About Wave Farm
 
The Space Between Us
Jan 24, 2006 - Apr 09, 2006
University Art Museum
University at Albany, State University of New York | Albany, NY 12222 | 518-442-4035
http://www.albany.edu
Drip-Man finally meets Speaker-Man.
This exhibition features the work of eight artists who explore a range of spatial circumstances inspired by familiar interiors and the surrounding architecture. Working in video, painting, drawing, and installation, Jesse Bercowetz and Matt Bua, Dawn Clements, Richard Garrison, Mark Greenwold, Oliver Michaels, Fabien Rigobert, and Mary Temple share an affinity for overlooked spaces (real or imagined). Drip-Man finally meets Speaker-Man.
This exhibition features the work of eight artists who explore a range of spatial circumstances inspired by familiar interiors and the surrounding architecture. Working in video, painting, drawing, and installation, Jesse Bercowetz and Matt Bua, Dawn Clements, Richard Garrison, Mark Greenwold, Oliver Michaels, Fabien Rigobert, and Mary Temple share an affinity for overlooked spaces (real or imagined). Through a combination of acute observation, persistent research, and elaborate fabrication, their personal readings of a given space reveal that the space between us is rarely what it first appears.
This exhibition features the work of eight artists who explore a range of spatial circumstances inspired by familiar interiors and the surrounding architecture. Working in video, painting, drawing, and installation, Jesse Bercowetz and Matt Bua, Dawn Clements, Richard Garrison, Mark Greenwold, Oliver Michaels, Fabien Rigobert, and Mary Temple share an affinity for overlooked spaces (real or imagined). Drip-Man finally meets Speaker-Man.
This exhibition features the work of eight artists who explore a range of spatial circumstances inspired by familiar interiors and the surrounding architecture. Working in video, painting, drawing, and installation, Jesse Bercowetz and Matt Bua, Dawn Clements, Richard Garrison, Mark Greenwold, Oliver Michaels, Fabien Rigobert, and Mary Temple share an affinity for overlooked spaces (real or imagined). Through a combination of acute observation, persistent research, and elaborate fabrication, their personal readings of a given space reveal that the space between us is rarely what it first appears.