School of Art, Media, and Technology

Jeanine Oleson (MFA Photo Faculty) Exhibits “It Can Howl” at the Atlanta Contemporary and “A human(e) matter” with Creative Capital

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Atlanta Contemporary presents It Can Howl – a group exhibition featuring the work of Danielle Dean, Bessie Harvey, Nancy Lupo, Jeanine Oleson, Lili Reynaud-Dewar, Chloe Seibert, Hayley Silverman, and Martine Syms.

This exhibition takes a look at the numerous experiences of the American South. It unfolds via asides and digressions overheard in the everyday that make up a sense of place. We transcend history and move across state lines; we look for moments that are absent and embrace spontaneity; we are shaped and shifted by the cultures, the personalities, literature, and most importantly the mythology.

It Can Howl

 

 

Documentation of Hear, Here at the New Museum on June 14, 2014.

Documentation of Hear, Here at the New Museum on June 14, 2014.

A human(e) matter is an umbrella concept comprised of performances, objects and videos concerned with global capital’s alienating effects on our consciousness through materiality and labor. With humor, pathos and an interest in craft and industrial production, this project forms parafictions that are absurd and dead serious. Jeanine Oleson is working with an ensemble in live performances and videos that enact compositions based on the idea of conduction that is material, musical, and social and referencing experimental music, physical labor and speech acts. A recent 3D video and related objects also focused on material transformation of copper and clay, troubling how images and sound are made and transmitted. An upcoming iteration includes a new video, performance, musical instruments, glass, weavings and images about absurdist production cycles and abstracted materiality. The video, shot in caves and mines in New Mexico, will follow a production cycle of copper into a wire factory and into a power grid.

A human(e) matter

 

 

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