionally Victorian medium of the silhouette onto the walls of the gallery, creating immersive installations that envelop the viewer. Walker’s multi-media work—which includes drawing, watercolor, video, and sculpture—often reconsider grotesque caricatures, probing their persistence in popular culture and reclaiming their subjugating power to alternative ends.

In a candid one-on-one conversation, Kara Walker and composer/musician Jason Moran discuss their collaboration for the Prospect.4 triennial in New Orleans, “Katastwóf Karavan” (2018). Installed at Algiers Point on the bank of the Mississippi River and activated daily across three days in February 2018, the work featured a thirty-two-note steam calliope performed by Moran and housed in a wagon developed by Walker.

A contemporary calliope, “Katastwóf Karavan” uses the mechanics of American manufacturing to uplift the voices it once suppressed. Historically this “music is used for people who are captive” Moran notes, eliciting feelings of both celebration and distress. “As a stationary object, it always needs to be activated,” Walker explains. “When you have monuments or commemorative things that just exist, they sit there and they disappear.”

Walker and Moran share how performing “Katastwóf Karavan” at Algiers Point pays tribute to Africans who were brought there to be sold into slavery in the 1700s. The calliope will honor “millions of ancestors, in a way that we aren’t sure about what we’re about to touch,” says Moran. Not intended to live in one place, Walker hopes to tour the monument to other locations similar to Algiers, noting “there are many places like that in the Americas and I think that it’s worthwhile to explore.”

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Museum Mondays! the Museum of Modern Art - "The Shape of Shape"

May 26, 2020

In The Shape of Shape, Amy Sillman—an artist who has helped redefine contemporary painting, pushing the medium into drawing, installations, video, and zines—has created a revelatory Artist’s Choice installation drawn from the Museum’s collection. “Even though shape is everywhere,” she reflected, “we don’t talk about it much; it’s not a hot topic in art, like color or systems. So I decided to look for works in MoMA’s collection in which shape does prevail over other considerations…. Often eccentric, poetic, or intimate, these works are like bodies that speak, operating at the hub of language and matter, signs and sensations.” The Shape of Shape features works that span vastly different time periods, places, and mediums, many rarely seen. Here, Sillman presents a highly personal exploration of shape—the ever-shifting boundaries that define what and how we see—in modern art.

This exhibition is currently being presented here as part of our Virtual Views series, as we “museum from home.” Hear directly from Amy Sillman and Michelle Kuo, the Marlene Hess Curator of Painting and Sculpture, during a live Q&A, and experience The Shape of Shape through a downloadable artist’s zine, video, installation views, and more.

Click Image to launch studio visit…

Click Image to launch studio visit…

Museum Mondays! - visit with sculptor Tim Hawkinson

May 18, 2020

Is it Science? Is it Engineering? Is it Music? Is it Sculpture? Is it Art? … Meet sculptor Tim Hawkinson and his strange, weird, mechanically driven kinetic and audio sculptures! Meet for an open discussion regarding Tim Hawkinson’s oddball/genius artworks on Wednesday between 1 -2 pm in a Google Meet. Link to be shared in Google Classroom.

Tim Hawkinson tinkers with everyday materials to build surprising mechanical art works. “I guess it comes from early on in childhood, a fascination with moving parts and sort of the magical,” he suggests.

In his studio, Hawkinson explains how he used gears, switches, nozzles, buckets, and pie tins to build a drumming machine that captures random drips of rain, amplifies them, and organizes them into music. “It’s not even electronics. I don’t know what it is,” he admits. One of Hawkinson’s largest projects, Überorgan, is an inflatable installation in a space the size of a football field. For a version of the artwork the artists created a score for the organ using old church hymns.

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From "Museum Mondays! (even though it's not Monday!)

May 15, 2020

Take a 360 degree tour of the Metropolitan Museum in NYC! (I suggest touring the Temple of Dendur…) Enjoy!

Click image to connect with Flip Grid Fridays!

Click image to connect with Flip Grid Fridays!

Flip Grid Fridays! presented by Ms. Carey and Ms. Amorosa

May 15, 2020
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Museum Mondays! studio visit with Chris Ware, cartoonist/illustrator

May 11, 2020

For Museum Mondays, we will spend time with cartoonist and illustrator, Chris Ware. Known for his New Yorker magazine covers, Chris Ware is hailed as a master of the comic art form. His complex graphic novels tell stories about people in suburban Midwestern neighborhoods, poignantly reflecting on the role memory plays in constructing identity. Stories featuring many of Ware’s protagonists—Quimby the Mouse, Rusty Brown, and Jimmy Corrigan—often first appear in serialized form, in publications such as The New York Times, the Guardian, or Ware’s own ongoing comic book series Acme Novelty Library, before being organized into their own stand-alone books.

Between the hours of 1-2 pm. on Wednesday, Mr. Coffin will host an open discussion on the work and process of Chris Ware, the importance of Books in a digital age, and the importance of the graphic novel. Link to the discussion will be posted in Google Classroom.

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Flip Grid Fridays! - Optical Illusion Challenge

May 8, 2020

Ms. Carey and Ms. Amorosa have posted their new Friday Flip Grid - the Optical Illusion Challenge!

https://flipgrid.com/ehsart

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Museum Mondays! Studio Visit with Leonardo Drew, sculptor

May 3, 2020

This week “Museum Mondays!” features a visit to the studio of sculptor, Leonardo Drew. Click on image for access to his Art 21 feature page. Join us on Wednesday in Google Meet, for an open discussion starting at 1:00 pm. Details to be announced in Google Classroom. Join us as we discuss found objects, personal history, culture, and science’s role in art making.

Leonardo Drew was born in Tallahassee, Florida in 1961, and grew up in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Although often mistaken for accumulations of found objects, his sculptures are instead made of “brand new stuff”—materials such as wood, rusted iron, cotton, paper, and mud—that he intentionally subjects to processes of weathering, burning, oxidation, and decay. Whether jutting out from a wall or traversing rooms as freestanding installations, his pieces challenge the architecture of the space in which they’re shown.

Memories of his childhood surroundings—from the housing project where he lived to the adjacent landfill—resurface in the intricate grids and configurations of many of his pieces. Never content with work that comes easily, Drew constantly reaches beyond “what’s comfortable” and charts a course of daily investigation, never knowing what the work will be about but letting it find its way, and asking, “What if….”

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"FLIP GRID FRIDAYS!"

April 29, 2020

Art Teachers, Ms. Carey and Ms. Amorosa have created "Flip Grid" Fridays! This week... they have an origami challenge! If you're bored... or inspired, GIVE IT A SHOT! Click here: https://flipgrid.com/ehsart

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Museum Mondays! Studio Visit with painter, Elizabeth Murray

April 26, 2020

Please join us for our first virtual studio tour/museum visit with painter, Elizabeth Murray. Click image to access tour.

Instructions: Please view “Elizabeth Murray: in Humor” … When finished, view “Bop.”

Please join members of the Edgemont Jr/Sr High School Art Department for an open discussion on the work of Elizabeth Murray to be announced on your Google Classroom pages. The first open discussion will be on Wednesday 4/29 at 1:00 pm. in Mr. Coffin’s Google Meet. Be on the lookout for the link! Come prepared with your questions and comments…

A pioneer in painting, Elizabeth Murray’s distinctively shaped canvases break with the art-historical tradition of illusionistic space in two-dimensions. Jutting out from the wall and sculptural in form, Murray’s paintings and watercolors playfully blur the line between the painting as an object and the painting as a space for depicting objects. Breathing life into domestic subject matter, Murray’s paintings often include images of cups, drawers, utensils, chairs, and tables. These familiar objects are matched with cartoonish fingers and floating eyeballs—macabre images that are as nightmarish as they are goofy. Taken as a whole, Murray’s paintings are abstract compositions rendered in bold colors and multiple layers of paint, but the details of the paintings reveal a fascination with dream states and the psychological underbelly of domestic life.

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"Making Art: Together While Apart" gallery launches on EHS Art Gallery home page.

March 31, 2020
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Sneaker Design Projects - STEAM Design (based on the Abstract series: Tinker Hatfield)

February 26, 2020
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Sneaker Design Projects - STEAM Design (based on the Abstract series: Tinker Hatfield)

February 26, 2020
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EHS Artist, Gloria Kim, designs invite for Katonah Museum!

January 16, 2020
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Alumni, Ellen Tang... comes back to visit from her freshman year at Pratt Institute!

December 19, 2019
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Alumni Photo Show opens in E-Gallery

November 1, 2019

EHS Senior Art student, Ellen Yu Tang commits to Pratt Institute

March 29, 2019
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