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At the UB Art Galleries

 

UB ANDERSON GALLERY

Upcoming:

UB Anderson Gallery is closed for the summer for renovations.

 

UB ART GALLERY

Upcoming:

NLXL a design studio for visual communication and interaction

NLXL a design studio for visual communication and interaction
July 1 through July 25, 2008
Opening reception
Thursday, July 17, 2008
5:30 to midnight

NLXL experiments with the possibilities of combining visual and interactive elements within single design solutions. Content, form and technique are carefully considered in each and every solution. NLXL designs logos, corporate and visual identities, web sites and web-identities, event styles, forms, posters, animations, books, content management systems, digital presentations and other digital applications. The exhibition will feature graphic posters and an interactive, multimedia installation.

 

 

 

Shadi Nazarian: Introversions
July 1 through July 25, 2008

Shadi Nazarian, Introversions construction drawing in plan: Jon Spielman of factoryny, 2008

Nazarian frames and choreographs an architectural experience as audiences are drawn toward a responsive minimalist structure, seemingly hovering in midair. Working in the fertile intersections of art, architecture, and emergent technology, she employs switchable Liquid crystal layered privacy glass to explore cognition and think about the ways in which we navigate the environment we live in. In the commercial sector, privacy glass has been used primarily for partitions, display cases, bank screens, and as enclosures for conference rooms, and provocatively, in dressing rooms and bathrooms. Presented in an academic and artistic context, Introversions seeks to discover how new materials such as privacy glass fundamentally alter spatial relationships and human perception. Nazarian isolates and enhances disorienting moments inherent to urban conditions that are triggered by reflections and other strange sights seen out of the corner of the eye by combining minimalist sculpture and architecture to generate uncanny optical effects.

Nazarian moved to New York City in 1989 to join I.M. Pei & Partners as an architectural designer, and then to Ithaca, NY to teach at Cornell University (1991-92, and 1999-2002). She has been teaching at the State University of New York at Buffalo in the School of Architecture and Urban Planning since 1994.

The production of Introversions is sponsored in part, by a generous grant from the New York State Council on the Arts Individual Artists Program (Film, Media and New Technology Production Category), New York Foundation for the Arts Special Opportunity Stipends, as well as the support of CBO Glass, KNEMA LLC, Polytronix Inc. and SMG HARSON. Fabrication by factoryny.

Exhibitions Archive-UB Art Gallery, Center for the Arts

4 UB Artists at UB Art Gallery
Second Floor Gallery, April 21 - May 7, 2005

Four installations in the second floor gallery by UB Master of Fine Arts candidates Jay Ariaz, Wanyen Chou, Rachael Hetzel and Kate S. Parzych.

Niagara Falls is one of this region’s most photographed landmarks. Despite this, Ariaz, who holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the Kansas City Art Institute, pursued the idea that a fresh perspective for photographing the wonder remained for his taking. By documenting hand-painted murals of Niagara Falls, located within the local community, he indeed grasps more than the power and beauty of the flowing water. His photographic installation, A Spectacular Fall, reveals an urban and cultural landscape that exists in contrast to the tourist attraction thus communicating a previously untold story of deterioration and loss.

Chou’s installation, Dream, uses her experiences as an Asian student living in an American city to explore the difficulties caused by drastic changes in environment as one moves from one culture to another. She uses her work to reveal her own sense of isolation, confusion and loss of identity brought on by language barriers and new cultural practices and seeks to challenge viewers to imagine themselves in similar circumstances. From Taipei, Taiwan, Chou received her Bachelor of Arts from the National Hualien Teacher’s College in Hualien, Taiwan.

Hetzel’s installation of large scale screen-prints and books focuses on issues of gendered roles within the family structure and the fluidity of memory. Through her screen-prints she seeks to relate the causes of oppression within the family structure and disclose hidden ways in which women exert power within their families. Hetzel received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in printmaking from SUNY College at Brockport in 2003.

Parzych, a Western New York native living in Akron, NY, holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in photography from UB. Using the photographic image as a starting point for books and installations that explore how family relationships are constructed in adult memories, representing an individual’s own concept of childhood and play. Her installation Don’t Tape Things to the Walls begins with a display of vintage clip-on ties, hand-embroidered with stern parental commands, then leads the viewer to subtly participate in the subversion of these mandates.



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