Showing posts with label Jennifer Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jennifer Williams. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2010

Center of Photography at Woodstock's Photography Quarterly

Pour, Shihmen Dam, Dasi, Taiwan, © Rona Chang

The Center of Photography at Woodstock have released their Photography Quarterly #98 Magazine, which features portfolios by previous artists-in-residence, many who have appeared on Nymphoto!

Our very own Rona Chang is also featured in the quarterly, along with Hee Jin Kang, Juliana Beasley, Justine Reyes, Kanako Sasaki, Jennifer Williams, and Stacy Arezou Mehrfar to name a few.

There's also a great selection of essays and interviews.

Wendy Ewald interviewed by Emily Glass
There is perhaps no other practicing artist in photography that converges the margins between artist and subject more than Wendy Ewald. Emily Glass interviews this ground-breaking image-maker at her upstate New York home about her process and her ongoing career.

Notes from the Blogosphere by Liz Unterman
Unterman investigates this exciting new platform where ideas are being exchanged, voices are being discovered and the roles of artist, curator, and tastemaker are being converged and asks five leading bloggers about what Blogs they turn to in order to know where photography is at.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Art for Haiti: Auction Highlights

As part of our Art for Haiti Auction, we'd like to show you works that are available during this week. To learn more about the auction please click here for the press release information.


Artist: Jennifer Williams
Title: “building” (from the “stalled” series”)
Date: 2010
Medium and Size: 24x30" Archival Matte Inkjet Print, edition 1/20, signed

Originally from the countryside south of Pittsburgh, PA, Williams attended graduate school at Goldsmiths College in London, England in 1996-97, and undergraduate at The Cooper Union in New York 1990-94. She has lived and worked in Manhattan for the last twenty years and has made the visual exploration of New York City a central theme in her work. Recent exhibitions include: “Cut: Contemporary Collage” at Platform Gallery in Seattle, WA; a solo show at A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, and Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island; and in the “New Works Gallery” at Silvereye Center for Photography, Pittsburgh,PA. She is a 2008-2009 A.I.R. fellow, and was awarded a residency in June 2009 at the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester, NY. An interview and photos will be included in the book “Nymphoto Conversations: Volume 1”, with an accompanying group show at Sasha Wolf Gallery in Soho. She currently is a Visiting full time Professor at Brown University.

Click here to place a bid on her print! (note the reserve minimum)


Artist: Keliy Anderson-Staley
Title: "Elijah"
Date: 2006
Medium and Size: 11"x14" Digital C-print from a wet plate collodion tintype
Print comes framed in a complimentary brown 16"x20" wood frame.


Keliy Anderson-Staley received a BA from Hampshire College and an MFA from Hunter College, CUNY. Keliy was a 2008 NYFA Photography Fellow. She has taught the nineteenth-century wet plate collodion tintype process at the Center for Alternative Photogaphy in NYC, the Bakery Photo Collective, at Bowdoin College, Hampshire College, and New Jersey City University. Her work has been featured in fine art photography magazines and exhibited in numerous galleries and museums.

Click here to place a bid on her print! (note the reserve minimum)

The Art for Haiti auction will be coordinated by eBay Giving Works and 100% of the proceeds will go to Partners in Health. The auction & print sale will run now through the end March 9, 2010 at 7:30 PM (EST).


Remember, the auction ends tomorrow night at 7:30PM! Please help us support Haiti.
Click here to see all the artwork offered in the auction and be sure to check if the reserve minimum have been set.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

In Rhode Island: Jen Williams



Jennifer Williams
selected photographs from the “stalled” and “baricades” series
List Art Building
1st floor gallery
64 College Street
Providence, R.I.
February 5th - 18th
****Opening Thursday , February 11th from 5-7

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Landmarks of New York at the NY Historical Society

from NY Historical Society:

LANDMARKS OF NEW YORK
An exhibition of 83 photographs documenting some of the most significant buildings and public parks in New York City will be on view at The New-York Historical Society from April 30 through July 12, 2009, in the exhibition Landmarks of New York. The exhibition has traveled to 82 countries under the sponsorship of the United States Department of State since 2006 and is now coming home to New York for its final showing. The photographs in the exhibition will then enter the collection of the New-York Historical Society, through a donation from the exhibition's curator, Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel.

Some of the photographers include Jennifer Williams, Christine Osinski, Teresa Christiansen, and Rona Chang.

New York Historical Society
170 Central Park West between 76th and 77th Street
The New-York Historical Society is open to the general public Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m; free admission on Friday from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Sunday hours are from 11:00 a.m. until 5:45 p.m.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Jennifer Williams [FLŌ] Installation in Dumbo

This Thursday will be the first Thursday Reception for [FLŌ]. Galleries in Dumbo participate so there will be a bunch of openings in one night to attend- sounds like fun.




© Jennifer Williams

A.I.R. Gallery
April 29 - May 24, 2009

First Thursday Reception: Thursday, May 7, 2009 6pm to 8pm

Fellowship Gallery: Jennifer Williams [FLŌ]
2008 -2009 A.I.R. Gallery Fellowship Recipient Jennifer Williams’ work exhibits a “desire to recycle and build,” as well as an interest in “the Rauschenberg sense of exploiting the rectangular frame,” that goes far beyond the more traditional uses of photography. In [FLŌ] Williams focuses her attention on the immediate landscape of the gallery itself. Her installation reminds us that there is substantially more to an exhibition space than a white walled cube. By photographing the ducts, pipes, light fixtures, office equipment, and other necessary but often hidden features of a gallery, Williams deconstructs the space, highlighting the architectural elements that make the building function but often go unnoticed. The viewer is directed to see the space in its entirety instead of imagining the artwork to be separate or unaffected by its context. In this case, rather than returning her large-scale collages to the street, Williams allows the outside to come in. The literal and imagined ductwork, electric lines, sprinkler system and other pipes lead the viewer’s eye around the space, serving as pathways to the building’s exterior and the surrounding urban geography. Williams received her BFA from Cooper Union and her MFA from Goldsmiths College in London. She has exhibited at Silvereye Center for Photography in Pittsburgh, the New Jersey Visual Arts Center, Soho Photo, the Williamsburg Art and Historical Sociey and the Platform Gallery in Seattle.

Press Release

A.I.R. Gallery
111 Front Street, #228 Brooklyn, NY 11201
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Sunday 11am - 6pm
212-255-6651
info@airgallery.org
www.airgallery.org

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Jennifer Williams @ A.I.R. Gallery

from A.I.R. Gallery:


© Jennifer Williams

A.I.R. Gallery
April 29 - May 24, 2009
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 30, 2009 6pm to 8pm

First Thursday Reception: Thursday, May 7, 2009 6pm to 8pm

Fellowship Gallery: Jennifer Williams [FLŌ]
2008 -2009 A.I.R. Gallery Fellowship Recipient Jennifer Williams’ work exhibits a “desire to recycle and build,” as well as an interest in “the Rauschenberg sense of exploiting the rectangular frame,” that goes far beyond the more traditional uses of photography. In [FLŌ] Williams focuses her attention on the immediate landscape of the gallery itself. Her installation reminds us that there is substantially more to an exhibition space than a white walled cube. By photographing the ducts, pipes, light fixtures, office equipment, and other necessary but often hidden features of a gallery, Williams deconstructs the space, highlighting the architectural elements that make the building function but often go unnoticed. The viewer is directed to see the space in its entirety instead of imagining the artwork to be separate or unaffected by its context. In this case, rather than returning her large-scale collages to the street, Williams allows the outside to come in. The literal and imagined ductwork, electric lines, sprinkler system and other pipes lead the viewer’s eye around the space, serving as pathways to the building’s exterior and the surrounding urban geography. Williams received her BFA from Cooper Union and her MFA from Goldsmiths College in London. She has exhibited at Silvereye Center for Photography in Pittsburgh, the New Jersey Visual Arts Center, Soho Photo, the Williamsburg Art and Historical Sociey and the Platform Gallery in Seattle.

The A.I.R. Fellowship Program is made possible by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, a state agency, the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA) through a re-grant from Brooklyn Arts Council, as well as generous support from Louise McCagg, The Bernheim Foundation, The Gifford Foundation, The Timken Foundation, Elizabeth A. Sackler, and The Milton and Sally Avery Foundation.

A.I.R. Gallery
111 Front Street, #228 Brooklyn, NY 11201
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Sunday 11am - 6pm
212-255-6651
info@airgallery.org
www.airgallery.org

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Jennifer Williams: New York, Seattle

Jennifer Williams is part of a group show at Platform Gallery in Seattle that runs through March 28, 2009. The show is titled "Cut - Contemporary Collage" and picks up on the renewed interest in collage. If you you are in Seattle this is a great show to check out.

Platform Gallery

114 Third Avenue South,
Seattle, Washington
February 19-March 28, 2009

But you can also see the work of Jennifer Williams in New York, starting next week:

"Quality Service"
Feb. 24-28th (opening feb. 24th 6-8)
The Cooper Union
6th and 7th floors
7 East 7th Street
New York, NY 10003


glob
2008
25" x 44"
handcut digital prints collaged on watercolor paper

©Jennifer Williams

And you can revisit our conversation with Jen, by clicking here.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Jennifer Williams in Pittsburgh

Jennifer Williams is in the Fellowship 2008 show at Silvereye Center for Photography in Pittsburgh PA on now until March 7, 2009. She is one of 10 honorable mentions.

And Jen is now part of the A.I.R. 2009 Fellowship program. Congrats!

Thursday, November 6, 2008

A Conversation with Jennifer Williams

I met Jennifer Williams back when I was still an undergrad at Cooper. She had returned from grad school in London and began working at Cooper. I was a total photo geek, hanging out in the color darkrooms, printing like there was no tomorrow. I remember the first time Jen and I printed next to each other. She was printing bits and pieces of a room in London, part of a house she squatted in for some time. That was her part of the Glengall Road series. I was completely taken by her need to document every detail in the space in this piecemeal sort of way. I couldn't even begin to imagine what life in a squatted place was like. She didn't have any borders or even a defined shape, her colors were a bit different in each section of the room, this stuff was so punk to me, and it still is.


Glob, Suffolk St., July 2008 © Jennifer Williams

This summer Jen sent some photos of some new work that she had wheat pasted up around the East Village. All I can say is that I think Jennifer Williams is brilliant.


Spurt, Delancey St., July 2008 © Jennifer Williams

"My collages are a response to the radical physical change within the aging nineteenth century neighborhood of the Lower East Side, my home for the last seventeen years. As they slide between modern color digital images and archaic monotone photographic drawings, their materiality mimics the disparate streetscape facades containing ancient crumbling tenements as well as shiny state-of-the-art condos; their forms explore the anxiety of gentrification."


Fight, 2008 © Jennifer Williams

Nymphoto: Tell us a little about yourself.

Jennifer Williams: I’ve spent the half my life living in major cities, but my roots lie in an aging rural/industrial working class area 45 minutes south of Pittsburgh. Recently I’ve begun to realize how often my upbringing informs my work. My parents built a house next door to my grandparents, who were one of the first families to build a house on the street which previously was a big farm. Behind our house, spanning many hills, was a 250-year-old farm, where I attempted to allay my teenage angst by rambling through corn fields while listening to my walkman. It was and is a beautiful place physically, but mentally it was difficult to watch as the area wasted away. All of the industry came to a halt in the 80’s, and hundreds of families moved away. Whole towns were left nearly empty. Today Pittsburgh has reinvented itself and now is a much more economically and culturally rich place for my nieces and nephews, which is just great.

Knowing there was a bigger world out there, in 1990 I moved to New York to attend The Cooper Union, where I studied all kinds of fine art disciplines. Soon after my arrival, I moved to the Lower East Side of Manhattan, which a t the time was a bombed out drug infested rather intimidating mess. I guess to some degree I felt at home in the decay, and “home” has been the same apartment since 1991. The neighborhood and my building both have been inspirations for me art-wise.

During college I went on exchange to London for a semester, my passion for British music and as well as some romantic notion of a trace of Welsh heritage taking me there. In the summer of ’94 my whole band moved there and toured, and eventually in the late 90’s I went back for grad school at Goldsmiths College. I love London, even though it can be terribly depressing weather wise. I’d live there if it weren’t so bloody expensive.


Untitled (Float), 2008 © Jennifer Williams

NP: How did you discover photography?

JW: When I was in elementary school, my mom began taking classes at the local community college in order to get an accounting degree. One of her electives was photography and she borrowed a camera from a neighbor. For her assignments she captured moments around the house/yard/neighborhood: pictures of the cat, quirky trees, me on my bicycle, etc. I was fascinated by the B&W prints she brought home; they transformed my everyday world. Around junior year of high school I took summer art classes in Pittsburgh and had the opportunity to take a 2-week photography course. My parents bought me a 35mm camera which had a digital light meter, and I’ve been taking pictures ever since.

NP: Where do you find inspration?

JW: I’ve always thought of myself as an artist who uses photography to make art, and I draw from sources like film, sculpture, drawing, and music. The everyday provides much inspiration, piles lying around the house or in the street, as well as architecture, or perhaps more specifically architectural ideas. I made my living doing carpentry before I fell into teaching photography, so structure is very important. I like working with my hands and with found materials. I’m fascinated by complex city spaces and buildings altered in weird ways. There is a reoccurring dream I have where my apartment building has extra floors, lots of staircases that go nowhere, extra rooms, sometimes even an elevator (though its usually broken). Also, Hilla and Bernd Becher's work, especially in person, is utterly inspiring. As straightforward as their work may seem, their compositions are mesmerizing, you can feel the precise calculation that has gone on behind the camera before each shot. I know I don’t have that kind of patience, and I respect it greatly.


Untitled (Dangle), 2007 © Jennifer Williams

NP: How did this project come about?

JW: In 2003 I began a project documenting the physical changes happening on the Lower East Side/East Village of Manhattan, focusing on the new architectural additions being built on top of tenements. Often I’d walk around at 7 or 8 AM to catch the light as the sun was rising. This was before the garbage trucks had picked up the trash, and as I was walking I started noticing haphazard yet sculpturally interesting piles along the way. Soon those became my focus, rather than the growth of the LES (which has clearly become less of a moment and more of a movement), and felt the need to work with them as raw materials. I’ve always been the kind of person who builds things out of scraps left behind, rather than starting off with, say, a pristine sheet of plywood or clean sheet of paper. Its something I learned from my grandparents, a sort of “make do with what you have” mentality, nowadays its called “recycling”. I’ve also never been satisfied with the rectangular shape of photographs. They frustrate me. Therefore, I believe the origins of this project lie in a desire recycle and build, as well as a sort of Rauschenberg-ish sense of exploiting the rectangular frame.


Gravitate, Clinton St., July 2008 © Jennifer Williams


Gravitate (detail), Clinton St., July 2008 © Jennifer Williams


Gravitate (detail), Clinton St., July 2008 © Jennifer Williams

NP: What's next?

JW: I’m in the “Fourth Annual Alternative Processes” show at Soho Photo coming up in November . The juror Dan Estabrook choose my work for the grand jurors prize, which is pretty exciting. I’ve also been trying to get my work out there in different ways. Now that my collages have made the step out into the real world via wheat-pasting, I’d like to make more site-specific compositions, both outdoors and indoors. The work should ‘collaborate” with construction barricade panels in which bits have been cut out and replaced, or that are hobbled together at strange angles, etc. It also will move indoors in order to interact with everyday objects in personal spaces. Cyanotype-wise, I want to make a flowing “collage”, perhaps 10 feet long. I’ve also been thinking about incorporating drawing into my work, but I haven’t quite gotten there yet. Oh and possibly a project based on found furniture on Craiglist. So many ideas, so little time……


Boxes, 2008 © Jennifer Williams


Leaning, 2008 © Jennifer Williams

The “Fourth Annual Alternative Processes” show at Soho Photo opens tonight. For lots more of Jen's work go to her site, and follow her adventures and musings on her blog, Beatrice the Cat.

Thanks Jen!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Opening Reception Tomorrow @ Soho Photo Gallery

Opening tomorrow night at Soho Photo is the 4th Annual Alternative Process Show. The show includes work by Nymphoto's Nina Buesing Corvallo and Jennifer Williams, the grand prize winner. Stay tuned for tomorrow's Conversation with Jennifer Williams.


Pile #3, 2006 © Jennifer Williams

Soho Photo
The Alternative Process Show
Nov. 6-29, 2008
Opening Nov. 6 6-8pm
15 White St.
New York 10013

Directions
Soho Photo Gallery is located in Manhattan's TriBeCa district, three blocks south of Canal Street, between West Broadway and Sixth Avenue. Subways: #1 to Franklin Street, A, C, E, N, R or #6 to Canal Street.

Gallery Hours-Thursday, 6-8 p.m., Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 1-6 p.m, or by appointment.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Jennifer Williams wins Soho Photo's Alternative Process Competition

Congratulations to Jennifer Williams for taking the first place prize in Soho Photo's 4th Annual Alternative Process Competition.


Stop by the exhibit to see Jennifer's gorgeous cyanotype in person. While you're there, check out the work of NYmphoto's Nina Buesing, who is also included in the show.

November 6 - 29, 2008
Hours: Thursdays, 6-8 PM, Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, 1-6 PM

Soho Photo
15 White Street
NY, NY 10013