Artel Concert Series #16, The Barmitzvah Brothers, The Burning Hell
January 14th, 2008| January 25, 2008 | 8:30 pm | to | 10:00 pm | ||
The Barmitzvah Brothers: Official Site / MySpace

The Burning Hell:: MySpace
ArchiveArtel Concert Series #16, The Barmitzvah Brothers, The Burning HellJanuary 14th, 2008
The Barmitzvah Brothers: Official Site / MySpace
Cameo Cinema Presents: Aboriginal Resistance NightJanuary 8th, 2008
Full Details Coming Soon — but mark your calendars now. Cameo Cinema Presents: Logan’s RunJanuary 8th, 2008
Logan’s Run120 minutes | View Trailer | IMDb Entry Released in 1976 and directed by Micheal Anderson, Logan’s Run remains one of the best sci-fi films ever. Set in 2274 in a post-apocalyptic domed world where everyone lives only until 30 when their Life Crystal runs out and they must go to “Carouselâ€. Logan 5 is a rebel Sandman played by dashing Micheal York trying to make it to sanctuary. Today Logan’s Run has gained cult status and watching the story of Logan 5 unfold is just as entertaining (and possibly more so) now as it was in the 70s. The amazing art direction, electronic soundtrack and Farah Fawcett’s crying are not to be missed. The film screening will be preceded by an introduction by Amy Uyeda. FREE ADMISSION Cameo Cinema is a free public film screening that celebrates the joy of watching movies. Other Upcoming Cameo Cinema Screenings: Thurs Jan 17: Scenes from a Marriage Join the Cameo Cinema Facebook Group for invitations to future screenings. Cameo Cinema Presents: Scenes from a MarriageJanuary 8th, 2008
Film clips from films about marriage presented with a talk by Wook Choi. Scenes from a Marriage - IMDb Entry FREE ADMISSION Thursday January 17, 2008 Cameo Cinema is a free, public film screening that celebrates the joy of watching movies. Other Upcoming Cameo Cinema Screenings: Thurs Jan 31: Logan’s Run Join the Cameo Cinema Facebook Group for invitations to future screenings. Exhibit: TODAY I LOST MY BAGPUSS BRACELET (Aly Ogasian & Amy Uyeda)January 7th, 2008
Drawing both from observation and imagination, Aly Ogasian and Amy Uyeda simultaneously document and construct their lives in a collaborative visual diary. Each created a daily drawing based upon sentences alternately chosen by the artists. An endeavor taking place over the course of six months, the work stems from shared traveling experience and the long distance relationships that inevitably occurred as a result of their separation. Through their drawing installation, Uyeda and Ogasian explore the ways in which intimate relationships are maintained through electronic medium. The drawings speak to different perceptions of the same occurrence; the act of drawing is intuitive and immediate causing a shared sentence to yield different results. Meant to reference the creative calamity of the studio space, the installation is inspired by the work of Raymond Pettibon, Tomoko Takahashi and Team Macho. Aly Ogasian is a 4th year Fine Arts student at Queen’s University from Granby, Connecticut. Her studio practice involves installation, sculpture, and time-based media and deals with issues surrounding decay and preservation. She studied abroad at the Glasgow School of Art in 2007. Amy Uyeda is currently completing a BFAH at Queen’s University, majoring in printmaking. Valuing the artists’ hand, this show is reflective of her art practice in a larger sense, as drawing processes inspire her work in lithography. Travels to Glasgow and abroad inspire her current work about nature in urban spaces. Artel Concert Series #15, Katie Stelmanis, The LuyasNovember 25th, 2007
Skvortsova & Richka: SocialiteOctober 23rd, 2007
THE ARTEL is proud to present Socialite, an installation about the art of manners and appearances and the occasional or the not so occasional desire to get away from it all. Richka explores facets of one’s private life while coping within boundaries of isolation. Series of images provide a discrete peek into a space where the protagonist exists in a state of einzelhalf as a side effect of struggling with social and cultural mismatches. Combined with socially expectant objects and text, this installation sets a nostalgic tribute to the contrary enigmas of avid sociality. Skvortsova presents a parody of socialite etiquette. Focusing on the expressiveness of body language and facial expressions the artist invites the viewer to read these as a complex communicational interplay specific to characters from a particular social strata. Periodic appearances by a certain character set the tone of interpretation of this social mingling, and attempts to disrobe the socialites of their aura of mystery. |
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