“MFA Photography, Video and Related Media 2012 Thesis" Exhibition

SVA Chelsea Gallery

poster for “MFA Photography, Video and Related Media 2012 Thesis" Exhibition

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School of Visual Arts (SVA) presents “MFA Photography, Video and Related Media 2012 Thesis Exhibition,” a selection of work expanding the photographic vocabulary by 23 students graduating from the MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department, curated by Bonnie Yochelson.

“Students continue to test the norms of traditional photography and video, creating amalgams of still and moving images, borrowing ideas and techniques from painting and sculpture, and creating environments as well as discrete objects,” says Yochelson. “No longer focused on the truth-telling nature of their medium, they readily blend fact with fantasy, and personal narrative with political commentary. They begin with the presumption that theirs is a world of images, and they create or manipulate images to add their experiences to that world.”

Elli Chung, for example, created an oversize book of photographs depicting “kami,” Japanese spirits that inhabit the physical world. Ryan Koopmans traveled to Asia and the Middle East in search of “paradise now”, fantastic urban architecture inspired by nationalist ambitions in the developing world. Brandon Holmes produced a video of the post-apocalypse as imagined by “preppers,” Americans preparing for the end of life on Earth as we know it.

The world’s unrest is expressed more personally in works by JooYoung Bae and Amani Willett, both of whom are new parents. Combining video and photography, Bae has produced a message For Heim, her son who will grow up in Korea, Japan and the United States -- nations with widely disparate cultures. Willett’s book Disquiet combines intimate portraits of his wife and infant son with threatening, politically charged images of life outside the home.

Several students reflected on imagery of the past. In Where the Boys Are, Pacifico Silano reimagines pre-AIDS gay culture. Brandy Watts created a Field Guide to 20th century botanical photography. In aphasiasticisms, Jeremy Haik explores the fragility and futility of cultural preservation.

Other students turned away from the contingencies of everyday life to explore the nature of artistic experience itself. In A Wakeful State of Perception, Ryann Cooley built a self-sufficient room to create an immersive experience of light, sound and space. In A Conversation with Photography, Shiyuan Liu created an explosion of color, pattern, image, and form to challenge the relationship between the photographic frame and the art of performance.

Media

Schedule

from June 08, 2012 to June 30, 2012

Opening Reception on 2012-06-14 from 18:00 to 20:00

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