Photorealism is an outdoor exhibit of work by Sterling Allen.
The entire show takes place on the exterior grounds of an overlook-able, un-leased building on West Anderson Lane. Constructed both in his studio and on site, each artwork exists in conjunction with the surrounding environment, slipping between obvious and invisible.
Subscribers will be emailed links to a map to the site and information about the works starting December 2, 2020. The show concludes December 19.
Stabbed Growth Seat 2019 Found objects, plywood, nails, epoxy 27½ x 16¼ x 15 inches
Organizer’s Statement
Sterling Allen has been making installations outside for a few years now. Because he does this without formal permission, the pieces must be installed, photographed, and promptly removed. Thus, the installations exist in pictures, and that creates a problem not uncommon in contemporary life. Think of this project as a stretch in two opposite directions: on one hand, Sterling insists on the complex artistic importance of place; on the other hand, he prompts himself to communicate that complexity only in pictures. Photorealism is the first formal outdoor exhibition within this ongoing practice.
—Emily Lee
October 11, 2020 – the future
a new drawing every week until the set is complete
Drew Liverman (b. Groton, CT 1979) is an artist in Austin, Texas. His drawing and oil painting balances the moment and its reflection, memory and form, the fast and the careful.
PREMEMBER will be a series of drawings of the places of Austin still here—but for how long?
N-S will release the drawings as Liverman completes them, roughly one a week delivered on Sundays. The show will conclude when he finishes the last drawing in the set.
St. Pauls Primitive Baptist
2021
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
8.5x9.25 inches ⬤ inquire
Kil-A-Bug
2021
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
8.5x10.25 inches ⬤ no longer available
Dianas Flower Shop
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape, Letratone on paper
9x9.75 inches ⬤ no longer available
El Secreto de Abuela
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
7.5x10.25 inches ⬤ inquire
Newbys Towing
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
9x12 inches ⬤ no longer available
Los Altos
2020
ink, gouache, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
9x12 inches ⬤ no longer available
Marshalls Barber Shop
2020
ink, gouache, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
9x12 inches ⬤ no longer available
Sams BBQ
2020
ink, gouache, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
10x10.5 inches ⬤ no longer available
Galloway and Ideal
2020
ink, grayon, gouache, collaged paper on paper
8.5x10.5 inches ⬤ no longer available
Leals
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, on paper
6x9 inches ⬤ inquire
Segovia Produce
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, Letratone on paper
10x10 inches ⬤ inquire
Atlas Auto
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper on paper
5x9 inches ⬤ inquire
City General
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape, Letratone on paper
12.5x10 inches ⬤ no longer available
Estradas
2020
ink, crayon, gouache, collaged paper on paper
9x12 inches ⬤ no longer available
Dans Hairstyling
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
9x10 inches ⬤ no longer available
Hornitos
2020
ink, crayon, colored pencil, pastel, collaged paper, correction tape on paper
6x11 inches ⬤ no longer available
Adreon Denson Henry
Amanda Julia Steinback
Amy Scofield
Emma Hadzi Antich
Laura Latimer
Leon Alesi
Mai Gutierrez
Ric Nelson
Sarah Fagan
Saul Jerome San Juan
Sean Ripple
Staci Maloney
Tammy West
No Outlet is a gallery of interventions and intentions at dead ends, sidewalk ends, cul-de-sacs, end of paths, and no outlets, dispersed across Austin.
Saul Jerome San Juan painted plein air at a no outlet off 360, on a road that has been reclaimed by a creek.
Saul Jerome San Juan, August 2020
Laura Latimer Micro-Enclosures (triptych)
2020
post-nature at a dead end in Allandale
Laura Latimer Micro-Enclosures (triptych)
2020
Sean Ripple a thieves’ tunnel through the tomb of time (detail)
2020
a single penny with a tinyurl was left on a pile of leaves at a barrier where two roads split. Ripple checked the installation regularly. If a penny disappeared, he replaces it along with a new tinyurl.
Adreon Henry It’s just a shot Away
2020
an A-frame playscape wrapped with a note of hope in Highland
Adreon Henry It’s just a shot Away
2020
Sarah Fagan Found While Walking
2015–2020
small sculptures made from objects found on the side of the road installed along a looping street that ends where it begins.
Sarah Fagan Found While Walking
2015–2020
"the litter goes back to the streets, reassembled in a way we may take more notice"
Sarah Fagan Found While Walking
2015–2020
Emma Hadzi Antich What is Wished For
2020
a box to collect wishes in Windsor Park
Emma Hadzi Antich What is Wished For
2020
"We are social creatures and without one another we cannot be whole. Missing each other is like missing a limb. We reach but do not find the thing we long to touch. By putting our longing to paper and then into this box, our wishes can touch, even when we cannot."
Mai Gutierrez PP01
2020
pine wood sculpture at the dead end of a new street off East MLK
Amanda Julia Steinback The Choir, The Calendar, and The Continuer.
2020
wire and spray paint over Tannehill Branch
Amanda Julia Steinback The Choir, The Calendar, and The Continuer.
inspired by a book of poems by Jim Harrison/Ted Kooser
Amanda Julia Steinback The Choir, The Calendar, and The Continuer.
"Isn’t it nice to think that when we’re fossils we’ll all be in the same thin layer of rock?"
Staci Maloney A Visitor from The Mutual Realm (unidentified landed object)
2020
between a street in East Austin
Amy Scofield Serendipity
2020
in a drainage tunnel near the end of East 6th
"Often, your curiosity leads you to answers for questions you didn’t know you had"
Leon Alesi Ancestors at an Impasse: The Personification of Transformational Freedom
2020
cedar posts salvaged from demolished neighborhood houses, vines, hose, rope, on land cleared at a no outlet that borders West Bouldin Creek
Leon Alesi Ancestors at an Impasse: The Personification of Transformational Freedom
2020
Tammy West Natural Healing
2020
Carolina jasamine fronds repair a human made cut in a creek bed
Organizer’s Statement
We can read the signage and roads of our City as texts: fictions, histories, habits, doodles, scripts, tarots…
The “No Outlet” sign marks an end of explicit options. The art made for these stages present new options.
Thrupple
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Lantern
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Bloodlines
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Discourse
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Amulet
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Cicaida
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Mood Ring
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Red Bean
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Split
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Bellini
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Glyph
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Firefly
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Sandsnake
2020
colored pencil on paper
9x11.5 inches
Laura Lit (b. Dallas, Texas, 1979) is an artist in Austin, Texas. Like Gerard Richter, Lit is a polyglot painter adept in several visual languages. Her practice combines a virtuoso hand with an omnivorous eye.
In 2015 Lit showed hyper-realistic oils at Women at their Work, meticulously crafted and sexually charged figure painting exploring the tension between desire and observation. Buoyant, unpredictable, and iconic, her 2018 work for AFTER IMAGES at Northern-Southern are abstracts of what Lit sees with her eyes closed, painted with the lightest touch. In 2019’s LIKEsNESS, Lit returned to the figure and representation but with sculpture: startlingly colored but tender busts of women in repose.
FUZZY FORCES is Laura Lit working now, fast and focused bursts of drawing with colored pencils. Reminiscent of the AFTER IMAGES paintings, the compositions seem sentient, astral manifestations of spirit visitors.
N-S will release the drawings as Lit completes them, roughly one a week. The show will conclude when Lit finishes the last drawing in the set.
Q & A
Q. I have heard you say that these images have no reference. What does that mean?
Laura Lit:I tend to be an over-thinker. An over-planner. Every detail planned out exactly. When things don’t work out, I can be a bit hard on myself. It plays out this way with my art. That’s why I’m always trying new things, to see if there’s a better way. To loosen up, to be more free to make mistakes, and therefore to grow.
It’s also why I like to try things that I previously thought I could not do. When I started out, I thought I was a pretty good drawer, but not necessarily a good painter. So I switched to painting and did that for many years, hardly ever drawing again. I never thought I could do sculpture, but when I figured out what was stopping me (discovering the right materials), I had to focus on doing that for a while. I never thought in a million years I’d be making abstract art and loving it. I thought I didn’t have the creativity needed to make art that was not based on reference material. I was in awe of nonrepresentational artists.
Q. You have so many modes of making: abstraction, realistic painting, sculpture. What prompts the shift from one mode to another?
Laura Lit: I started making a few abstract pieces for Batch simply because I wanted something cool on the walls. To come up with subject matter that was appropriate for the space was too daunting. The images, shapes, and colors just flowed out of me. Since then I go back and forth, but now I don’t want to paint or draw figures or faces any more. That might change in the future, but doing the abstract pieces fulfills me in ways representational stuff could not. Allowing myself to work based on instinct and my subconscious, which is infinite and forever evolving, is different for me and I like it. I could see in the future perhaps turning some of these drawings into sculptures or wall hangings.
Q. What are you looking for in these pictures? Or what could we be looking for?
Laura Lit:With these pieces I am looking mostly to visually represent a feeling or a sensation. For me, it’s a way of processing difficult emotions. Art has always probably served that purpose for me. Using repetition, contrast, and opposing forces is parallel to how we process things psychologically. Colors have inherent psychological meaning, and shapes have their own dynamics. The task is to figure out how to arrange colors and shapes in a way that they interact with each other to create specific sensations, movement, forces, and feelings. Each viewer will have a different response to each piece, as it is dependent on their perception and personal history. One person might see a giant black egg as a warm, calming force, and another might see it as an imposing, menacing force. I encourage people to explore these routes into their subconscious, and what it means to them as an individual. Or they can just enjoy the pretty colors.
MAY 2020
Outdoor Interventions in Austin, Texas
Sterling Allen
Ted Carey
Sarah Fagan
Rachel Freeman
Adreon Denson Henry & Jennifer Henry
Emily Lee
Sean Ripple
Amy Scofield
Meghan Shogan
Amanda Julia Steinback & Staci Maloney
Alyssa Taylor Wendt
Suzanne Wyss
Left in Leaves is a group show of interventions across the city of Austin, freely left in outdoor public spaces between May 1st and 31st. Organized by Phillip Niemeyer
Ted Carey Curb Serpent
UT Campus, on street in front of the Visual Art Center
May 4
Amy Scofield
an empty lot in an alley between Attayac and Waller
May 5
Rachel Freeman Heron Totem
in Waller Creek near Denson
May 6
Sean Ripple origin point relay
504 Long Bow Ln
May 9–31
Sterling Allen Cloudy Column (Candy)
527 Sunshine
May 9–16
Sterling Allen Target (Small, Black and White)
5527 Sunshine
May 9–16
Sterling Allen Branch Triad
5527 Sunshine
May 9–16
Sterling Allen Bullseye
5527 Sunshine
May 9–16
Sterling Allen
untitled
5527 Sunshine
May 9–16
Sarah Fagan and Vinchen Filling the Void
North Loop neighborhood
May 10
Sarah Fagan and Vinchen Filling the Void
North Loop neighborhood
May 10
Sarah Fagan and Vinchen Filling the Void
North Loop neighborhood
May 10
Amanda Julia Steinback and Staci Maloney Shelter in A Place
Walnut Creek Trail at Garden View
May 11
Amanda Julia Steinback and Staci Maloney Shelter in A Place
Walnut Creek Trail at Garden View
May 11
Ted Carey Time on Hand
Barton Creek Greenbelt
May 12
Ted Carey Time on Hand
Barton Creek Greenbelt
May 12
Amy Scofield Harmony in Incongruity
East 6th Street and Waller
May 16
Suzanne Wyss Attempting to fit in where you once belonged: stick and poke
Govalle Neighborhood Park
May 17
Amy Scofield
above the Ann and Roy Butler Hike and Bike Trail
May 18
Amy Scofield
above the Ann and Roy Butler Hike and Bike Trail
May 18
Alyssa Taylor Wendt Shag Portal
Walnut Creek trail at Govalle Park
May 19
Alyssa Taylor Wendt Arcana
Walnut Creek trail at Govalle Park
May 19
Ted Carey Unloveds Mysteries
Mueller Park
May 20
Ted Carey Unloveds Mysteries
Mueller Park
May 20
Suzanne Wyss 100 Hugs
Boggy Creek Greenbelt and Allandale
May 21
Emily Lee 9:45 part one
Patterson Park
May 22
Emily Lee 9:45 part two
Patterson Park
May 22
Adreon Henry & Jennifer Henry How To Be
7209 Eastcrest Dr.
May 23
Sarah Fagan and Vinchen Fillling the Void
Hyde Park
May 23
Sarah Fagan and Vinchen Fillling the Void
Hyde Park
May 23
Sarah Fagan and Vinchen Fillling the Void
Hyde Park
May 23
Sterling Allen
untitled
7503 North Lamar
May 24
Sterling Allen
untitled
7503 North Lamar
May 24
Sterling Allen Floor Piece (For Mike & Ree)
813 W. North Loop
May 24
Emily Lee 9:45 part three
Maplewood Av. and 38 th ½ St.
May 25
Emily Lee 9:45 part four
Maplewood Av. and 38 th ½ St.
May 25
Emily Lee 9:45 part four
Maplewood Av. and 38 th ½ St.
May 25
Emily Lee 9:45 part five
Maplewood Av. and 38 th ½ St.
May 25
Ted Carey I love you this much (half trick pony), in the wild
Boggy Creek Trail at 12 th St.
May 26
Amy Scofield Homage to Little Losses
Red Bluff Nature Preserve
May 27
Emily Lee 9:45 part six
Hancock Golf Course
May 28
Emily Lee 9:45 part six
Hancock Golf Course
May 28
Emily Lee 9:45 part seven
Hancock Golf Course
May 28
Emily Lee 9:45 part seven
Hancock Golf Course
May 28
Emily Lee 9:45 part eight
Hancock Golf Course
May 28
Emily Lee 9:45 part eight
Hancock Golf Course
May 28
Adreon Henry Contemplation Stone
Meadowview Triangle in Highland
May 29
Left in Leaves, zine, 28 pages, edition of 60
ORGANIZERS STATEMENT
At Big Stacy pool, there’s a regular named Ken. He’s about 72 years old with a silver ponytail and the cliched fitness of a man half his age. He swims a mile, at least, then does press-ups with his feet on the bench. On cloudy, humid days he sets up in the park outside the pool with a custom rig to conjure enormous soap bubbles.
I asked him about it. He told me he learned the art in Guatemala where he surfs and helps leftist groups. There they call him Comandante Burbujas. He built the set up himself, with his own glycerin mixture. On wet, cloudy days, the bubbles can be as big as cars.
I suggested, hey what about a show for kids or something organized. Ken demurred. This is “Arte Puro” he told me. “It is not done for money and can never be scheduled. It just is, free and enjoyed, then gone.”
Where is Here is a portrait of a community, circa 2019: photographs of people who live, work, grew up, or frequent the thereabouts of East Austin, one of every age, newborn to 100.
The project was organized by Keyheira Keys & Phillip Niemeyer. The portraits are the work of six photographers, identified in the caption of each photo by their initials:
Where is Here took a year to plan and a year to execute. The first shoot was February 17, 2019. The last was February 18, 2020. The show opened with a reception February 29, 2020. It closed after a week to do our part to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus. We posted the entire show, and some extras, above.
The people in these photographs have stories. You may know something about someone in one of the photos—tell us! — hello@northern-southern.com We hope, as a next step, to document these stories.
This project is the effort of a collaborative community. We had help from so many: Monique Foley, Angelica at Parson House, all the great people at Conley-Guerrero Senior Activity Center, Luci and Dana at Miller fine art printing, Adrian Armstrong of Brown State of Mind, Six Square, Miriam Conner, Paloma Mayorga and Big Medium, Rachel Freeman, James Turner, Stella Alesi, and Ashley Ellis. Thank you, also, to Michael Lee of KUT.
We hope we have done our little bit to contribute to the history and love of this place.
— Keyheira Keys & Phillip Niemeyer
For Juneteenth 2020, Northern-Southern purchased a full page in The Austin Villager. The Villager is a free and independent newspaper for East Austin published by Tommy Wyatt since the early 1980s.
WHERE IS HERE in The Austin Villager held by publisher Tommy Wyatt, June 19, 2020
JAN–FEB
2020
Naomi Schlinke
James Turner
Naomi Schlinke
Naomi Schlinke
Naomi Schlinke
James Turner
James Turner
James Turner
James Turner and Naomi Schlinke paint collages and collage paintings. Making becomes a product of movement, simultaneously improvisational and planned, repetitive and unique.
Schlinke’s recent pieces are self-contained meditations, calm but evocative like a wild ritual or a sacred freedom. Visual and kinesthetic, her practice draws upon her early years as a dancer in 1970s San Francisco. Turner is grounded, humble. He calls his works “drah-rins”. They feel like long walks with old friends.
Visting Hours Saturdays 3–6:30pm
Artist Talk Happy Hour
Wednesday, February 12, 6-8pm
(talk at 7pm)
“12th on 12th”
Show closes after visiting hours, Saturday February 15.
Carter/Reddy
Greg Foley
Karen Gelardi
Rick Griffith
Mykola Haleta
Dev Harlan
Elaine I-Ling Shen
Prem Krishnamurthy
Karel Martens
Meredith Miller
Christina Moser
Meghan Shogan
Simon Walker
Tigress Tile
Transmountain
Cheryl Wing-Zi Wong
WORK PLAY MONEY LOVE WHAT IT IS WHAT COULD BE BOTH NEITHER ART DESIGN surveys creative practices that overlap cultures, primarily professional design and fine art, but also politics, business, spirituality, and social change. Never outliers, just rarely discussed—hybrid art-design practices have blossomed in the twenty-first century. The show is a conversation about art-design as a profession shaped by contradictory pressures and motives. We attempt to find—and share—ways to talk about the ways we work now.
Nov 4
Austin Design Week Preview
For Austin Design Week, the show will be presented mid-installation as the backdrop for a open conversation about doing and thinking. Artists and curators will chat with visitors and refreshments will be served. We will talk about how we should talk about the work we do now. — Monday, Nov 4, 2-4pm
Nov 9
Opening Reception
Refreshments and conversations — Saturday, Nov 9, 6–9 pm
Nov 16–17, 23–24
E.A.S.T. Tour #133
Nov 23 — Saturday
Greg Foley <– –> Mike Reddy Q & A
4:30pm
Nov 30 — Saturday
Elaine I-Ling Shen <– –> Meghan Shogan Q & A
4:30pm
Visiting Hours 3-6:30 pm
Dec 7 — Saturday
Visiting Hours — Saturdays, 3-6:30 pm
Post-Play Workshop 4:30pm
Join us at the gallery for an interactive workshop developed by Prem Krishnamurthy and collaborators. We’ll take 30 minutes to imagine the future of work, play, and us.
Dec 11
Last Chance Happy Hour
5–7 pm
Dec 12
Closing
Sep–Oct
2019
HOUSE PLANTS is a suite of shaped canvas that live on the walls like sentient plants, less tamed than coaxed. The paintings are domestic-sized. They expand the spaces around them, nourishing the air of the room. Modernist but winking, folky yet sophisticated, kind, exact, unique and warm. In two words: Brad Tucker-y.
HOUSE PLANTS is Tuckers’s first solo show in his hometown of Austin in over a decade.
Closing Reception with Artist Talk
October 24
Thursday
6-8pm
Talk with Brad Tucker, 7pm
Participate in a new piece of art with Brad by dancing, 8pm
Inland Beach Ball installation view, photo by Scott David GordonChristine Heindl, “Hexagram of the Heavens”, 2018, acrylic, water-based enamel, coins, mirror on canvas. 18×18 inches
May 30–July 9
2019
slow portraits in an age of instant images
Adrian Armstrong
Dawn Okoro
Jean Smith
Laura Lit
Ryan Sandison Montgomery
Saul Jerome San Juan
Six contemporary points-of-view on the human face and figure in painting, drawing, and sculpture, curated by Phillip Niemeyer.
Laura Lit, “Johana”, 2019, paper clay, acrylic and oil, 10x8x6 inches
Closing Reception and Artist Talks
Monday, July 8
6–8:30pm
Talk with Dawn Okoro, Adrian Armstrong, Laura Lit, Saul Jerome San Juan, moderated by Keyheira Keys at 7pm
Normal Visiting Hours
Saturdays until July 9
3–6:30pm
Schedule a Visit
We want to show you this work, and are available to show it most days with notice.
Email: hello@northern-southern.com
Apr 6–May 8
2019
Virginia Fleck
Ted Carey
REBRIS presents two contemporary Austin-based artists working with discarded, post-consumer materials: Virginia Fleck and Ted Carey.
Ted Carey‘s assemblages regard things as words. Recognizing matter as embedded with both personal and universal associations, his witty and economical arrangements serve as a poetry of gestures. A recent piece at Museum of Human Achievement exemplifies: suspended from a two-by-four, an inverted lawn chair and an umbrella of dry leaves dangle in absurd and counter-intuitive equilibrium. Each Carey installation is unique to its surroundings, riffing off the given architecture and the particularities of place. We are excited to see what Carey does with Northern-Southern’s front gallery.
Likewise, Virginia Fleck has free reign over the back gallery. Fleck is known for ebullient plastic bag mandalas and glittering installations of aluminum can tabs. She uses post-consumer materials as media of joyful defiance, unearthing the hidden beauty of disposable items that continually pass through our hands. Most recently at The Femme Abstract exhibition at EAST 2018, she showed a master-work: a cascade of hundreds of thousands of linked aluminum can tabs.
The ready-made is a tradition at least a century old. In recent decades the medium has matured into one open with possibility and edged with relevance. Human-made debris is the omnipresent material of our times. Fleck and Carey operate in a cultural sphere where re-use as art is no longer a novelty. Freed from shock, they arrange with nuance: Koi ponds of junk.
Virginia Fleck, installation viewTed Carey, “Paul revered”, 2019
ONGOING
Where is Here is a project to photograph at least one person of every age—newborn to the most senior—of the people who live, work, grew up in, are from, or frequent the thereabouts of East Austin around East 12th Street.
Where is Here is curated by Keyheira Keys with Phillip Niemeyer.
Photographers (a growing team): Tyeschea West, Arius Holifield, Hector Hernandez, Beartie Pearson, Jorge Sanhueza-Lyon, Ryan Junell
Special thanks to Miriam Conner.
DEC 15, 2018 – FEB 1, 2019
Jaime Zuverza & Transmountain
---
Rachel Freeman
INSIDES is a complementary pair of domestic dream-rooms. Artist Jaime Zuverza and design duo Transmountain (Gil Moreno & Lindsey Culpepper) collaborate on furniture-art fusions in the front gallery. In the back, Rachel Freeman creates an all-over installation of artwork. Two rooms converse, each heightening the experience of the other. INSIDES is genre-ignoring—drawing, painting, woodwork, design, installation, curation all put to use. The work is sensual and precise, sturdy and protean.
Artist Walk-through
with Jaime Zuverza, Transmountain, and Rachel Freeman
Saturday, January 12, 4:00pm Download catalog (PDF)
Midnight Vanity by Transmountain, paintings by Jamie ZuverzaRachel Freeman, “Uttering Thistle”
An artist and home-builder Joseph Phillips thinks a lot about how people shape and replicate nature. His first solo show in six years,“‘SCAPES”, imagines built environments of absurd survival luxuries and compartmentalized dreams. The clean, exact gouaches have a sunny hardness and a canny sense of the dismal. The work is political, complex, and fantastic.
Shawn Camp’s EQUIVOCATION is an installation consisting of a wall painting, a video, a loop of sound, and a large back-lit painting in a room with subtly shifting light. The experience is a mediation on the cyclical nature of being and an abstraction of the way we perceive time and space.
Stella Alesi
Kel Brown
Cattywampus Press
Rachel Freeman
Robert Jackson Harrington
Adreon Henry
Matt Macomber
Ryan Sandison Montgomery
Phillip Niemeyer
Deb Norris
Gretchen Phillips
Mike Reddy
Beth Schindler
Elaine I-Ling Shen
Amanda Julia Steinback
Donya Stockton
Leslie Webb
Alyssa Taylor Wendt
Celebrate creative living at Northern–Southern with a group show of art, design, and other things that people make. Experimental and low-stakes, the show is a summer rejuvenation of purpose, an answer of why.
The catalog features a short interview with each contributor, asking why they make and why they made the thing that’s in the show.
Three acoustic robots emote music accompanied by found voice recordings and projections. Each of the robots mimics a human personality disorder: Cluster A (odd, eccentric), Cluster B (dramatic, emotional, erratic), and Cluster C (anxious, fearful). The robots “sing” round robin in a group therapy session.
Cluster A and C, installation viewCluster A, installation viewCluster BCluster C
Matthew Steinke is a composer, animator, inventor, and artist. An Austin native, he came of age playing in post-punk bands in the DIY scene of Olympia, Washington. Over the past two decades, Steinke’s robotic installations and performances have been presented in museums, galleries, and festivals across the U.S., Canada, and Europe. In Austin again, he built and has performed with an ensemble of new and robotic instruments, OCTANT. He was a finalist for the 2016 ArtPrize. His concert/multimedia performance NO PLACE was a stand out of the 2017 Fusebox festival.
MAR 24 – MAY 5
2018
The first solo show for New York-based painter, and former Austinite, Michelle Marchesseault. She filled the gallery with paintings (serial rainbows, gestural abstractions, perfect imperfections) and flowers.
Michelle Marchesseault, “A lady came out”, 2017, acrylic oil plasterinstallation viewMichelle Marchesseault, “Clicks”, 2017, acrylic oilinstallation view
JAN–MAR 2018
Dev Harlan
Laura Lit
New York based Dev Harlan negotiates the conceptual spaces between digital ephemera and inert mineral. Here he projects tightly controlled, geometric pattern onto replicas of natural rocks..
Laura Lit has an adept hand at realist figurative painting. In this series, the only reference she uses is what is seen when eyes are closed, letting the subconscious influence shape and form. Download catalog (PDF)