Jökulsárlón
Jökulsárlón is a glacial lagoon in Southeast Iceland. This was our first stop on day 2 (Saturday). It deserves a post all it’s own.
So beautiful it hurts.
Jökulsárlón is a glacial lagoon in Southeast Iceland. This was our first stop on day 2 (Saturday). It deserves a post all it’s own.
So beautiful it hurts.
This last weekend Mark and our friend Beer and I set out for a trip along the ring road following the southeast coast in Iceland. We stayed in a little cabin set against a mountain and experienced three amazing days of frozen wonders. Here are some sights from day 1 (Friday) of the trip:
If you can believe it, Day 2 held even more amazing sights than Day 1…stay tuned!
I added recent projects from the last year to my website today (finally), from Budapest, Reykjavík, Philadelphia, Chicago and Ann Arbor. I moved things around to hopefully make the site more easily navigable.
Also, we’re leaving for a little trip this weekend that promises waterfalls, a steamy river, trolls fronting as rock formations, an iceberg lagoon and much more. I hope the weather cooperates…
When I arrived in Iceland, it was my plan to make some gouache paintings of small, contained worlds, like the glassy images in these two pieces: Last Map: Osolith and Last Map: Divisadero on white or blue paper. However, on my first day in my studio, I found a collage of images from the Icelandic landscape left by a previous resident. As it depicts a self-contained world, I decided to copy it in gouache, as a sort of collaboration with this unknown artist. These are just studio snapshots. I will add more professionally documented images of the piece to my website when I get home.
Mark and I are all set-up at the residency in Iceland. We’re getting time to make work, get out and about in Reykjavík, read, do yoga, and rest. We have a great set-up this time, with our own little apartment inside the larger shared residency apartment. Here are some images from my studio:
And there’s the same amazing view, this time with snow and with different light:
It makes a big difference to have a good camera this time. I was able to get decent shots out the windows with my point-and-shoot in June, but now I have a better digital camera with a much more accurate zoom lens. Behold:
Thursday, I’m hopping aboard the Wolverine from Ann Arbor to Chicago to see and stay with some good friends. Friday, I’m giving a lecture on my work (details below) at Northeastern Illinois University. It’s also the last day the show will be up, so come out if you can!
That afternoon, I board a plane to Toronto to meet Mark and Chris and Mary for Halloween weekend, Canada style.
Then Mark and I get on another couple of planes to head to Iceland again for the month of November. It will be a whirlwind, but needless to say, we’re a little excited. I’ll work on some ideas I have had bouncing around in my head and Mark will get his own studio to work on some music projects. Speaking of which, he has a new album out. Everything about it is AMAZING. Here is a link to his new website. Have a look and listen.
Talk details:
Friday, October 29
11 a.m.
Northeastern Illinois University, Fine Arts Center, FA 252
Directions to the talk.
Also, here is a Chicago Tribune review of the show.
Bon voyage!
Here are some images from my solo exhibition We are running… at Northeastern Illinois University’s Fine Arts Center Gallery. Much of this work appeared in my recent exhibition in at Pterodactyl in Philadelphia, but the postcard installation with the bottle of ash is new. The postcards are manipulated exhibition announcements from both solo exhibitions, mounted on Scrabble tile trays. The bottle contains sea glass and volcanic ash from the base of the Eyjafjallajökull volcano that erupted in Iceland this year. Exhibition details follow the images.
Amy Sacksteder: We are running…
October 4th-October 29th
The work included in this project is derived from the last moments of Amelia Earhart’s life and is used as a springboard to examine and confront mortality. The title is an excerpt of Earhart’s last words. The work is also influenced by the artists’s June 2010 residency in Iceland.
Artist Talk: Friday October 29th, 11am
Reception: Friday October 15th, 6-9pm
The Fine Arts Center Gallery
Northeastern Illinois University
5500 N St. Louis Ave
Chicago, IL 60625
The Gallery is located on the NEIU campus inside the Salme Harju Steinberg Fine Arts Center. Park in the lot the west side of campus via the entrances Foster or Bryn Mawr Avenues.
Directions here.
To see invividual images of pieces in the show, visit this page on my website.
In addition to my solo show, We are running… (just installed…phew!) at Northeastern Illinois University’s Fine Arts Center Gallery (more on that soon), I currently have work featured in some other group shows:
1) Sub Terrain at Work Gallery in Ann Arbor. Here’s more info, and a great review of the show, highlighting the works of friends Amanda Thatch and Ryan Molloy.
2) Interrupted Landscapes at Champion Contemporary in Austin. My pieces are in the wonderful company of work by Scott Hocking, Lori Nix and a host of other fantastic artists. This is the gallery’s debut exhibition and the space looks great. Check out the installation images from the show. My work, the Object Lesson panels are to the far right in the installation image below.
3) With/Drawn, an international contemporary drawing exhibition, hosted by The Drawing Room in Budapest. That’s my piece way back there over David’s right shoulder (he’s the fellow holding the paper). In Hungary, it’s practice to have the curator or another prominent person read a prepared statement about the exhibition.
I got to go to the opening of Sub Terrain, and I’m happy to hear the other openings were successful too!
Krista Peel is at it again, making another themed calendar with her great photography. I’m a participating artist once more, and this time the directions involve: the theme “Mystery Mansion,” providing her with some supplies and instructions, and her constructing the rooms around those instructions and objects.
She just sent out glimpses of the rooms constructed so far, and I spotted mine, evident by the objects I sent her: buckthorn roots, smoky quartz crystals and dark agate slices. I can’t wait to see the real thing!