Plane Break: Annie Ling, Jason Isolini, and Monika Sziladi
January 31 - April 22, 2022

The picture plane is a threshold that separates illusion from reality. Although it refers to the surface of a two-dimensional object, it more accurately describes the process of looking into an illusionistic space without noticing the material on which the image rests. This occurs when we observe photographs or watch TV. We see the image, not the plastic screen or paper. Our minds have trouble holding both in view at once. What happens, then, when the picture plane is broken? When its presence and absence compete for our attention, disrupting our sense of realities (material/real and illusionistic)?  Here, in this intermedia zone of photography-sculpture, where sensorial and optical perceptions wildly intersect, the photographers in this exhibition recognize something familiar.

Jason Isolini, Untitled (Magenta), 2022, lenticular
Photo courtesy of Jason Isolini

Between Starshine and Clay: Kiyan Williams, Jean-Marc Superville Sovak, and Vinnie Bagwell
February 5 - May 9, 2021
co-curated with: Jennifer Jones

Images of enslaved Africans on the Atlantic Coast manifest in the featured work of Jean-Marc Superville Sovak, Vinnie Bagwell, and Kiyan Williams. Much like the rhetorical question in Lucille Clifton’s poem ‘won’t you come celebrate with me’ — in which the lines “between / starshine and clay” contemplate a life journey against all odds — work in this exhibition honors hardships endured while critiquing historical memory in the United States. In a-Historical Landscapes, Superville Sovak superimposes figures of 19th century anti-slavery literature onto contemporaneous idyllic American landscapes of the Hudson River School, to reexamine the concept of historical. Bagwell’s work also addresses omission. In two public sculpture projects, Victory and Enslaved Africans’ Rain Garden, the Yonkers-based artist makes figurative representations in bronze, humanizing enslaved Africans whose lives were integral to the building of this nation. Jubilant and defiant outstretched arms made of gleaming stones and soil from an African-American burial ground in Queens emerge from the ground in Williams’s Reaching Toward Warmer Suns. This monument along with Notes on Digging channel freedom in catharsis.

Jean-Marc Superville Sovak, Rogers’ Slide Lake George,
from the series a-Historical Landscapes, 2019, print
Photo courtesy of Jean-Marc Superville Sovak

CHIAOZZA: Color Gathers Space
September 5 - November 23, 2020

Image

CHIAOZZA, install photo, 2020
Photo courtesy of Adam Fezza

Exhibitions curated at WCC Art Gallery

Westchester Community College
State University of New York

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