Fathoms at Turn-Based Press, 2014

Turn-Based Press, Dimensions Variable, and Florida International University present an exhibition showcasing FIU’s MFA candidates.

AdrienneRose Gionta, Andrew Horton, ARG + Yasmin Collaborative, Gardner Cole Miller, Ivan Santiago, Joe Locke, Kristin O’Neill, Nick Gilmore, Yasmin Khalaf

“It is of great use to the sailor to know the length of his line, though he cannot with it fathom all the depths of the ocean.”
John Locke – An Essay Concerning Human Understanding

Change offers the false promise of progress but is rarely an upward trajectory. The landscape is one situation built upon another and the division of both becomes blurred. Place is as much a location as it is a duration. Through various practices this group of artists tries to grasp at an ever-changing present and find the conflicts that occur where a new situation begins to overtake the old. This exhibition will examine the spaces created in this flux, what is lost, and what it is to try to create something solid in a place where the ground is always shifting. The intention is neither to be a memorial to a lost place or a monument to progress, but an attempt to fathom the possibilities of place.

The works featured in Turn-Based Press, complementary to the collaborative installation in Dimensions Variable, focus on concrete compositions and abstract conceptions of place and space. Through a diverse range of processes including painting, printing, sewing, and digital media these artists reproduce and re-imagine the various locales and environments suggested by the images and materials central to each work. Tensions between familiar places and unknowable spaces arise in the photographic urban cityscapes of Ivan Santiago as well as the collaboration between Yasmin Khalaf and AdrienneRose Gionta whose uncanny domestic interiors are imagined and explored through painting and digital reproduction. Zines by Joe Locke “highlight the affect of place” through the obsolescence of photocopy reproduction. Nick Gilmore’s abstract landscapes destabilize the conventional process of printmaking by thrusting the paper’s two-dimensional surface into a three-dimensional space. Gardner Cole Miller’s work in fiber and tarpaulin subvert the traditional, repetitive process of quilting while drawing material inspiration from the historic narratives associated with the places they inhabit.

Fathoms opens March 7, 2014, from 7 – 10 PM and will be on-view through April 12, 2014.
The March 7th opening will include a performance by Bobby Flan, from 8 – 11 PM.

Information about the artists:

AdrienneRose Gionta (b. Brooklyn, NY) works across diverse media often engaging computer based practices and conceptual subject matter. She examines para-feminist dialogues and existential conundrums through video games and social media. Her work can currently be seen in I Think It’s In My Head at Girls Club and Abracadabra at The Art & Culture Center of Hollywood. She has previously exhibited at David Castillo Gallery, The 6th Street Container and Locust Projects and will have her first solo museum exhibition at the Frost Museum this spring. Gionta’s work is included in several private collections including the Francie Bishop Good + David Horvitz collection.

Andrew Horton (b. Miami, FL) is a mixed-practice artist. His work is concerned with phenomenology and seeks to be constantly elusive. His work has been show at Dorsch Gallery, Leonard Tachmes Gallery, and Scope Art Fair and is in the collection of the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum.

Bobby Flan (b. Brooksville, FL.) is an artist who investigates the formal ties between sound and the movement of bodies. Working across sonic disciplines—including but never limited to: techno, shallow house, post-punk, and IDM (Imbecilic Dance Music)—Flan composes works that negotiate the canon of electronic music by way of ransom. His work has been shown at Bas Fisher Invitational, General Practice, Churchill’s Pub, and a tiny, unnamed bar in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, among others.

Gardner Cole Miller produces fiber-based quilting projects that draw inspiration from histories of conquest and expansion, seeking to examine continuities and discrepancies between pasts and present. Through a combination of traditional techniques and unconventional materials, crafted narratives attempt to connect times, places, and peoples.

Ivan Santiago (b. Miami, FL) received his Bachelors in Fine Arts in Photography and is currently working on his Masters in Fine Arts in Photography and Time-Based Media from Florida International University. He uses the sharp reality of photography and video to draw intimate observation of the urban landscape. The plain beauty of a common or ignored space is favored over the archetypical “scenic” landscape. He has been included in shows at The 6th Street Container, The Martin Z. Margulies Collection, The Art & Culture Center of Hollywood, Daniel Azoulay Gallery, Objex Art Space among others.

Joe Locke is an artist whom through photography and raw materials creates visual arrangements that challenge the narrative nature inherent in the photographic object. By downplaying the narrative he is able to highlight the affect of place in his representations.

Kristin O’Neill (b. Key West, FL) is an artist that is exploring the unification of marine forms and man-made material to explore her identity. She is examining personal relationships with marine culture and her upbringing on an island-based environment such as her living, environmental and social conditions.

Nick Gilmore (b. Mobile, AL) is interested in concepts of entropy, landscape, and the sublime. Combining elements of printmaking, sculpture, and painting, his artwork emphasizes materials and process, while teetering between metaphor and pure abstraction. He has shown locally at Locust Projects, The 6th St. Container, and Turn-Based Press.

Yasmin Khalaf works with painting and drawing materials to explore uninhabited spaces that evoke a psychological affect. Her works have been exhibited at the 6th Street Container, Audrey Love Gallery at the Bakehouse Art Complex, and the Patricia and Phillip Frost Art Museum.

Sweat meet and greet at Turn-Based Press, February 2014

Since 2009, artists and writers have been coming together to create a broadsheet edition for a project called Sweat. One of the portfolios produced in the course of this project is in the collection of the Jaffee Center for Book Arts at the Florida Atlantic University library, and an exhibition of the works was shown in 2012 at the Miami-Dade College Wolfson Campus Centre Gallery.

This upcoming Fall 2014, another exhibition will be held at the Freedom Tower–now the Miami-Dade College Museum of Art and Design–of new editions created for the project. Last night at Turn-Based Press, we had a meet and greet event to introduce visual artists and writers to each other.

Turn-Based Press will continue to support the production of the Sweat Broadsheet project in ways that we’ll announce soon.

Sweat Broadsheet Collaboration Logo

The Fall 2013 New World School of the Arts Screenprinting class met at Turn-Based Press for the end-of-semester print exchange. The students were happy to meet at an off-campus location by that time.

Because of the hectic nature of the Fall art season in Miami, December print exchanges are true feats of accomplishment–they always arrive on the heels of Art Basel Miami Beach, just after the end of classes, and just after juries, meaning that one has to be both dedicated an organized in order to be able to actually have something ready for the exchange. Meeting for the exchange is also a nice opportunity to celebrate and blow off steam. Because the end-of-semester exchanges are always optional and voluntary, the folks who participate really want to be there; it can be fun.

This time, a few of us walked to the nearby, newly open Pérez Art Museum Miami, and dined outdoors at Verde, which was delicious.

Brian Perez posted a few photos from the event over at his company’s tumblr, and he’s given me permission to repost them.

NWSA Fall 2013 Screenprinting Class Print Exchange at Turn-Based Press, photo by Brian Perez.
NWSA Fall 2013 Screenprinting Class Print Exchange at Turn-Based Press, photo by Brian Perez.
KH tearing glassine--action shot!  Photo by Brian Perez.
KH tearing glassine–action shot! Photo by Brian Perez.