Three-by-Six (“3×6”)

Three-by-Six ("3×6")

Artlab33 | Art SpaceThree-by-Six (“3×6”) is a summer media arts event in Miami, Florida; a cross between an art show and a film festival. On each selected evening, six curated short video, film, performance, sound, or other time-based combination works will be presented.

Three-by-Six (“3×6”) will be held on the last Thursday of the month during the summer of 2010 (Wynwood Art District’s Last Thursdays). Artlab33 | Art Space will provide a forum for submission and curation of media artworks and build a community of participation, review, and response for both audience and practitioner. Our address is: 2085-B NW 2nd Avenue, Miami, Florida 33127.

The program title, Three-by-Six (“3×6”), refers to the structure of the program:

• Three events
• Three curators/jurors
• Three themes
• Six pieces per event
• Six minutes or less per piece
• Sixty minutes long event

No limitations are placed on what type of work can be submitted except: it must be able to be projected digitally, performed, played via sound system, or some combination, each piece is limited in length to 6 minutes, and no more than 6 will be selected for any one event.

Electronic files and support materials can be submitted via email (up to 5 MB’s), CD, DVD, or internet download. Entries with technical problems need to be resolved by the artist or will be withdrawn or rejected. Terms of submission include permission to exhibit both live and online (whether or not selected for a particular event), permission to video tape performances, and permission to include selected work in a compilation DVD. No materials will be returned. Other than these uses, the artists will retain all rights.

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Three-by-Six (“3×6”) Submissions:

Works must be: video, film, sound, performance, slideshow, or combination. Anything that can be projected or performed in real-time, no longer than six minutes in length. Shorter can be better!

SUBMISSION DEADLINES:

Program #1 – 8 May, 2010

Program #2 – 12 June, 2010

Program #3 – 12 July, 2010

EVENT SHOWING DATES :

Theme #1 : #phrasesihate (a twitter trending topic) – on 27 May, 2010

Theme #2: Likin’ – on 24 June, 2010

Theme #3: Obsess’n – on 29 July, 2010

We will follow up if we need more information or clarification. Your permission to post your work online, exhibit at the event, and compile into a DVD is required. Electronic files and support materials should be downloadable through a URL that you provide, emailed under separate cover to printcollection@gmail.com, or post mailed to:

Miami Art Exchange
Attn: Artlab33 | Art Space – “3×6”
PO Box 1462
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33302

Please answer all of the following questions to the best of your ability.

Required with your submission:

Your Name:

Your valid Email:

Your phone (if residing in Florida):

Title of Work *

Description of Work * Media, Emphasis, Major Points

File Size (# of kb’s, mb’s, or gb’s) *

Number and Types of Files *

Submission Delivery Method *

• URL (http://…. )

• Email (under 3MB to printcollection@gmail.com)

• CD/DVD (over 3MB through postal mail)

URL for Downloading

Permission to Post Work Online, Show and/or Videotape at Event, and Compile in DVD for Distribution * Required; Artist Retains Ownership

• I grant my permission for these uses.

Do you have other materials you would like us to be aware of? URL’s, Significant Projects or Exhibitions, Other Examples of Your Work?

Please submit by the correct deadline to be considered for each individual event date.

Common Ground

“Common Ground”

Exhibition Dates: 13 – 30 March, 2010

Opening: 7 – 10:30 pm, Saturday 13 March

Our upcoming exhibition features drawing contrasting the relationships between figuration and abstraction.


“Encroaching” © 2010
Ink & Varnish on Board
16 x 20 inches
Toyin Odutola

The space that our artists inhabit, between figuration and abstraction, is in the associative realm between the conscious and unconscious mind. This space is enigma, a seductive entity, suggestive of childhood memories and fantasies where we once scrawled with broken crayons. It sometimes bordering on the violent, sometimes on the sublime. We imagine it to be a malleable, liquid material that can be bent and molded at will.

Exhibiting will be Christopher Skura, Toyin Odutola, Franklin Sinanan, David Rohn, and Onajide Shabaka.

Toyin Odutola drawings are new to Miami. She says, “I am a draftswoman who deals in portraiture. Working with rudimentary tools, I desperately try to create complex entities.” Toyin Odutola’s massively strong, yet graceful figures, lyrically haunt and preoccupy our thoughts. Although still very young, Ms. Odutola invokes historical references that follow her like ghosts. They may be creations out of her imagination, but they continually creep up and out into our world with force.

There is a chilling patience in the drawings of Christopher Skura that reminds us to take note of his work. His works appear as slices, as sections in a sequence of interlocking objects. While we may be able to become lost in the smallest of spaces, between two dots on a field of yellow, we know the elastic band of reality will prevent us from falling in and free falling into infinity. Christopher Skura’s complex worlds are both organic and manufactured in a similar way as architectural building blocks and frameworks. Skura’s drawing takes us to an alternate reality enveloped in a high key golden aura.

“Untitled” © 2008
graphite, ink, colored pencil on paper.
Christopher Skura

David Rohn steps away from his performative work to show a few drawings that are both instructive and sensitive. David Rohn’s drawings have a variety of characters in different situation and different dramatic circumstances. His drawings, as blueprints, form guidelines and a map to instructive platforms of activity. They continually try to balance and push us toward a kind of accuracy and precision that is more about us than them.

Franklin Sininan’s raw vision, filled to the edges with tribal mask forms, textures, figures, loads of color, and graffiti, are what make up his painting and drawing. His Caribbean background certainly is an influence on his imagery and motifs. This tribal, motif filled art has a sense of immediacy and agency that envelopes each work in the contemporary art making process. There is a riotous abundance of color and a tendency toward optical overload that infuses his work.

Gagged
Nupastel, carbon smoke on paper
36 x 24 in.
© Onajide Shabaka

Using a fully engage working process, Onajide Shabaka’s various drawings use somewhat violent techniques in their creation by burning, erasing, rubbing, and smoking his surfaces. Not only are their emotional content highly charged, they creative process in brought about through a fully charged engagement with both the subject and medium. The burning and smoking of the drawing, though not destroying the paper’s surface, it creates a texture that mutes and highlights the line drawings, both at the same time leaving it with a translucence and aura.

Proof: South Florida Printmakers

“Proof”

29 January to March 7, 2010

Opening Reception: Friday, 29 January, 2010 – 7:30 p.m.-to-10 p.m.

Gallery Walk Reception: Saturday, 13 February, 2010 – 7:30 p.m.-to-10:30 p.m.

Artists:

Kari Synder
Kathleen Hudspeth
Tom Virgin
Diane Arrieta
Jonathan Thomas
John Cutrone
Seth Thompson
Andrew Binder
Brian Reedy

“Proof”

“Proof” teams writers and artists to create editions of literary broadsides and artist’s prints. In some cases the artist responded to words provided by the writer; some writers produced new work after conversations with the artist; and still other pairs worked closely together to produce new collaborative works. This intersection of word, image and the process of creative dialogue are at the heart of “Proof.”

[Below: Preview Opening, 29 January, 2009]

Miami Art Auction for Haitian Earthquake Relief

MIAMI ARTIST ART AUCTION

for

HAITIAN EARTHQUAKE RELIEF

(click image above for more info)

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Earthquake victims await treatment Saturday at a Doctors Without Borders facility in Port-au-Prince.

Weekly Regular Hours: Tue.-Sat. 11-5 p.m. (or by appt.)

Open Every Second Saturday’s Wynwood Art Walk

*Splash!* – Closing Reception

Miami Art Exchange at Artlab33 Art Space

*?Splash!* – International Exhibition

Closing reception: 9 Jan., 7-10:30 p.m.

2051 NW 2nd Av.
Miami, Florida 33127

Artists: Paul Aho (Florida), Mark Dixon (Canada), Till Könneker (Switzerland), TJ Norris (Oregon),
Bill Puzstai
(Canada), Sara Stites (Florida), featuring painting, works-on-paper, and photography.

Special projects: Gary Moore (Florida), Onajide Shabaka (Florida)


Weekly Regular Hours: Tue.-Sat. 11-5 p.m.

Open Every Second Saturday’s Wynwood Art Walk – Sat., 12 Dec., 7 – 10:30 p.m.

2051 NW 2nd Avenue
Miami
, Florida 33127

*Splash!* – International Exhibition

Miami Art Exchange at Artlab33 | Art Space

*?Splash!* – International Exhibition

Vernissage – Opening: 3 Dec., 6-8 p.m.

2051 NW 2nd Av. Miami, Florida 33127

Exhibition Dates: 3 Dec., 2009 to 9 Jan., 2010

Artists: Paul Aho (Florida), Mark Dixon (Canada), Till Könneker (Switzerland), TJ Norris (Oregon), Bill Puzstai (Canada), Sara Stites (Florida), featuring painting, works-on-paper, and photography.

Special projects: Gary Moore (Florida), Onajide Shabaka (Florida)

swimming pool redux

*SPLASH!*: a sudden disturbance to the otherwise quiescent free surface of a liquid (usually water). The disturbance is typically caused by a solid object suddenly hitting the surface. Think of a splash from a water droplet, it rises into a beautiful crown of sparkling water that also envelopes us in a fluid cocoon of freshness and energy.

Paul Aho (Florida), Mark Dixon (Canada), TJ Norris (Oregon), and Sara Stites (Florida) are all exploring various abstract forms, from the man-made to those produced in nature. In each instance the artist has created a unique vision through personal creativity. Dixon and Norris have created richly patterned works-on-paper, while Aho and Stites have worked along similar paths on paintings. In all, they provide a highly unique selection from which to view.

Till Könneker (Switzerland) has a well-known practice of creating silhouette drawings, here done on hand-made Japanese paper. These delicate works are powerful in both imagery and presentation. He develops his work in an explorative and playful manner, always ready to trust chance.

Bill Pusztai’s (Canada) poetic photographs reveal his interpretation of the four muses. “Embodying the allusive muses, this quartet of classically composed nudes is a statement about statements, art about sex, soft-core porn about literature, and homage to one of the unsung heroes of culture and gender theory.” (Photographic images include nudity.)

TJ Norris
Carnivale
, © 2007
Ink, Goauche on Paper
30 x 22 1/2 in.

Mark Dixon
Red, Blue, Green, © 2004

acrylic on gessoed paper
12 x 12 in.

Paul Aho
Avalon
, © 2009
oil and acrylic on wood
48 x 48 in.

Till Könneker
Things Are
, © 2009
Print on handmade Japanese paper,
ed. 4/10

Bill Pusztai
Four Allegories of Photography (for Northrop Frye)
[series]
West: Erotesis
, © 2008
photography
18 x 12 in.

Current Works: Painting

Artlab33 | Art Space
2051 NW 2nd Ave
Miami, FL 33127

Opening Reception: Saturday, November 14, 2009
7 – 10:30 pm

Inaugural Exhibition at Artlab33 | Art Space (Miami Art Exchange) opens 14 November, 2009 at 7 pm.

Artists: Paul Aho, Julio Green, Darren C. Price, Ross Ford, Alexandra Suarez


Paul Aho“Leaf Storm”

“A celebration of complexity, [my paintings] seek to present a world that is physically provocative, unapologetically poetic and undeniably beautiful, while utilizing abstract form as a metaphor for personal, social and political struggle.” Paul Aho

Darren C. Price - theimpassable

Darren C. Price – “The Impassable”

Julio Green - Portal VII

Julio Green – “Portal VII”

“To connect with the viewer by harnessing the power of passion in the creation of colors, shapes, forms, and textures [is my objective].” Julio Green

Ross Ford – “N 359″

“Each of my paintings is based on a drawing. I draw constantly in an effort to channel subconscious feelings. For any one painting I make many iterative drawings, usually several hundred for each large painting, but occasionally several thousand. The process is two-fold, first raw expression, second analysis and selection.” Ross Ford

Alexandra Suarez - breakingfree

Alexandra Suarez“The Observers”

“My work is a philosophical journey inspired by emotion, social injustice and reflections on our human condition.” Alexandra Suarez