Category Archives: General Info

One Hundred Dollars

Recent Parsons Illustration graduates  Su kyung (Hannah) LeeRachel Levit, and Hazel Lee Santino, and faculty Melinda Beck, Jordin Isip , and Taylor McKimens were included in One Hundred Dollars, a group show curated by Andrew Smenos and Sergio Barrale this summer at Littlefield in Brooklyn, NY. Each piece by the one hundred artists had to use a dollar bill as its canvas. Some of the other artists included were Daniel Davidson, Tricia Keightley, Rob Leecock, Matt Leines, Kristen Schiele, Joe Sorren, and Eric White. See more images and read the review in the Huffington Post.

Here are four of the one hundred pieces in the show:

Hazel Lee Santino

8 Parsons students with 13 images Chosen for American Illustration 31

Recent Parsons Illustration 2012 graduates Iain BurkeLeah GorenRachel Levit, Yasmin LiangRay MasakiHazel Lee Santino, and Chad Weaver, and 2011 grad  William Hatch Crosby were chosen by a distinguished jury to be included in the American Illustration 31 archive this fall.

These 13 works from the Parsons Illustration Program were chosen from over 8,000 pieces entered by illustrators, magazines, agencies, publishers, and schools. Congratulations to them and their teachers!

Scroll down to view the 13 works chosen:

Iain Burke, Murderside, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Iain Burke, Ghostside, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Iain Burke, Hay Honey!, Senior Thesis 2, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Iain Burke, Stumpy G, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

William Hatch CrosbyStar Death, Senior Thesis 2, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Leah Goren, Cat Scarf, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Leah GorenMara Hoffman bustier, Senior Thesis 2, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Leah GorenMiu Miu sequin collar, Senior Thesis 2, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Rachel LevitSavila, Senior Thesis 1, Lauren Redniss (faculty)

Yasmin LiangManual Cruise Control, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Ray MasakiDustcloud, Senior Thesis 1, Lauren Redniss (faculty)

Hazel Lee Santino, Tiger Mask , Senior Thesis 2, Jordin Isip (faculty)

Chad WeaverRodger, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

E.M. Smith Love Story

A fascinating stop motion Brianne Bower made for a local Jewelry store. The video is currently still airing in the theaters around the area!

Smith, the jeweler, went back to Bowers and asked her to edit her winning entry from a 90-second video to a 30-second commercial that could be tailor-made for retailers in non-compete markets.

“I’m currently approaching several retailers who are interested in buying the customizable spot for their market,” says Smith. “Sales of this ad will help make up for the original event investment.”

Bowers now works on creative projects for Smith and his brother, including a large mural she painted of the Smiths’ parents from black and white photographs taken many decades ago when the family business was in its infancy.

 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ber8HDW9mmA]

Cinders Gallery Talk!

 

Cinders Gallery Presents: Alternative Spaces for Gallery Exhibition

An evening with Kelie Bowman and Sto from Cinders Gallery, an artist-run alternative space started in 2004 here in Brooklyn, NY.

This Thursday April, 26th 2012 @ 6pm 6 East 16th Street room 1200

http://blog.cindersgallery.com/

Senior Show

Finally! As a great year draws to an end we invite everybody to come enjoy the fruits of our labors. From May 7th to May 20th we will be hosting the Senior Illustration Show on the 6th floor of the 6th East 16th street building.

The reception will be on May 11th from 6:30pm to 8:30pm. We look forward to everybody joining us.

On Tuesday May 15th from 10am to 4pm Senior presentations will be taking place. The presentations will consist of six minute speeches. Three minutes for the artist to talk about their work and three for the faculty and public to critique it. Keep checking the blog for updates.

Typeface: A Documentary

Come view the premier of the documentary Typeface with us on Monday, March 14th 2012. The screening will be held in room 1009 in 6 east 16th street.

In rural Wisconsin, a lone employee waits in a cavernous old museum for visitors to come. A few individuals straggle in every few days and then, come Friday, the museum fills with life. Machines hum, presses print, artists buzz about. One weekend each month, the quiet of Two Rivers is interrupted as carloads of artisans drive in from across the Midwest. The place comes alive as printmaking workshops led by, and filled with, some of the nation’s top design talent descend on the sleepy enclave.

In a time when people can carry computers in their pockets and watch TV while walking down the street, Typeface dares to explore the twilight of an analog craft that is freshly inspiring artists in a digital age. The Hamilton Wood Type Museum in Two Rivers, WI personifies cultural preservation, rural re-birth and the lineage of American graphic design. At Hamilton, international artisans meet retired craftsmen and together navigate the convergence of modern design and traditional technique. But the Museum¹s days may be numbered. What is the responsibility of artists and historians to preserve a dying craft? How can rural towns survive in a shifting industrial marketplace where big-box retailers are king?[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=oAHQ2AGtZr8]

8 Parsons students with 11 images selected for American Illustration 31 annual

Parsons Illustration seniors Iain BurkeKatie Dunham, Sukyung (Hannah) LeeRachel Levit, Chelsey Pettyjohn, and Julee Yoo, and recent graduates William Hatch Crosby and Rachel Friedman (class of 2011) were selected by a distinguished jury to be included in the American Illustration 31 annual. It will be printed in full color and distributed worldwide in hardcover this fall.

From 8,000 pieces entered by over 1,200 illustrators, magazines, agencies, publishers, and schools, the jury selected only 439 images to appear in the book and represent the best pictures from 2011. Students and professionals were juried altogether and when the dust settled 30 student images were selected. With an unprecedented 11 of the 30 coming from the Parsons Illustration Program, Parsons ruled this year! Congratulations to them and their teachers!

Scroll down to view the 11 works selected:

Iain Burke Hell 02, Junior Concepts, Guy Billout (faculty)

 

William Hatch Crosby, Wandering Giant, Printamking Studio, Paul Marcus (faculty)

 

Katie DunhamAshtray, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

 

Rachel Friedman, Los Angeles 1953, Senior Thesis 2, Jordin Isip (faculty)

 

Sukyung Lee, Ice-cream, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

 

Rachel Levit, Little People, Senior Thesis 1, Lauren Redniss (faculty)

 

Chelsey Pettyjohn, 4 drawings from the Night Religion series, Senior Thesis 1, Jordin Isip (faculty)

 

Julee Yoo, The Last Queens, Senior Thesis 1, Juliette Borda (faculty)

“Mirage Show” at Brooklyn Fire Proof features Parsons Illustration alumna Lulu Wolf

Mirage Show, an exhibition of contemporary collage curated by Geoff Kim, opens on Friday, April 13th from 6:00 – 10:30 pm at Brooklyn Fire Proof. Included in the nine person show is Parsons Illustration Program graduate Lulu Wolf (2010) and former faculty member James Gallagher.

“The Mirage Show features work from an impressive roster of internationally recognized artists, many of whom call on their expertise in an array of digital mediums to inform their works on paper. Drawing on an expansive selection of cross-media imagery from both vintage and hyper-contemporary sources, participating artists build upon and destabilize the history of collage to recreate a medium in concert with the Internet Age. The Mirage Show, by including both art-world approved veterans and some of our favorite young talent, showcases the very best of a community of artists working in the rapidly changing medium. The opening party will feature luminescent projections via the Gowanus-based JohnWhitlock, sets from Comadrome and Cluster DJs Catdog, as well as Mario Zoots of the throbbing, ghostly, globe-spanning remote collaborative Modern Witch.”  Brooklyn Fire Proof, 119 Ingraham St, Brooklyn, NY

Mirage Show

Our very own George Bates now has his work featured at a MTA station!

Beach 36 Street

GEORGE BATES

Symphonic Convergence 1&2, 2011

Glass block

A dominant theme in George Bates’ work is convergence and how nature, objects, and people meet and form a greater whole. If you view only the individual components of the whole you may fail to see the larger ideas and systems to which they are connected. At B.36th Street, he designed a lyrical composition with a bold, yet playful spirit, that expresses his feelings about the Rockaways. Created in glass block in the station stair landings, the glass brings in light and brightens the station. The design on the south bound side, which receives the strongest light, features a spiral formed of people’s heads, rendered in deep blue and heavy line. These are profiles that overlap one another, building up and snowballing into a large element, a community.

Edward del Rosario: Paintings and Drawings at Nancy Margolis Gallery

The opening reception for Edward del Rosario‘s appropriately titled solo show, “Paintings and Drawings”, is this Thursday, April 12th from 6:00 – 8:00 pm at Nancy Margolis Gallery in NYC. Please stop by to say hi, hang out, and see Eddie’s beautiful and powerful work.

Edward has exhibited on both coasts of the United States and the little island state of Hawaii. His work has appeared in many publications including The New Yorker, Harper’s, and The New York Times Magazine. Edward is a former Parsons Illustration Program adjunct faculty member (Junior Drawing and Painting; Painting).

Domecile l, oil on linen/panel, 30" x 30", 2012

Domecile l, oil on linen/panel, 30" x 30", 2012