Center Art Gallery
Spoelhof College Center
3201 Burton Street SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49546
(616) 526-6271
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Disclosures
February 15 – March 16, 2001
Feminism is a loaded word.
That's exactly the reason a pair of Calvin College art professors wanted to do
a gallery exhibit addressing the theme of feminism. "We thought that with
a visual arts exhibition of photographic images and ceramic works we could get
people to think about feminism in different ways," says Calvin professor
Jennifer Steensma Hoag, one of the two curators (along with professor Anna Greidanus
Probes).
The result is "Disclosures," an exhibition in which all of the artwork
addresses the theme of feminism from the point of view of equality and justice
regardless of race or gender. It will run from February 15 to March 16 in the
Center Art Gallery at Calvin, intentionally spanning both Black History Month
and Women's History Month. "The purpose of this exhibition," says Steensma
Hoag, "is to show a diversity of ideas about what feminism is and can be.
We hope the exhibition of high quality, dynamic images from experienced artists
will excite and engage the community, inspiring people to investigate their own
notions of feminism."
Along with the exhibition plans also are underway for a variety of educational
opportunities, including a February 22 artist lecture at Kendall College of Art
& Design, a February 23 artist lecture at Calvin and a panel discussion with
exhibiting artists at Calvin on February 23 as part of the Opening Reception.
Steensma Hoag and Greidanus Probes researched and invited all of the artists.
Steensma Hoag is a photographic artist, while Greidanus Probes is a ceramic artist;
the exhibition features artwork from both photographers and ceramists. Says Greidanus
Probes: "We selected nine artists to provide a variety of approaches to feminism
in style and content. Each artist will be expected to exhibit a number of artworks.
In this way, the audience can see how an artist consistently and deliberately
explores an idea. The exhibition is not intended to be an exhaustive display of
current feminist work, but rather to function as an introduction to feminism."
The four photographers participating in the exhibition will be Carla Williams,
Chuck Samuels, Darlene Kaczmarczyk and Donna Pattee-Ballard. Williams is a photographer
from Santa Fe, N.M. whose artwork is heavily influenced by historical images of
black women and how black women are represented within culture, while Samuels
is a photographer from Montreal, Canada, who remakes historical art photographs
made by well-known male photographers, substituting himself for the female model.
Michigan's Kaczmarczyk, an assistant professor at Kendall, photographs dollhouses
and figures with a pinhole camera, staging stories about gender differences. Pattee-Ballard,
also a Michigan artist and an adjunct instructor at Kendall, in the past has addressed
the negative ways in which women are viewed by society. Her new body of work for
the exhibit will be more positive, highlighting the strength of women.
Ceramic artists include Janis Mars Wunderlich, Kathy King, Wendy Withrow, Barbara
Sansing and Karen Orsillo. Mars Wunderlich, of Columbus, Ohio, investigates the
dualities of her roles as mother and artist, as well as wife and artist, in clay
forms that are "arresting and humorous." King is a ceramist and professor
at Georgia State University whose work addresses issues about gender and sexuality
using the conventions of the comic book artist on surfaces of storage containers.
Withrow is a West Michigan artist and a recent BFA graduate from Grand Valley
State University who uses delicately formed unglazed porcelain. Sansing, from
Amherst, New Hampshire, earned her BFA degree in ceramics 40 years after graduating
from high school and represents a generation of women whose images and voices
add depth to the ongoing development of feminist thought. Orsillo of Kittery Point,
Maine will exhibit hand compressed, colored clay vessels that pulsate mesmerizing
patterns referencing fabrics, traditionally made by women.
"There has not been an exhibition in West Michigan that addresses feminism
for at least a decade," says Steensma Hoag. "This exhibit is long overdue."The
exhibition and lectures are activities supported by the Michigan Council for Art
and Cultural Affairs Minigrant program, administered by the Arts Council of Greater
Grand Rapids.The barrier-free Center Art Gallery, located on the lower level of
the Spoelhof College Center, is open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday through Thursday,
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, and noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday. There is no admission
charge.
For more information call (616) 957-6271.