Thursday, June 2, 2011
Secret Garden pARTy
Friday, May 13, 2011
Video and Wine-tasting Benefit
Music by Justin King and Tremble & Wag
![]() |
Noah Klersfeld, still from "Water Undulating", 2010 |
![]() |
Pawel Wotjtasik, still from "Crash", 2010 Click through for more information and video artist bios! |
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Interview with DAC Director Karl Erickson on GYST Radio
Monday, April 25, 2011
Cornell MFA Show

This week DAC welcomes the Cornell University MFA show "Meditations in an Emergency," curated by Christopher Lew.
April 28–May 7, 2011
Reception: April 30, 6pm to 9
For emerging artists today, the environment in which they create is one marked by distraction and preoccupation. Meditations in an Emergency—whose title is borrowed from Frank O'Hara's 1954 poem—suggests how to make work in a time of disruption. The studio, whether it be in a physical room or lodged in the mind and imagination, is a space to pause and think, a generative space that does not run counter to the world at large, but is positioned at a certain distance and remove from it. It provides a way for an artist to create in a time of crisis, moving beyond gut reaction to a headspace that is more contemplative and insightful.
Meditations in an Emergency brings together eleven candidates of Cornell University's MFA program who all reveal individual notions of what art can be through varied approaches. Some artists give primacy to the materials employed while others are led by research-based methods, and still others play off the tension between subjectivity and authorship, content and form, or the power of the image and its ability and inability to convey meaning. The exhibition aims to make tangible what O'Hara describes as "the ecstasy of bursting forth"—a sense of birth and renewal as these artists contribute to dialogues about art and its making that extend beyond their immediate communities, into a larger conversation that is potentially and inherently international in reach and multigenerational in scope.
Featured artists: Robert Andrade, Piotr Chizinski, Amie Cunat, Gabrielle Jesiolowski, Gabriela Jimenez, Daren Kendall, Baseera Khan, Ruth Oppenheim, Benjamin Rubloff, Farideh Sakhaeifar, Bernie Yenelouis
Thursday, April 14, 2011
two trunkshow
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Interview with Brian O'Connell and Todd Bourret about their show "Harry & Pete."

DAC: How did the constraint of time influence your creative process? Do you typically work well under pressure?
DAC: While the project was built upon constraint did you find the process itself at all limiting to creativity?
DAC: How were you forced to reevaluate the role of artist while working (with?) mechanically produced indexes as your medium?
Saturday, April 9, 2011
My House Is Burned But The Cherry Tree in My Garden Scatters Its Blossoms As If Nothing Had Happened
Check out this project by upcoming exhibiting artists Aeron Bergman
and Alejandra Salinas:
"My House Is Burned But The Cherry Tree in My Garden
Scatters Its Blossoms As If Nothing Had Happened”
45 minute electroacoustic radio piece commissioned by
Markus Heuger for German radio WDR 3: Studio Akustische
Kunst.
It will be broadcast on 8 April 2011 at 23:05.
“Orbiting alongside the asteroid Itakawa, Divine Olivine
is a hazard data observatory, a monitoring station and the
first deep space sacred site. Only a few make “The Decade”
(as the pilgrimage became known) to breathe filtered air
by the Olivine found in Itakawa.”
The piece will also be available online, after 8 April:
http://www.wdr3.de/open-studio-akustische-kunst/details/artikel/
my-house-is-burned-but-the-cherry-tree-in-my-garden-scatters-its-blossomsas-
if-nothing-had-happene.html
There will be a listening event at Ny Musikk in Oslo, 9
April at 15:00.
Work mixed and mastered at NOTAM, with the help of sound
engineer Cato Langnes.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Harry and Pete

In Harry and Pete, Todd Bourret and Brian O’Connell come together under three familiar constraints – space, time, and budget - to produce a body of collaborative work that explores the nature of dialog, debate, support, and influence. Limiting themselves to an established materials list, Bourret and O’Connell will use the DAC gallery as a studio in the week preceding the opening.
Through a material back-and-forth, Bourret and O’Connell employ their mutual interest in the manipulation of indexes to suggest further generative possibilities. Both artists use indexical procedures (e.g. photographic processes, prints, stencils, molds, etc.) to make effects of the past present. In making, recording, and displaying residues, their work provokes both memories of and projections into pasts as viewing becomes an act of reconstruction. In Harry and Pete, an expanding series of works traces material and conceptual transformations that reflect both deliberate responses as well as chance effects.