Faculty Work
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Monuments Now Exhibition Catalogue
A collection of images and essays exploring the historical and contemporary context of monuments and responding to the pieces included in the exhibition, including Art Chair Paul Ramírez Jonas's Eternal Flame.
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Back Stages: Essays Across Art, Performance, and Public Life
Out June 2022, this collection of career-spanning essays by Shannon Jackson includes a chapter on the work and practice of Art Chair Paul Ramírez Jonas.
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2022 Cornell Biennial Artist Preview
Joanna Malinowska, Leslie Lok, Felix Heisel
The Cornell Chronicle provides details on the wide array of included artworks, installations, and performances, which will imagine how artistic futurities might generate cultural transformation.
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I Tilted Over Until It Becomes Horizon
An exhibition that "expands notions of queer kinship through shapeshifting and time travel" and includes work by art Visiting Critics Abigail Raphael Collins and dean erdmann, at the String Room Gallery on the campus of Wells College.
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Maria Park: Present Matter
An exhibition of works by Maria Park, titled Present Matter, explores protocol, legibility, and duration as they relate to the interruptions surrounding our lives.
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Key to the City
Art Department Chair Paul Ramírez Jonas's large-scale public realm project Key to the City moves from NYC to England this summer, produced by Fierce Festival in partnership with Commonwealth Games and Birmingham 2022 Festival.
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3 going through 9 to get to 27
Paintings and tapestries by Assistant Professor Leeza Meksin, art, are part of the Galveston Artist Residency (GAR) Gallery group exhibition on display now through mid-May.
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Photo No-Nos: Meditations on What Not to Photograph
Associate Professor Michael Ashkin, art, contributes an essay and photo to the new book, edited by Jason Fulford and published by Aperture, which features ideas, stories, and anecdotes from many of the world's most talented photographers.
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Studio Archive Project: Use Your Words
Associate Professor of art Carl Ostendarp's work is part of an online group exhibition curated by JJ Manford (B.F.A. '06). Includes art alumni Erik den Breejen (M.F.A. '06), Amie Cunat (M.F.A. '12), and former department chair Buzz Spector.
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Roberto Bertoia: Reflections 2020
Reflections 2020, by Associate Professor of art Roberto Bertoia on display at the Bibliowicz Family Gallery, Milstein Hall.
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Lost in a Thousand Leaves with Luca Padroni
Italian artist and long-time Cornell in Rome visiting critic Luca Padroni reflects on his depiction of the human condition in relation to time and the natural world.
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Stories Last Longer Than Symbols
With Who is Afraid of Natasha?, Art Professor of the Practice Joanna Malinowska and collaborator C.T. Jasper bring a monument (back) to life.
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Carl Ostendarp: Greatest Hits Exhibition Catalogue Kunstverein Heilbronn
The exhibition catalog from Associate Professor Carl Ostendarp's 2017 solo exhibition at Kunstverein Heilbronn, edited by Matthia Löbke with German/English text by Matthia Löbke and Lane Releya. Published by the Heilbronn Art Association (2021).
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Publishing as Practice
Centered on three contemporary artists/book publishers with a fresh take on the political in publishing, the book is the culmination of a residency program curated by coeditor and contributor Kayla Romberger, Visiting Critic in Art.
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Remembering a Child of Ithaca, Twelve Years Later
On the 12th anniversary of a loss that prompted the commission, Associate Professor of Art Roberto Bertoia's sculpture Child of Ithaca on the Ithaca Commons remains a popular spot to rest and reflect. In 14850.com
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Leslie Brack: Paradise and Other Fires
Painter and Visiting Lecturer Leslie Brack's solo exhibition offers nine "narcotic and explosive" watercolors of recent wildfires and urban upheavals. It opens May 8 at Cathouse Proper in Brooklyn.
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Glyphadelphia: Curated by Carl D'Alvia
Associate Professor of Art Carl Ostendarp's work is included in the intergenerational group exhibition of 35 artists who use the glyph as a departure point.
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Triennale Brugge: Who's Afraid of Natasha? Joanna Malinowska & C.T. Jasper
The commission by Malinowska, Assistant Professor of the Practice in Art, and collaborator C.T. Jasper touches on social issues related to the removal of a Polish Soviet-era monument nicknamed Natasha that came to symbolize a repressive regime.