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walter
gropius masters workshops
The
Walter Gropius Master Artist Series is funded through
the generosity of the Estate of Roxanna Y. Booth, who
wished to assist in the development of an art education
program in accordance with the proposals of Walter Gropius,
who designed the Museum's Gropius Addition, as well as
the Gropius Studios. The Museum is indebted to Roxanna
Booth's son, Alex, for his participation in the concept
development of the Gropius Master Artist Workshops.
Workshop
fees -- Workshop fee, which includes materials, is
$225 for non-members; $195 for Museum Members; $165 for
teachers; and $120 for students. Meet-and-greet, first-day
breakfast and daily lunch included in the workshop fee.
How
to enroll -- Registration must be received at least
3 days in advance of the class starting date. All checks
should be made to the Huntington Museum of Art. Most major
credit cards are accepted by fax, phone, mail or in person.
For more information, call (304) 529-2701.
Walter
Gropius Masters Workshop Series Presents:
Art Werger
Bridge Gallery
Exhibition: April 19-June 15, 2008
Public Lecture: 7 p.m. Thursday, April 24, 2008, HMA's
Grace Rardin Doherty Auditorium
Three-day Workshop: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. April 25-27, 2008
"Scratching
the Surface"
This workshop will be an introduction to intaglio printing
through various methods of drypoint. Intaglio printing,
which includes etching and engraving, is done on metal
plates with the image held in the lower recesses, beneath
the surface of the plate. We will explore non-acidic approaches
to intaglio printing. Intended for beginners and advanced
students, various methods will be covered, including mezzotint,
roulette work, and working with found objects. Emphasis
will be on linear and tonal approaches. We will cover
plate preparation, printing press procedures, use of inks
and development of content through the medium. Come prepared
with sketches or photographs for inspiration but be prepared
to push beyond them.
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Art
Werger, "Short Stories," 2006, Mezzotint
and aquatint, eighty-one 2.5-inch plates arranged
in short narratives. Image courtesy of the artist.
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Art
Werger background
Growing up in New Jersey, Art Werger's intaglio prints
focus on scenes from his childhood. Providing an almost
voyeuristic view of the hussle and bussle of urban scenes,
his etchings and mezzotints focus on the tension between
the individual and his or her environment. In a manner
reminiscent of film noir or the cinematic techniques of
Alfred Hitchcock, Werger captures the strangely incongruous
sense of an individual's isolation and loneliness as he
goes about his daily life amidst urban crowds.
In
describing his work, Werger says, "The people are
seen in casual activities which dominate their daily routines,
often preoccupied or oblivious to their situations. They
are often observed from an elevated point so that the
environment lays out in front of the viewer. The viewer
becomes an omniscient voyeur, privy to the world below,
yet curiously removed from it. As a cinematic device,
this abstract angle allowed for an overview of the scene
as well as an introduction to the characters within the
environment. The characters' actions are intended to suggest
a narrative which requires the viewer's participation
to be resolved."
Born
in 1955, Werger received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree
from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1978 and a Master
of Fine Arts degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
in 1982. Chairman of Fine Arts at Wesleyan College in
Macon, GA for 18 years, Werger is currently a Professor
of Printmaking and Director of Foundations at the University
of Ohio in Athens. Represented by such galleries as S.
E. Feinman Fine Arts In New York and Davidson Gallery
in Seattle, Werger has exhibited internationally and has
works in several collections including the Boston Public
Library, the Brooklyn Museum, the Philadelphia Museum
of Art, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.
Walter Gropius Masters Workshop Series
Presents:
Ed Eberle
Virginia Van Zandt Great Hall
March 15-May 11, 2008
Public Lecture: 7 p.m. Thursday, May 1, 2008, HMA's Grace
Rardin Doherty Auditorium
Three-day Workshop: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. May 2-4, 2008
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Ed
Eberle, "The Jester," 2004, ceramic. Image
courtesy of the artist.
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"The
Process is Everything: Working with Ed Eberle"
"In this instructive and participatory workshop,
I envision your helping me, under my direction, to make
some pieces. I want to give you a sense, a taste, of how
I work. This means that you can help me throw, or handbuild,
pieces for assemblage. Of course, you can make some pieces
for yourself. But everyone doesn't have to make things
- we'll find something for you to do. If you just want
to observe only, that's ok too - you are still part of
the whole. The dynamics of the group is important - enter
with a clean slate. We'll be working with porcelain and
black terra sigillata. If you've never worked with porcelain,
that's even better! I'd like to throw, paint, and construct
some vessels and sculptures. We will explore brief impromptu
vignettes of various topics throughout; i.e., phi rectangle,
pattern, and mythology
Bring a leather hard piece
for painting, if you wish. Don't forget your cameras -
let's document this experience."
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A
self-portrait of Ed Eberle.
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Ed
Eberle background
After
receiving his MFA from Alfred University in 1972, Eberle
taught at the Philadelphia College of Art and at Carnegie-Mellon
University for a total of 14 years.
In
1985 the studio in the Millvale section of Pittsburgh
was established where Eberle continues working as a studio
artist in ceramics and drawing.
In
addition to numerous one-man exhibitions in New York,
Chicago and Pittsburgh, his work is represented in museum
collections in Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Boston, Philadelphia, Kansas City and Canberra, Australia.
Ed
has lived with his wife, Evalyn, in the Squirrel Hill
part of Pittsburgh since 1975. Sons Jonathan and Joseph
were raised there and now reside in St. Louis and Brooklyn.
Walter
Gropius Masters Workshop Series Presents:
Thorney Lieberman
Exhibition: May 17-August 3, 2008
Public Lecture: 7 p.m. Friday, May 30, 2008
Workshop: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. May 30-June 1, 2008
“Several
Arguments with Photography:
Thorney Lieberman, Photographs 1968-2008”
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Thorney
Lieberman, Paint Can, 1976. Photograph with paint,
16" x 20". Image courtesy of the artist. |
“Throughout
its history, photography has been inexorably and unselfconsciously
tied to subject matter. Without a second thought, a photograph
of a beautiful sunset is widely considered a beautiful
photograph. My primary argument, which we will explore
in the workshop, is that if photography is to further
develop (pun intended) contemporary photographers need
to look beyond subject matter.
It’s my contention that subject matter as the main
event - or more often, the only event - has been exhausted.
After all, Edward Weston elevated the mundane object to
a monumental photograph in the 1930s, marking photography’s
last great breakthrough.
And if indeed photography has reached its saturation point
with the world in front of the lens, where do we go with
this medium? What beckons to be explored? Perhaps we need
to focus inward, on photography itself.
If you look at the history of painting, you see that painters
were forced long ago to move beyond subject matter, beyond
addressing the world around them. In order to move their
medium forward, they took up issues of perception, perspective,
picture plane, psychology, illusion and paint itself.
Photography is comparatively young and so has barely begun
to make this transition.
To that end, this workshop will examine aspects that are
unique to photography, exploring for example the photograph
as a slice of time, the translation of three-dimensional
space to a two-dimensional representation, and the interpolation
of scale (from the “big” world to the “small”
print).
Even as we argue with photography, we will address the
traditional issues of composition, framing, quality, the
use of light, and as much Photoshop® as you can handle!
I will be available throughout - to both critique and
coach.”
Thorney
Lieberman Background
Photographer Thorney Lieberman has consistently engaged
the inherent possibilities and contradictions of his medium
over the course of his impressive career. Since earning
a B.A. from Bard College in 1968, Lieberman’s focus
has expanded from mere subject matter to include the complexities
of photography and its relation to issues of time, space,
and scale. His work has ranged from representational and
conceptual pieces in the 1970s, to scenes from New York
City in the 1980s and Colorado landscapes in the 1990s,
to his recent focus on Native Americans in the new millennium,
and his current project to capture the gritty reality
of the lives of West Virginia coal miners. His exhibition
at the Huntington Museum of Art will serve as a retrospective
of Lieberman’s career.
Lieberman’s
work has been shown several times at the Museum of Modern
Art in New York City, The Brooklyn Museum, the Dallas
Museum of Art, as well as the Bibilothèque Nationale
in Paris. During the 1970s and 80s, Lieberman photographed
architecture professionally, working for many notable
firms including I.M. Pei and Partners. In 1990, Abbeville
Press published a compilation of some of his New York
scenes in the book, Manhattan Lightscape. His work is
held in collections internationally.