Posts Tagged ‘installation’
Here are images from my show Our Improbable Existence at Pterodactyl in Philly. Here is more info about the show. The show was made possible by the support of the Philadelphia Art Hotel. To see individual pieces, peruse recent blog posts or visit my website. Off to the opening!





















Posted August 13th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: art, drawing, exhibitions, fun, Iceland, installation, large-scale, opening, painting, Philadelphia, photography, residency.
Here is the press release for my show at Pterodactyl sponsored by the Philadelphia Art Hotel. Install Thursday, opening Friday. I’m pasting the text below for better readability. Here’s hoping the five people I know in Philly and the rest of the city make it out to the opening!

The Philadelphia Art Hotel and Pterodactyl present an exhibition:
Amy Sacksteder – Our Improbable Existence
August 13th, 2010
8pm
3237 Amber St.
5th Floor North
Philadelphia, PA 19134
Amy Sacksteder attempts to reconcile vitality and mortality (and the accompanying celebrations and mournings that reality elicit), both her own and with that of others’. To quote Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, “we try as best we can to do justice to the tremendousness of our improbable existence.” She thus distills momentous experiences into and through her artwork, which in turn, becomes a place for mourning and celebration; a place to explore and engage the tension between vitality and mortality. Her work has been sited on contemporary art blogs such as my love for you is a stampede of horses, and has been published in New American Paintings. Amy Sacksteder exhibits regularly nationally and internationally. She has attended residencies through the Ragdale Foundation in Illinois, the Pouch Cove Foundation in Newfoundland, the Residential Art Centre of Cantagal in France, and the Hungarian Multicultural Center in Budapest.
Most recently, she attended a residency program through the Association of Icelandic Visual Artists (SÍM) in Reykjavík to prepare for a solo exhibition at Northeastern Illinois University in the fall. She will return to Iceland in November to continue the research and creative work she began there in June. Amy Sacksteder received her MFA from Northern Illinois University in 2004. She lives and works in Ypsilanti, Michigan, where she is an Assistant Professor of Art at Eastern Michigan University.
Posted August 10th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: art, drawing, exhibitions, fun, installation, opening, Philadelphia, photography, residency.
Here are some images from our group show, SKIPTI / SWAP at the end of the residency at SÍM. On Monday we installed the show, had the opening, followed by a picnic in the garden, and de-installed the show. Then I had to pack and say my goodbyes. What a day!




Also, in addition to the drawings I made at the residency, I worked on a couple of photo-based projects and along with many of the other artists, became quite the collector of maps, stamps, postcards (new and vintage) and objects from the land such as shells, stones, sea glass, lava rocks and the like.
On Sunday I did a photo shoot of one of the Amelia Earhart islands in the Icelandic landscape set against the sea. Here are a few images from that shoot. I wonder what they’ll become when they grow up?





I am, once again, so grateful for this phenomenal residency and the opportunity to see breathtaking sights in a remarkable country, make work unimpeded, and become friends with such a fantastic group of artists.
Posted June 30th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: Amelia Earhart, art, drawing, exhibitions, friends, fun, Iceland, influences, installation, opening, photography, residency, Reykjavik, travel.

I didn’t really want to write any details about my and Nannette’s exhibition until all was said and done in case we didn’t pull it off in the way that we wanted. But now that a successful opening has come and gone, I am happy to tell our tale. I went to Budapest with only the goal to finish a video project Nannette and I began last summer, do a couple of drawings, and see a few museums…maybe hit the spring baths. In short, I was going to take a break over break–treat it like a mini residency. Instead, pretty much as soon as I arrived, we started hatching major plans. We planned to both make work for the entire week and put a show together in addition to the video (which quickly transpired into an installation). We had hints of possible venue spaces at the beginning of the week, but it wasn’t until Monday (or Tuesday?) that we secured the venue (for a Thursday night opening…). Nothing like cutting it close, right?
Nannette’s background is in photography and video, but she is a closet draw-er and makes these gorgeous ink drawings on crayon resist with faint, meticulous etching which she never shows to anyone. I was flattered that she showed them to me and excited she was considering exhibiting them. So she got down to work on a larger-scale series of those drawings and a photography project based on rivers. Meanwhile we were going to the office every day and working on the video together, and I was furiously drawing in the mornings and evenings- (into the mornings again). It turns out that the venue, Chinese Characters, has the perfect back space for video projection, and was the perfect width to create a reflecting pool for the video (which contributes enormously to the content of the piece). We we aided immensely by David, who did a lot of the heavy-lifting during the installation, including making the structure for the pool. Working collaboratively all week was wonderful, as even our 2D work influenced each other’s to a strong degree. We brainstormed titles for awhile and came up with fekete leves (where the sky used to be). Fekete leves literally means “black soup” in Hungarian (Magyar). When used as slang, it implies a sense of foreboding or bad things to come. Where the sky used to be is the name of the video project, upon which the rest of the show hinged.
Here are some snapshots from the show. Sorry about the quality of these images. I only had my aged point-and-shoot, but Nannette got some great install shots with her camera, so as soon as I get those images, I’ll update this post. Thanks to everyone who came out to the opening! For those who didn’t make it, the orb-looking images on black are C-prints by Nannette, and she also has the black ink drawings (installation) on resist with scratching. We each made one of the white “north” drawings and collaborated on the video and installation. Mine are the small gouache and ink drawings on blue paper.

front right corner

entrance from Vittula into the gallery space with two of Nannette's C-prints flanking two of my drawings

a C-print and my other four drawings- along the left wall

her drawing installation

the near and far left walls of the space

view from the entrance (the video installation is through the black curtains)

North 1 and North 2 (Nannette-left, me-right)

Where the Sky Used to Be- video installation with reflecting pond
Thank you to Nannette and David for putting me up (and putting up with me) all week, to Tim of Chinese Characters/Klub Vittula for providing the space, libations and an open mind, and to Fabian for DJ-ing and acting as impromptu photographer. Next I’ll post images of the six drawings I made while there and maybe a couple of shots from the opening.
Posted March 7th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: Amelia Earhart, art, Budapest, collaboration, drawing, exhibitions, friends, fun, influences, installation, language, large-scale, mortality, music, opening, organization, photography, residency, studio, travel, video.

Fekete Leves (where the sky used to be) is a two-person installation that engages aspects of disorientation and loss of control by Budapest-based artist Nannette Vinson and Detroit-area artist Amy Sacksteder. Sacksteder is exploring mortality by channeling the last moments in Amelia Earhart’s life through mostly drawings, paintings and installations. Through her ink drawings, Vinson is revisiting the turbulence that accompanies loss of innocence. Her visual art background is primarily in photography and video art; Sacksteder’s is in 2D media. Through this collaboration, each artist is working in an as-yet “foreign” medium to her, thus each is experiencing her own lack of control. This is their first collaborative endeavor.
Chinese Characters Contemporary Art Space
1073 Budapest – Kertész u. 4
Thursday, March 4, 6 – 10 p.m.
Posted March 1st, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: Amelia Earhart, art, Budapest, collaboration, drawing, exhibitions, friends, fun, installation, mortality, opening, painting, photography, studio, video.

David and Nannette were kind enough to loan me a space in their flat to use as a drawing studio while I’m here. So far, we’re spending a lot of time editing video and making work–with some feasts here and there for good measure. Tomorrow we’re off to the hardware store to get installation materials. Then we’re headed to the Glenn Brown exhibition at the Ludwig Museum.
Posted March 1st, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: art, Budapest, collaboration, drawing, exhibitions, food, friends, fun, installation, opening, painting, studio, travel, video.

the entrance to our "office"
I wanted to write a long-ish post (with photos) about all of the fun I’m having during my week-long stay in Budapest, but the wireless network in my and Nannette’s “office” (i.e. a large, decadent cafe) won’t deign to allow the uploading of a bunch of images. So for now, I will just be posting one image per visit to the office. A longer post will have to wait until I’m back in the States. Some highlights so far include lots of artmaking, insomniac house chickens, a completely affectionate little cat named Mitsy, plenty of good food, and BIG BIG plans. More to come!
Posted February 28th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: animals, art, art deco, Budapest, collaboration, drawing, exhibitions, food, friends, fun, installation, large-scale, studio, travel.

So, I don’t really follow the Olympics…and I don’t own a TV, (I know, I know…how unAmerican, right?) so I didn’t get a chance to see images from the opening ceremonies until they popped up on a TV in a pub I went to last week. I saw this large crystal structure all aflame, and was simultaneously pleased to see such a brash display of awesomeness, and disappointed that this object I have seen cropping up in art and design the last couple of years was used for such a commercial event. For a recent, relevant example, see the work of Alexis Anne Mackenzie in the previous post or this post from awhile back.
What’s funny, is that in all of the googling I did to find images for this post, not once did I see the word “crystal” appear. Cauldron? yes. The ever-vague “structure”? yes. Pillars? yes. Also, I couldn’t find the name of an architect or designer for the “structure.” It was simply implemented by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC). So, as much as I would like to give credit to some savvy designer with her finger on the pulse of the art world, I can’t. Instead, I am left feeling a little bit like a somewhat ubiquitous, but relevant image was exploited by a behemoth of an event, and as a result, I feel a little bit empty inside. Oh, Canada.

Posted February 16th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: architecture, art, influences, installation, large-scale.
It’s been a busy couple of art months recently. The latest is an installation called Ghost Town for the Annual Art Faculty Exhibition in the University Gallery at EMU. What you don’t see is one of the best aspects of the piece: there’s a song. Mark wrote the most amazing song recently that I dubbed Ghost Town and I knew it had to be part of this piece. He rigged speakers in the rafters above the installation that plays the song subtly, so that you only really hear it when enveloped in the gold cut paper.
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To get an interwebby version of the effect, listen to the mp3 while scrolling through the images.









I made the components of this piece at different times. The gold paper cut-outs and small oil painted panels were all made for my solo exhibition Still at Paint Creek Center for the Arts in April 2009. The skull pieces (gouache and gold leaf) were made in Budapest this last summer. They are essentially portraits of the skulls in the artist/stylist/designers’ homes featured on The Selby. I plan to make more of these and am excited to see where I can go with this piece in the future.
The opening is Tuesday night February 2 from 4 – 7 p.m. in the University Gallery in the Student Center at EMU. There’s a lot of great work by all of my colleagues. Come see the show!
Posted January 31st, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: art, collaboration, exhibitions, influences, installation, large-scale, Mark, mortality, music, oil, opening, painting, studio.
One show just came down at the Gallery Project in Ann Arbor and one show just went up at Paint Creek Center for the Arts in Rochester (MI). I am honored to have been/be a part of both of them. Here are some photos of my work from Presence/Absence at PCCA (including some new work hot off the drawing table):

back right wall of gallery; all small pieces are propped up on scrabble tile trays mounted onto the wall

In Lights: oil on canvas with theater light and glass window blocks. Gobo projection reads Amelia Earhart's last words: We are running north and south.

Last Map drawings: gouache, ink, and gold leaf on blue paper

Object Lesson panels: gouache and gold leafing pen on birch panels

back left wall of gallery

Slides From the Trip- slideshow of stills from silent film project, a collaboration with Budapest-based artist Nannette Vinson

white drawings

Captured Island: gouache and ink on paper

Longitude: gouache and ink on paper

Navigation: gouache and ink on paper

Skullscape: gouache and ink on paper
Presence/Absence runs from January 15-February 20 with an opening reception at Paint Creek on Friday the 22nd from 7-9. I am accompanied in the show by four amazing artists: Faina Lerman, Luzhen Qiu, Alison Wong, and Sun You. Here is a sweet blurb about the show in Real Detroit Weekly. Hope you can make it out to the opening!
Posted January 17th, 2010 in Uncategorized. Tagged: Amelia Earhart, art, collaboration, drawing, exhibitions, fun, influences, installation, large-scale, oil, opening, painting, studio, video.