Joianne Bittle "No Man's Land"

Churner and Churner

poster for Joianne Bittle "No Man's Land"

This event has ended.

"No Man's Land" brings together two series of Bittle's work: a recently completed group of paintings of jackrabbits (2008-2011) and the first of a series of portable dioramas.

Shown together for the first time, the paintings in Bittle's series depict solitary, gnarled jackrabbits in a desert landscape. The hares' agitated expressions disconcert the viewer in a reciprocal gaze, denying any attempt at anthropomorphization.

Nestled in a cargo trailer, Bittle's diorama Preserving Mass Extinction is an imagined landscape of Marfa, Texas as it may have looked 250 million years ago, featuring fluorescent sponges, red tube coral, sea urchins and trilobites. A quotation of the American Museum of Natural History's 1960s diorama of the Permian Sea, as well as a memorial to her own time in the West Texas desert, the installation connects ancient geological time to the present environment. It is the first in Bittle's series Portable Landscapes.

Born in 1975 in Indiana.

[Image: Joianne Bittle "Preserving Mass Extinction" (2010-11) mixed media in cargo trailer 72 x 71 x 144 in.]

Media

Schedule

from March 24, 2011 to April 27, 2011

Opening Reception on 2011-03-24 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Joianne Bittle

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