Archive for the ‘Exhibits’ Category

Airline to Heaven, Part II

Saturday, June 5th, 2010
Annie Heckman, Green stars, 2006, colored pencil and graphite on paper, 9 x 12 inches, Collection Lorien Jordan

Annie Heckman, Green stars, 2006, colored pencil and graphite on paper, 9 x 12 inches, Collection Lorien Jordan (appears in Airline to Heaven, Part II animation)

Writing from the road: the opening last night was beautiful. Everyone at the gallery (Mae, Zeina, Mark, Louis) was so helpful and kind throughout the installation, and cared as much about this piece as I did. It means a lot to me when someone notices that a piece is off by an inch and hops on a ladder up to the ceiling to fix it without hesitation. The show runs through July 3 (details below) and I’ll be updating with more photos, stills, and clips shortly. If you do get a chance to stop by the gallery, please drop me a line in the guest book and/or call me up to tell me about it!

In the midst of wrapping up this project I was asked to write a statement about the piece, and have put together what reads more like a compact essay. This piece, Part II of a three-part series of works, is complex in that it bridges a set of works, neither introducing nor completing an idea, and writing about it helped me to create my own window onto the development of the project. With the recent death of Louise Bourgeois, I’ve been considering how much her approach to the reality of family relationships and the visual resonances of psychoanalysis have influenced my thinking.

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Artist Statement : Airline to Heaven, Part II

I made Airline to Heaven, Part II to narrate a transition: the placement of a set of dead characters into an airplane so that they could fly to heaven. Part I of this series visually introduced the characters, Part III will reveal what they find in the sky, and Part II needed to get them on the plane. I solve the classic narrative problem of moving a character from one room to another by making the human and animals explode out of the picture plane into the aircraft, and by showing you that they have arrived at their seats with a shot of the bunny at the window as the airplane takes off at the end of the short animation.

Woody Guthrie wrote out the lyrics to Airline to Heaven with a nod to the conventions of air travel, including tickets and seating. Years later, Jeff Mangum again envisioned air travel as a metaphor for the afterlife, setting out the notion that our ashes would circle the earth in the lyrics of In an Aeroplane Over the Sea. Every time I imagine these possibilities I feel a tug of transcendent potential and a simultaneous grounding in the deniability of such a concrete metaphor: there is no physical place in the sky, no airplane waiting for me, no reunion.

Drawing from this conflicted response to the hope of a heaven airline, I create a feverish layering of imagery, regenerative movements, indicators of magic, and an acknowledgment of certain physical accompaniments to death: blood, the blue diamond pattern on a hospital gown, the dirt of a grave. The metaphor of an Airline to Heaven becomes the entry point for a mode of imagination that allows us to create scenarios beyond our own experience, a mental space where shared affections and loss are given full expression with the symbolic renderings of death and regeneration. I constructed the animation piece at the center of a spatially layered, drawn hell-mouth, and made it the most life-giving hell-mouth I could imagine in order to capture the cyclical nature of any afterlife construction.

As I told my father when I decided to dedicate this piece to him, the animation would be a bloodbath, almost from start to finish. This is fulfilled in the piece, but the blood flits in and out as red water, as a transition, and as a frame through which images are viewed. In a similar way, the limit point of death serves as a framework for retracing attachment, loss, and affection. I dedicated this piece to my father because he has been my closest partner in trying to prevent and confront a particular loss.

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Airline to Heaven, Part II will be on view this month as part of

MISC Video and Performance
June 3 - July 3

NY Studio Gallery
154 Stanton St @ Suffolk in the LES New York, NY 10002
JMZ or F trains to Delancey / Essex
www.nystudiogallery.com 212.627.3276 info [at] nystudiogallery.com
Hours: Thurs - Sat, noon - 6 pm or by appointment

tonight

Friday, June 4th, 2010

The gallery has extended the reception to 11.30 tonight! Here’s a photo of the installation.

Airline to Heaven, Part II, 2010, animation projection, screen fabric, wood, paper, tacks, gouache, graphite, marker, 120 x 84 x 144 inches, animation duration: 3 minutes, 54 seconds

Airline to Heaven, Part II, 2010, animation projection, screen fabric, wood, paper, tacks, gouache, graphite, marker, 120 x 84 x 144 inches, animation duration: 3 minutes, 54 seconds, installed at NY Studio Gallery

MISC Video and Performance
June 3 - July 3

Performances and Reception June 4; 7-11:30pm

NY Studio Gallery
154 Stanton St @ Suffolk in the LES New York, NY 10002
JMZ or F trains to Delancey / Essex
www.nystudiogallery.com 212.627.3276 info [at] nystudiogallery.com
Hours: Thurs - Sat, noon - 6 pm or by appointment

Airline to Heaven, Part II opens at NY Studio Gallery June 4

Monday, May 24th, 2010
Annie Heckman, Airline to Heaven, Part II, 2010, animation still

Annie Heckman, Airline to Heaven, Part II, 2010, animation still

Four years ago, shortly after finishing my master’s degree, I was honored and excited to see my first animation, Airline to Heaven, Part I, screen at NY Studio Gallery as part of their MISC Performance & Video series. This year gallery owner Kristen Copham and director Zeina Assaf (both amazing) are adding installation work to the mix, and including the second part of my series, Airline to Heaven, Part II — a long-worked but brand new animation installation that has never been shown before. There will be rabbits, hell-mouths, kittens, the works.

Find the details below and please join us at the opening June 4 if you’re in NYC!
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


MISC Video & Performance


June 3 - July 3, 2010

Reception and Performances: June 4, 7-10pm

NY Studio Gallery is pleased to present the 5th Annual MISC Video and Performance. A multi-media experience featuring a variety of emerging, mid-career and established artists working in diverse genres ranging from video, animation, live performance, or video installation. Video loops and installations will be accessible during gallery hours, while performances are scheduled during reception night.

Video Installations include:

Ron Diorio extends his documentary practices through What I did during the war. Peter Dobill presents his riveting Bloodbreather video. Interaction and attempted manipulation of natural landscapes makes up Murray Dwertman’s Upper Buttermilk Falls. Airline to Heaven, Part II is Annie Heckman’s animation projection at the end of a long tunnel of drawn dirt and bones. Lynn Herring’s Man’s Inner Reflections is a sculpture that is created with mirrors and video. In Mutes I-V Ryan Kuo dramatically slows down TV footage highlighting unnoticed glitches. Yuliya Lanina creates and exhibits racy animatronic characters in Mishka. In the intimate video Sex-Ed, Matthew de Leon attempts to fill in for an X-rated adult actress. Jennie Thwing creates a miniature diorama of forest with fields, tents and celestial projections. Undulating corner projections by Naho Tariushi come back for their second time at MISC. Ina Yun creates animation projections on made and found objects.

Projected Animation Loop: Jonathan Monaghan, Kanako Okazaki, Ben Pederson, Lai-Chung Poon, Elise Roedenbeck, Devlin Shea, Carmen Tiffany.

Video Loop: Arielle Falk, Jason Head, Morrisa Maltz, Liz Rodda, Bradly Dever Treadaway, Traci Tullius, Joy Whalen.

Rooftop projection: Weather permitting Kyung Woo Han projects two videos reconstructing well-known 2-D imagery from 3-D spaces.

Performances: Hector Canonge presents MALATTIA a multimedia performance using hospital screens and silhouettes to address the AIDS issue. Genevieve White performs Loss using a sculptural cocoon. Mike Richison improvises acoustic inventions on his vacuum-based instrument.

MISC images: French Penguin by Jonathan Monaghan is an animation of an emperor penguin fused with Gothic architecture. Morrisa Maltz creates her own world in Weird Marching Army.

About NY Studio Gallery

NY Studio Gallery combines exhibition and workspace to create an atmosphere of interaction, collaboration and integration of media, styles and artistic genres for US and international artists.

NY Studio Gallery

154 Stanton Street @ Suffolk, New York, NY 10002

info@nystudiogallery.com l 212.627.3276l www.nystudiogallery.com

Thursday - Saturday 12 - 6pm or by appointment

Cellar door at The Op Shop in Hyde Park

Thursday, April 8th, 2010
Annie Heckman, Cellar door (still), 2010

Annie Heckman, Cellar door (still), 2010

Annie Heckman
Cellar door
an animation installation at The Op Shop

Opening April 17, 2010 5-8pm, running through May 1

Cellar door is an animation installation built up from fragments of imagery found in the former Hollywood Video space. Tucked into a corner of the basement, the work consists of a fluid series of movements collaged together in the spirit of surrealist games. The title refers both to the surprising door we found in the basement of the building and to ongoing discussion, dating back to the late 19th century, of the phonic elegance and associative potential of the phrase “cellar door” in literary and linguistic analysis.

In the meantime visit the Op Shop in Hyde Park to see the fabulous projects Laura Shaeffer has put together, everything from visual art to plant and thrift exchanges.

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The Opportunity Shop is temporarily located at
1530 E. 53rd Street
Chicago, Illinois 60615

Friday, March 26th through Saturday, May 1st
Open Thursday - Sunday from 11am - 7pm
Also open coinciding with events on other evenings

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Want your smart thoughts to become blended into this piece? Comment or contact me with your associations with the words “Cellar door.”

Thank you

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Thank you so much to everyone who visited, helped me prepare, and attended the talk with such thoughtful questions. And a special thank you to Lindsey Thieman (and the rest of the amazingly helpful staff) at the International Museum of Surgical Science for making it all possible, and to my husband Peter Clark for boundless patience and helpfulness. I had a *beautiful* weekend immersed in the exhibit and am returning to the studio to make the next thing. Below is one of the photos of this installation.

Annie Heckman, You thought that you were alone but I caught your bullet just in time (installation detail), 2009, paper, graphite, phosphorescent paint, thread, wire, lighting system, approximately 120 x 200 x 276 inches, installed at the International Museum of Surgical Science, 2010

Annie Heckman, You thought that you were alone but I caught your bullet just in time (installation detail), 2009, paper, graphite, phosphorescent paint, thread, wire, lighting system, 120 x 200 x 276 inches, installed at the International Museum of Surgical Science, 2010

Tonight

Friday, March 5th, 2010

The exhibit opens tonight! Thanks to Julia Thiel at the Chicago Reader for listing it with a huge beautiful image.

Here’s an image I took while installing. If you’re really tall and have a small camera you may be able to swing something similar:

Annie Heckman, installation process at the International Museum of Surgical Science, 2010

Annie Heckman, installation process at the International Museum of Surgical Science, 2010

And down the hall, a trepanned skull:

Annie Heckman, International Museum of Surgical Science, photo of trepanning display, 2010

Annie Heckman, International Museum of Surgical Science, photo of trepanning display, 2010

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You thought that you were alone but I caught your bullet just in time

March 5 – May 21, 2010

International Museum of Surgical Science

1524 N. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60610

opening together with Lauren Kalman’s exhibit, “Blooms, Efflorescence, and Other Dermatological Embellishments”

Free, public reception: FRIDAY, MARCH 5 from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m.
Artists’ talk (free with Museum admission): SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 2:00 p.m.

Details on museum website for parking –> https://www.imss.org/parking.htm
and a map –> https://www.imss.org/location.htm

Installing at the International Museum of Surgical Science

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010
Annie Heckman, installation progress shot, International Museum of Surgical Science

Annie Heckman, installation progress shot, International Museum of Surgical Science

I’m in the process of installing this exhibit and thought you might enjoy seeing the blurry photos I take to remind myself of where things are and how they look. Since I’m working with a blacklight to charge the glow paints, there’s a deep violet glow in these shots.

Information about the exhibit is below and I hope you can make it out for the opening this Friday, and/or the artist talk this Saturday, or contact me if you would like to meet some other time to talk about the exhibit.

Annie Heckman, Installation progress shot, International Museum of Surgical Science

Annie Heckman, Installation progress shot, International Museum of Surgical Science

Annie Heckman, Installation progress shot, International Museum of Surgical Science

Annie Heckman, Installation progress shot, International Museum of Surgical Science

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You thought that you were alone but I caught your bullet just in time

March 5 – May 21, 2010

International Museum of Surgical Science

1524 N. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60610

opening together with Lauren Kalman’s exhibit, “Blooms, Efflorescence, and Other Dermatological Embellishments”

Free, public reception: FRIDAY, MARCH 5 from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m.
Artists’ talk (free with Museum admission): SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 2:00 p.m.

From curator Lindsey Thieman’s beautiful writing on the show on the International Museum of Surgical Science site:

“You thought that you were alone but I caught your bullet just in time” comprises glow-in-the-dark house-of-cards structures built of interlocking cut paper pieces, each drawn upon in graphite and coated with phosphorescent paint to resemble a human or animal bone. Heckman’s intricate and tenuous skeletal structures have the potential to be broken down and rebuilt during the course of the exhibition and, due to the nature of the glow-in-the-dark paint, must be recharged on a programmed lighting cycle in order to remain visible, creating a self-enclosed system of decay, disappearance, regeneration, and re-emergence. Heckman contextualizes this installation in the tradition of European bones churches such as the Kostnice Sedlec in the Czech Republic and the Capuchin Chapel in Rome, saying, “The imagery created by the collections of carefully arranged human bones in these tremendously sad, hallucinatory burial grounds flits black and forth between flowery, ornate flourishes and gruesome, brittle remains.” As in these churches, the skeletal imagery of Heckman’s installation evokes awe at the paradoxical beauty of human mortality.

Yet the installation’s title—an earnest but impossible wish the artist dedicated to her brother shortly after his death—and the work’s specific grounding in Heckman’s personal experience of loss collapses this grand symbolism down to the mourning of a single life passing, to the level of an individual body, once animated and now reduced to pile of bones. From this singular, specific foundation, the installation is rebuilt as a memorial for the multiplicity of lives past and present that together provide a brief glimpse into the wonder of life itself. Heckman explains, “Faced with the impossibility of characterizing mortality, I look back to moments of awe to formulate a language for approaching death and loss. Looking deeply into anything with wonder is a form of re-generation and of self-abuse. I want my viewers to remake these encounters with me, to become my companions in brief confrontations with the unknown.”

Bound & Gathered

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

I was fortunate to co-organize Bound & Gathered, an exhibit of contemporary fiber-based work at Edge Zones Art Center in Miami this February 2010 with my (forever, amazing) friend, artist Emmy Mathis. In deciding on the range and depth of the show, we had an interesting time sorting through a definition of fiber, and emerged with the idea that fibers can be any substance, in a form that can be interwoven, combined, bound, or gathered.

On a personal note, I should add that I was *mad* at the weather when our flight to Miami for the opening (along with all possible replacements) was cancelled. While I moped in Chicago and waited for news of the exhibit, Emmy took my absence in stride and made the show a huge success (and text-messaged me updates and images) and I am so grateful to her for bringing this all together. Here are some words that we wrote for the exhibit along with the piece that I contributed.

 Annie Heckman, emWe made a drawing of the strange moment when Snow Whites gentle mother visited a bone church /em[detail],  2010, pen, thread, and cut-out inkjet prints on paper, 15.5 x 12 inches

Annie Heckman, We made a drawing of the strange moment when Snow White's gentle mother visited a bone church, 2010, pen, thread, and cut-out inkjet prints on paper, 15.5 x 12 inches

Annie Heckman, We made a drawing of the strange moment when Snow Whites gentle mother visited a bone church [detail], 2010, pen, thread, and cut-out inkjet prints on paper, 15.5 x 12 inches

Annie Heckman, We made a drawing of the strange moment when Snow White's gentle mother visited a bone church (detail), 2010, pen, thread, and cut-out inkjet prints on paper, 15.5 x 12 inches

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Literally speaking, the verbs ‘to bind’ and ‘to gather’ refer to methods of joining and collecting, of bringing together. The artists in this show first bound together their objects, through sewing, twisting, papermaking, and interweaving. This act is intimate, often highly personal and refers to methods of making. ‘To bind’ refers to the body, specifically to the hands or feet. ‘To gather’ is what we, as organizers, have done to the works in this show. Bound & Gathered represents a cross-cultural and cross continental dialogue among what one artist in the show often refers to as ‘her fellow tribes people.’ Although the work in this show is diverse and highly eclectic, somewhere in the overlapping of these activities lies a particular poetics of object-making: a sometimes uncomfortable mode, rendering results that float between object and image, with a tenderness complicated by the implied navigations of home economics and craft.

We interact with fibers on a constant basis. Bare feet stand on a wood grain floor; arms rest under a layer of cotton. Breasts in bras, legs in pants, at least one part of our body is always in contact with some type of fiber. As co-organizers, we were first bound together in our undergraduate experience where as students of post-modern irony, we quietly and subtly revolted with a conversation about sympathy and tenderness, about sincerity and tactility, about the soft truths behind clichés. While the artists in this exhibit are angling toward different meanings and twists on this intention, they have all chosen to work in a mode that steps to the side of the object-image conversation in order to make objects that bind and gather by being pliable and interconnected.

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Bound & Gathered
Organized by Annie Heckman & Emmy Mathis

Mora Barber |Pip Brant | Natasha Duwin | Annie Heckman | Laurie LeBreton | Abigail Lelis | Marcela Marcuzzi | Emmy Mathis | Jason Meyer | Isabel Moros-Rigau | Alex Trimino-K | Casey Ann Wasniewski | Plamen Yordanov

EDGE ZONES ART CENTER, Miami, FL

Visions in New York City

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

I’m so honored that Maurizio Pellegrin has decided to include my piece Becoming Formless in this exhibit  — check out more information on the site for Visions in New York City. The closing reception is Friday, November 13, and sadly I won’t be able to make it to the reception. Please celebrate for me, New Yorkers!

artXposium at the West Chicago City Museum

Friday, September 18th, 2009
Annie Heckman; A short dream about trains and prairies, from before you moved south; animation still; 2009

Annie Heckman; A short dream about trains and prairies, from before you moved south; animation still; thank you to the West Chicago City Museum, 2009

artXposium is up and running again this year for its annual exhibit, in a new form, at the West Chicago City Museum.

Curators Anni Holm and Irene Pérez have challenged us to work more closely with West Chicago as a place, and for my project I decided to delve into the archives at the museum, with the generous help and hospitality of museum curator Sally DeFauw, who helped me sift through the archives when I had a broad starting point of trying to capture something about the city’s history as a railroad town. The process was so interesting and I only scratched the surface.

Combining the images I found with my own memories of growing up in a nearby midwestern town, I created an animation piece called A short dream about trains and prairies, from before you moved south. This piece is being installed together with an amazing train set in the museum’s collection, and uses footage of that train set as a starting point.

Details below if you can join us this weekend! More information and follow-up to come, and in the meantime check out Kathryn Born’s coverage of the exhibit on Art Talk Chicago.

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Locations:
West Chicago City Museum, 132 Main Street in West Chicago, IL 60185
Gallery 200
Main Street Storefronts
19th century CB&Q Depot
West Chicago Public Library District

Friday, September 18:
7-10pm - Meet the Artists Potluck, screening of Reach the Rock

Saturday, September 19: Open 11am-10pm
2pm - guided tour with the curators
5-10pm closing reception with an artist talk by Danish Artist in Residence, Berit Nørgaard, performances by Alison Rhoades, Core Project, Kathryn Born, and John & Mandy Rakow, along with food, drinks, and a silent auction.

artXposium is curated by Anni Holm and Irene Pérez and organized in conjunction with the West Chicago International Artist in Residency Program featuring Berit Nørgaard’s project: If I Can Do It - You Can Do It Too.