Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Broadly speaking, realist work with a conceptual component has been around a long time, but it wasn't until the 1980s and '90s that it really took hold, arguably becoming the stylistic choice for contemporary artists during that time. Now the idea is well established, and there's no shortage of it in the galleries.

Edge Gallery (3658 Navajo Street, 303-477-7173, http://edgeart.org) is hosting a pair of solos, Jeneve Parrish: n + everything and Susanne Mitchell: In-Between that together make the point that there's more to representational art than meets the eye. Both Parrish and Mitchell explore conceptual realism by assembling precisely rendered representations of people and things to enigmatically carry out narratives. In fact, there is so much harmony in their approaches that at first I thought the two shows read together as a solo. Instead, each artist tells her own story, and the key differences that separate their respective pieces emerged clearly on closer examination.
Parrish is interested in conveying the simultaneity of nothing and everything — that's what that plus/minus in the show's title means. She has decided to make the ideas of "nothing" and "everything" into concrete images — a swath of wallpaper for "nothing," a view of the cosmos for "everything." This dichotomy is seen throughout the show, with paired drawings that include the "nothing" wallpaper in one, and the "everything" cosmos in the other. In spite of this structural burden, many of the drawings are great.
For Mitchell, the cross-cultural experience of her young son is the subject of a set of large and elaborate drawings that bridge the gap between the U.S. and Africa. Mitchell's ex-husband is from an isolated village in Malawi, meaning that's where her son's extended family lives. Mitchell has frequently traveled to Africa and has made sure that her little boy stays connected to his relatives there. This story is all laid out in these large drawings, with the circumstances of Mitchell's life providing her a great entree into the art-of-identity movement.
Both shows run through July 17.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011




FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE JUNE 1st, 2011
SUSANNE MITCHELL AND JENEVE PARRISH
Two new exhibitions at Edge Gallery
June 24th – July 17, 2011
Opening Reception: Friday, June 24th, 7–10 pm


Denver, CO – Edge Gallery is pleased to present In-BETWEEN, new work by Susanne Mitchell and n ± everything, new work by Jeneve Parrish. The shows open to the public on Friday, June 24th, 2011 with an artists reception scheduled from 7–10 pm at Edge Gallery, 3658 Navajo St. Denver. A First Friday reception is scheduled the following week, July 1st from 7-10 pm. The Gallery is open Fridays from 7–10 pm and Saturdays and Sundays from 1–5 pm or by appointment by calling 303-842­-5859 or 503-490-2456. The show runs through July 17, 2011.
Mitchell’s work, In-BETWEEN is inspired by examining her experiences in Africa in relation to her experience of living in the United States. This series of drawings questions notions about happiness and longing, utilizing binary oppositions between and within the two places. Objects and figures act as surrogates for these cultures and create colliding images, which reference issues ranging from starvation and obesity, privilege and poverty, to excess and overindulgence verses need.
Parrish’s series, n ± everything depicts objects and figures as variables in philosophical and existential problems. Two “constants” repeat across the work; stars represent “everything,” or the most one can possibly consider; wallpaper represents “nothing,” or the smallest, most inconsequential thing imaginable, unworthy of consideration. Each picture presents a thought problem where the solution is always “too much,” or “too little,” and Parrish uses meticulous, laborious means to convey the obsession and ultimate frustration of searching for meaning.
Susanne Mitchell (b. 1973, New York) lives and works in Denver, Colorado where she is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Metropolitan State College. She received her BFA from California College of the Arts (1996) and her MFA from University of Colorado, Boulder (2007). Susanne has traveled extensively in Africa and has lived and worked for periods of time in a remote village in Malawi. These events inform her current artistic work, which address subjects such as dislocation and disparity. Her artwork has been featured in numerous exhibitions including Craft and Folk Art Museum (Los Angeles, CA), Universidad Nacional de Colombia (MedellĂ­n, Colombia) and Clos de L’Abbaye (Paris, France).

Jeneve Parrish (b. 1977, Portland, OR) is an visual artist living and working in Denver. Her work explores questions of perception, representation and illusion, and the construction of personas. Parrish currently teaches drawing and design at Metropolitan State College in Denver. She received her Master of Fine Art degree in 2008 at Washington State University and her Bachelor of Fine Art degree from The Oregon College of Art & Craft in 2005. Recent exhibitions include “the Door” at 29 Ludlow St. (NY, NY), Kentucky Neuroscience Institute (Lexington, KY), the Old Court House Arts Center (Woodstock, IL) and Blackfish Gallery (Portland, OR).

Monday, February 7, 2011


A new exhibit at the CVA features work by Metro faculty, including the late E. C. Cunningham

Metropolitan State College has a special place in Denver's art world. Not only does it have the biggest set of visual-arts departments in the state, but it has its own mini-museum, the Center for Visual Art, long a fixture in LoDo and now the jewel of the Santa Fe art district. These two factors come together in Collective Nouns, a group show featuring members of the art faculty from the college.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Explore This! 7


The Creative Art Materials/Caran d'Ache Award for Excellence
($375 product)

"Pa(-)da Hastasama Pose and Everything" - Jeneve Parrish (CO)





Explore This! 7 Now On Line at the CPSA Website
Please enjoy a visit to the Explore This! 7 Online Exhibition at www.cpsa.org. CPSA is proud to present 53 original mixed media artworks with colored pencil as the primary medium. These artworks and twelve award winners were selected by our Juror, Ken Rollins. We also congratulate the five CPSA members who are the first to earn CPX Signature status this year!

We are certain that you will enjoy viewing the works and learning of the award winners. The enlarged images list the media used by each artist and include prices if you should wish to purchase a painting.

Collective Nouns, Metro Faculty Show




Collective Nouns: MSCD Art Faculty Biennial
January 7 – February 19, 2011
Meet-the-Artists Friday, January 7
Members and special guest reception: 6-7pm
Public reception: 7-9pm

Faculty Lecture Series
February 1-3, 2011.
Click here for complete schedule.
The reception and lecture series are free and open to the public.

Representing the state’s largest art department, the MSCD art faculty is made up of a diverse group of regional artists, working in an eclectic range of media. This exhibition features an ensemble of recent works from the faculty; artists from each area of the art department will be represented. Most works in the exhibition will be for sale.

In conjunction with the faculty exhibition, there will be a retrospective of work by former Metro State art professor E.C. Cunningham, held in two locations.