Anthology: Somewhere Not Here

OPENING FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 6-9 pm
ON VIEW THROUGH SEPTEMBER 17
Related event: A Real Imitation


CURATED BY TOMMY KHA

Pao Houa Her
Manal Abu-Shaheen
Johanna Case-Hofmeister
Jen Davis
Curran Hatleberg
Ka-Man Tse
Pixy Liao
Joel W. Fisher
Dru Donovan
Michael Marcelle
Farah Al Qasimi
Sara Maria Salamone
Justine Kurland
Ryan James MacFarland
Shane Lavalette
Rory Mulligan
Hannah Price
Nelson Chan
Lilly McElroy


Crosstown Arts is pleased to present Anthology: Somewhere Not Here, an exhibition of photography and video curated by New York/Memphis-based artist Tommy Kha.

Anthology collects images by an array of contemporary photographers sharing a common process instead of specific genre or subject. The works are informed by the acts of their journeys—seeking, feeling, and finding through passages of time and place.

Featured artists include Pao Houa Her, Manal Abu-Shaheen, Johanna Case-Hofmeister, Jen Davis, Curran Hatleberg, Ka-Man Tse, Pixy Liao, Joel W. Fisher, Dru Donovan, Michael Marcelle, Farah Al Qasimi, Sara Maria Salamone, Justine Kurland, Ryan James MacFarland, Shane Lavalette, Rory Mulligan, Hannah Price, Nelson Chan, and Lilly McElroy.

Learn more about the artists below.

From the curator

Life is not about significant details, illuminated a flash, fixed forever. Photographs are.

– Susan Sontag

Somewhere Not Here brings together a diverse group of contemporary photographers. Rather than relying on a particular theme, the selected artists and works are connected through a hunting and gathering gesture in picture making.

The pictures, intentionally printed in small format to reference drug store prints and postcards, vary in subject matter and genre. They share and borrow languages such as landscape, the open road, picture as document, and street photography.

The photographers are nomadic, always in search of images that are elusive and not always present, not easily hunted.

Curran Hatleberg and Justine Kurland actively travel the American Road, while Manal Abu-Shaheen seeks her subjects in further places, crossing vast oceans to photograph in her home country.

Often, the way home is the source of the artists’ images. Ka-man Tse presents a picture of the personal journey, of her wife and Tse’s parents sharing a meal together in the same frame. Lilly McElroy’s video, Hopeful Romantic, reflects another aspect of artist’s performative nature—a performed Lilly McElroy. The video is edited to Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark” as she drives from Maine to California.

Some respond on impulse, referencing modes of transport, manifested as a sort of muse—a sitter for the camera. At times, these modes become a temporary studio space for Pixy Liao, as she travels back to China with her boyfriend, Moro Magario.

Others respond to constraints. Hannah Price’s pictures may take cues from Oulipo, a French literary movement, where she actively makes photographs “during a time people consider to be the most menacing; during the dark nights and of those who blend in with it. At night, I roam the streets looking for subjects of this type.”

The rest could be seen as collections of the world seen in passing—the gathered.


About Tommy Kha

Tommy Kha (b. 1988, Memphis, Tennessee) received his BFA in Photography from Memphis College of Art and his MFA from Yale University School of Art. His work has been published in Modern Painters, Humble Arts, Slate, the Huffington Post, Blouin ArtInfo, BUTT Magazine, Buzzfeed, and Miranda July’s “We Think Alone” and exhibited at Deli Gallery, Ryerson Artspace, Georgia Scherman Projects, Aperture, Signal Gallery, ALLGOLD at MoMA PS1 Printshop, Johalla ProAjects, Yongkang Lu Art, and Kunstverein Wolfsburg. He was an artist-in-residence through the Center for Photography at Woodstock and Light Work. Recently, Kha published his first monograph, A Real Imitation, through Aint-Bad Magazine. He currently lives and works in New York City and Memphis.
Learn more


About the Artists

Pao Houa Her was born somewhere in the northern jungles of Laos. She fled Laos with her family when she was a baby, crossed the Mekong on her mother’s back, was fed opium to keep from crying, lived in the refugee camps in Thailand and landed in America on a silver metal bird in the mid 1980s. She is a visual artist who works within multiple genres of photography. She has exhibited in numerous shows both nationally and internationally including a solo show at the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University. Her received her BFA from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and her MFA from Yale University.

Manal Abu-Shaheen is a Lebanese-American photographer currently living and working in Long Island City, NY. She was born in Beirut in 1982 and moved from Lebanon to New York in 2000. Abu-Shaheen received a MFA in Photography from the Yale School of Art, New Haven, CT in 2011; a BA from Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY in 2003; and attended Lebanese American University, Byblos, Lebanon in 1999. Her work has been exhibited at the Queens Museum, Queens, NY (2016); The Center for Fine Art Photography, Fort Collins, CO (2016); The Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY (2015); The Print Shop at MoMA PS1, Queens, NY (2014); Camera Club of New York, NY (2013); and Welch School of Art and Design Galleries, Atlanta, GA (2012), among others. She is a recipient of the 2016/17 A.I.R Gallery Fellowship and the 2015 Artist in the Marketplace Residency program at the Bronx Museum of the Arts. She currently teaches at the City College of New York.

Johanna Case-Hofmeister received an MFA from Yale University in 2013. She went on to study projection design and technology at the Yale School of Drama. Her photography has been exhibited nationally and internationally. She is currently an Associate Professor in Photography at Long Island University.

Jen Davis is a New York based photographer. For the past fourteen years she has been working on a series of Self-Portrait’s dealing with issues regarding beauty, identity, and body image. She has also been exploring men as a subject, and is interested in investigating the idea of the relationship, both physical and psychological, with her camera. Her first monograph titled Eleven Years, published by Kehrer Verlag (Germany) was released in the Spring of 2014 accompanied by her first solo show in New York City at ClampArt. She received an MFA from Yale University in 2008, and BFA from Columbia College Chicago in 2002. Davis’ work has been exhibited both nationally and internationally. In the fall of 2016 Davis will have a solo exhibition in FotoFocus 2016 Biennial in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her photographs are in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, The Sir Elton John Photography Collection, and The Library of Congress, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Davis is represented by Lee Marks Fine Art and ClampArt, NY.

Curran Hatleberg (b. 1982, Washington, DC) received his MFA from Yale University in 2010. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including recent shows at Higher Pictures gallery and Fraenkel Gallery. He is the recipient of a 2015 Magnum Emergency Fund grant, a 2014 Aaron Siskind Foundation Individual Photographer’s Fellowship grant, and the 2010 Richard Benson Prize for excellence in photography. Hatleberg’s work is held in various museum collections, including the SF MoMA, the Center for Contemporary Photography, the Davison Art Center at Wesleyan University, the Williams College Museum of Art, and the Yale University Art Gallery. Lost Coast, his forthcoming monograph, will be released by TBW Books in fall 2016.

Ka-Man Tse is a photographer and video artist based in New York.  She received an MFA from Yale University in 2009, and a BA from Bard College in 2003.   Her images are informed by the points of intersection between the LGBTQ and the Asian Pacific Islander communities, and what is shared and negotiated between the two seemingly divergent worlds.  Her photography and video begin from small gestures and moments that then unfold in public and private spaces. She has exhibited internationally and nationally; including the Lianzhou Foto Festival in Guangdong, China, the Museum of Chinese in America in New York, NY, the Bronx Museum of the Arts in New York, NY; Cornell University, the Palm Springs Art Museum in California, Capricious Gallery in New York, NY, the Philadelphia Photo Arts Center, and Gallery 339 in Philadelphia, and the Eighth Veil in Los Angeles.  She was a SPARC Artist-in-Residence through the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and completed the Artist in the Marketplace Program through the Bronx Museum of Arts. She is the recipient of the 2014-2015 Robert Giard Fellowship.  She currently teaches at Yale University, where she was appointed lecturer in 2013, as well Parsons the New School of Design, since 2011. This spring, Tse mounted her first solo exhibition at the Silver Eye Center for Photography in Pittsburgh, PA. Her current project, Narrow Distances is currently on view in a solo exhibition at Lumenvisum in Hong Kong this summer (July 23 – August 21, 2016); her work is also currently on view at the New York Public Library, Mulberry Street Branch in Soho (June 1 – September 7, 2016).

Born and raised in Shanghai, China, Pixy Liao is an artist currently resides in Brooklyn.She is a recipient of NYFA Fellowship in photography, En Foco’s New Works Fellowship and LensCulture Exposure Awards, etc. She has done artist residencies at Pioneer Works, Light Work, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Center for Photography at Woodstock, and Camera Club of New York. Liao’s photographs have been exhibited internationally, including He Xiangning Art Museum (China), Asia Society (Houston), Flower Gallery (NY),  VT Artsalon (Taiwan), Kips Gallery (Korea), The Running Horse Contemporary Art Space (Lebanon),  Format (UK), Noorderlicht (Netherland), etc,.Liao holds a MFA in photography from University of Memphis.

Joel W. Fisher (b. Newport, VT) received a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of New Hampshire in 1997 and a Master in Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2006. From 2006-2007 he worked and studied at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig, Germany on a Fulbright Fellowship. His work has shown both nationally and internationally in both group and solo exhibitions. Work in collaboration with J.T. Leonard entitled Landmark was shown in group and two person exhibitions including Wassaic Projects’ Return to Rattlesnake Mountain, AD/HD at KNOWMOREGAMES and P-R-I-M-E-T-I-M-E Galleries in Brooklyn, and solo exhibitions in Kansas City and Indianapolis in 2013 and 2014. A monograph entitled Landmark was published by Daylight Books in the spring of 2015 and was short-listed for the Aperture Foundation First Book Prize. Work from an on-going solo project entitled Agapage appeared in exhibitions Shifting Practices: Allusions, Interventions, and Conventions in Contemporary Photography at The Art Gym at Marylhurst University and The Heart is a Lonely Hunter at the Fraenkel Gallery in 2015. Joel has received grants from the Oregon Arts Commission, Ford Family and Mellon Foundations and was a participant in the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Workspace Program (2015-2016). Joel also co-curated and wrote the introduction for the exhibition catalog Reinventing Documentary: The Art of Allan Sekula (2015). Joel was a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology, an area head of photography at the City College of New York (CUNY), and is currently an Assistant Professor of Art and Studio Head of Photography at Lewis and Clark College.

Dru Donovan received a BFA from California College of the Arts in 2004 and an MFA from Yale School of Art in 2009. Donovan’s work has shown nationally and internationally and was included in reGeneration2: Tomorrow’s Photographers Today at the Musée de l’Elysée in Lausanne, Switzerland, and in the 2010 California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, Fraenkel Gallery, Yancey Richardson Gallery, Hap Gallery and Philadelphia Photo Arts Center. Donovan’s photographs have been published in Aperture Magazine, Blind Spot, Picture Magazine, Matte Magazine, The New York Times Magazine and Vice. Her work is in the collections of Deutsche Bank and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. In 2011TBW Books published her first book, Lifting Water. In 2011-2012 she participated in the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Workspace studio residency. Awards Donovan has received are the John Gutmann Photography Fellowship in 2015 and is a 2016-2017 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellow. She has taught at many institutions including Parsons School for Design, Pratt Institute, Lewis & Clark College, University of Hartford and Yale University and will be a Visiting Lecturer at Harvard in the fall of 2016.

Michael Marcelle was born in New Jersey in 1983, received a BA from Bard College in 2005 and an MFA from Yale University in 2013. His work has been exhibited at Aperture Foundation, Interstate Projects, Pioneer Works, Austin Center for Photography, and has been featured in The New Yorker, Vice Magazine, Vogue, Paper Journal, and more.

Farah Al Qasimi, born 1991 in Abu Dhabi, is an artist and musician. Farah studied photography and music at Yale University (New Haven, Connecticut) and is currently an MFA candidate in the Photography program at the Yale School of Art. Farah has participated in residencies at the Burren College of Art in Ireland, at her studio in Dubai (with the support of the Abu Dhabi Music and Arts Foundation) and at the School of Visual Arts in New York. Recent shows include Coming Up Roses at The Third Line, Dubai; Biennial for Arab Photography at Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris; Emirati Expressions at Manarat al Saadiyat, Abu Dhabi; Walls and Margins at the Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah; and Black Mirror at the Aperture Foundation, New York.

Sara Maria Salamone is a photographer and independent curator who has earned her BA in Photography from Hampshire College and her MFA in Photography and Related Media from Parsons The New School for Design. Salamone has curated exhibitions at Albany Center Gallery in Albany, NY and LAUNCH F18, NYCAMs, and site95 in NYC. Salamone also comes from a diverse and experienced background, having worked at Casey Kaplan, site95, The Armory Show, Frieze New York among many others. Her most recent solo exhibition was held at GCA in Brooklyn, NY. Salamone lives and works in Brooklyn.

Justine Kurland is an artist who is lives in New York, and is represented by Mitchell-Innes & Nash.

Ryan James MacFarland, born Tallahassee, FL in 1985, is a multidisciplinary artist with a focus in analog photography. Working with both natural and found environments as his primary subject, MacFarland explores the relationship to his surroundings informed by concepts such as nonlinear science, cosmic intervention and conscious existence. His work has been exhibited in the US and abroad since 2004 and written about or published in Art F City, Artinfo, DuJour, Purple, OUT, The New York Times, Vogue, W and Whitewall. He lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Shane Lavalette, born 1987, in Burlington, VT, is an American photographer, the founding Publisher/Editor of Lavalette, and the Director of Light Work. He holds a BFA from Tufts University in partnership with The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Lavalette’s photographs have been shown widely, including exhibitions at the High Museum of Art, Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, Aperture Gallery, Montserrat College of Art, The Carpenter Center for Visual Arts at Harvard University, The Center for Photography at Woodstock, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and Musée de l’Elysée, in addition to being held in private and public collections. In 2016, a solo exhibition of One Sun, One Shadowwas presented at Robert Morat Galerie in Hamburg, Germany. His editorial work has been published in various magazines, including The New York Times Magazine, The New YorkerNewsweekEsquireBloomberg BusinessweekVice MagazineThe WireWallpaper*, among others. Lavalette is currently based in Upstate New York.

Rory Mulligan currently lives in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. He received a BA from Fordham University and a MFA from Yale University in 2010. His work has been exhibited both nationally and internationally and is included in the permanent collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Mulligan’s work has been published by J&L Books (Atlanta), Blind Spot Magazine (New York) and Art Licks (London) and his writing is featured in The Photographer’s Playbook published by Aperture. He was a 2014 Artist in Residence at Light Work in Syracuse, New York and is currently a Process Space Resident for the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.

Raised in Fort Collins, Colorado, Hannah Price, born in 1986, is a photographic artist and filmmaker primarily interested in documenting relationships, race politics, perception and misperception.  Price is internationally known for her project City of Brotherly Love (2009-2012), a series of photographs of the men who catcalled her on the streets of Philadelphia. In 2014, Price graduated from the Yale School of Art MFA Photography program, receiving the Richard Benson Prize for excellence in photography.  Over the past six years, Price’s photos have been displayed in several cities across the United States, with a few residing in the permanent collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Nelson Chan was born in New Jersey to immigrant parents from Hong Kong and Taiwan and has spent most of his life between the States and Hong Kong. Having grown up on two continents with unique cultures, this immigrant experience has influenced the majority of Nelson’s work. He continues to explore this duality of personal and cultural identity through the medium of photography. He is a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, where he received a BFA and a graduate of the University of Hartford, Hartford Art School, where is received his MFA. Nelson is based in New York City and is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York.

Lilly McElroy is an American photographer born in Wilcox, Arizona. The artistic projects she pursues are a reflection of her complex relationship with the American West and exploring what it means to be an American in a time of diminished expectations. She received her BFA in Photography in 2003 and BA in creative writing in 2004 from University of Arizona, and an MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 2006.

Film Workshop + Festival

this workshop gives participants the chance to script, shoot, edit, and screen their own independent, original films—all in one week. we’ll make use of Crosstown Arts’ brand-new digital lab to edit, and then we’ll premiere all films at a mini-film festival on the last Friday of the workshop. led by Crosstown Arts’ professional videographer, Justin Thompson, each participant will receive a DVD with all the participants’ films.

10 participants | for entering and current middle-school students

Contact Nat Akin at nat@crosstownarts.org to sign up!

Shoot & Splice: Video Journalism

VIDEO JOURNALISM: HOW DOCUMENTARIES RAISE AWARENESS AND CREATE CHANGE

For the first Shoot & Splice of 2016, join our panelists Noah Glenn, Mark Hackett and Andrea Morales to discuss, debate and analyze the use of documentary film to convey organizational messages, video journalism, the difference between the two and how to effectively and ethically craft both.  

Noah Glenn is the Creative Director and Video Artist for City Leadership.  In his role at City Leadership, Noah is responsible for producing, shooting & editing the very popular Choose901 videos.  The Choose901 documentaries highlight interesting people, organizations and events and are used to further City Leadership’s larger goal of attracting and retaining talent in Memphis. Mark Hackett is the Executive Director of Operation Broken Silence, a non-profit that focuses on the human rights catastrophe in Sudan.  As part of its mission, Operation Broken Silence uses short documentaries and videos to highlight the serious issues that people in Sudan are facing.  Andrea Morales is a Memphis based documentary and editorial photojournalist.  Andrea’s work has been seen in The New York Times, Time Magazine and The Guardian.

Shoot & Splice is a monthly filmmaking forum presented by Crosstown Arts & IndieMemphis

Another Life

OPENING RECEPTION: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 6-9 pm

Featuring work by Andrea Morales, Yasmine Omari, Louis “Ziggy” Tucker,  Stephanie Wexler, and a collaboration by Carla Worth & Andrew Gafford.

“Life and death are mirrors. To talk about one is to talk about the other, despite the distance in the language between them: life with its fragility, versus death and its finality.

We choose to remember because we want to feel who we loved that came and passed before us. It’s for our own benefit to do so. We keep the dead alive in our dreams and photographs. We see them where we used to live, we see them where they were last seen. We see them as we last saw them. Our circles grow closer, tighter and are sometimes preserved and strengthened by death.

Why we come to life, how we leave at death, how we are remembered: our questions shape the narrative of the ultimate. We turn the questions into rituals. Chief among them is our memory.

It’s a comfort that the world does not empty of people. We welcome the ghosts as evidence of life. This show collects works that examine that memory through photography, video and mixed media by a group of local artists.” – Andrea Morales

Co-curated by Andrea Morales in collaboration with Crosstown Arts

Image:
INDIANOLA, MS – May 29, 2015: at the public viewing for B.B. King at the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center on Friday morning.
Credit: Andrea Morales for The New York Times

Extra Celestial

Organized in partnership with Creative Growth Art Center (Oakland, CA)
Curated by Tom di Maria, Director of CGAC

Opening Reception: Friday, December 11, 6-9 pm
Curator Talk: Saturday, December 12, 2 pm

Crosstown Arts is pleased to partner with Creative Growth Art Center to present the upcoming exhibition Extra Celestial. Founded in Oakland, California in 1973, Creative Growth serves adult artists with developmental, mental, and physical disabilities, providing a professional studio environment for artistic development, gallery exhibition and representation, and more.

In Extra Celestial, Creative Growth artists Luis Aguilera, David Albertsen, Terri Bowden, Susan Janow, Allan Lofberg, Dan Miller, Donald Mitchell, William Scott, Ruth Stafford, William Tyler, Merritt Wallace and Ed Walter explore concepts of inner and outer space.

This ethereal grouping of works on paper presents an otherworldly and highly personal view of inner explorations and celestial journeys. Often abstract, always visionary, these colorful and dynamic paintings and drawings serve as maps to a galaxy of dreams and to compelling utopian realities.

An important component of Extra Celestial is the gallery premiere of Starquarius, the new space exploration video from the Creative Growth Video Production Workshop that reflects and re-considers the iconic sci-fi films of our lives.


Curator Talk: Saturday, December 12, 2 pm

In conjunction with the exhibition, please join Creative Growth Director Tom di Maria for his gallery talk, From the Margins to the Mainstream: Artists with Disabilities Today. The talk will review the history and leadership of Creative Growth Art Center’s work as the world’s oldest and largest art center for people with disabilities. He will review the Center’s studio art practice, the evolution of several key artists, and its relationship to so-called Outsider Art and to the contemporary art world.


About Creative Growth

Creative Growth Art Center is the nation’s oldest and largest artist-run space for artists with disabilities, offering a professional art studio, exhibition opportunities, and a supportive artistic community for 154 adult artists with developmental, physical, emotional, and mental disabilities. Founded in 1974 on the idea that all people can gain strength, enjoyment and fulfillment from experiences in the arts and are capable of producing works of high artistic merit, CGAC’s studio program offers, at no cost, 74 ongoing workshops led by artists in a range of media. Our year-round Saturday Youth Art program provides 16 young adults with access to our award-winning studio. As a role model organization, CGAC has fostered the development of over 20 similar centers worldwide.

Critical to CGAC’s success is its landmark/adjoining gallery. Started in 1978 with a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts as the world’s first gallery for artists with disabilities, this museum-quality space, with its six extraordinary annual exhibitions, serves as a portal to the larger community of viewers and collectors. Over 12,000 people visit our gallery each year.

CGAC’s artists are thriving in the mainstream art world, making significant contributions to the field of contemporary art, and becoming recognized among the outstanding contemporary artists of our era. Recent accomplishments include:

–       CGAC artist Judith Scott became our third artist (Dan Miller and William Scott are the others) to have work acquired by the Museum of Modern Art, New York. These are the only three artists with developmental disabilities with work in the Museum of Modern Art’s permanent collection.
–       Participation in over 20 outside exhibitions and art fairs, including our artists’ first presence at: Art Fair Tokyo, Japan; D’Dessin Paris Contemporary Drawing Fair, France; and the Codex Book Fair, Richmond, CA.
–       CGAC artists Kerry Damianakes and William Scott received 2015 Wynn Newhouse Awards, given to artists of excellence who also happen to have disabilities.
–       “Bound and Unbound,” a major 5-month retrospective exhibition of CGAC artist Judith Scott’s eighteen years of sculpture making, was presented at the Brooklyn Museum.

Derek Larson: Trance

Curated by Miranda Lash, Curator of Contemporary Art, Speed Art Museum

November 14-December 20, 2014
Crosstown Arts, 422 N. Cleveland, Memphis, TN 38104

Opening Night: Friday, November 14, 6-8 pm
Gallery talk with the artist and curator at 6:30 pm

Roundtable discussion: Saturday, November 15, 11:30 am

Crosstown Arts is pleased to announce Trance, an exhibition of digital media work by Georgia-based artist Derek Larson, opening Friday, November 14. The exhibition is curated by Miranda Lash, Curator of Contemporary Art at the Speed Art Museum in Louisville.

In his practice Larson combines digital media with painting, lights, motors, and projected animations on freestanding screens. For his first solo show in Memphis, Larson is presenting five video projections: three from his series entitled Tantric Wealth from 2012, and two artworks from his most recent body of paintings that include elements of video. Through this constellation of artworks Larson addresses how technology has changed our ways of seeing. Are our ever-present screens and videos luring us into an extended state of passive hypnosis, or perhaps more optimistically, do they allow a more expansive mode of learning, contemplation, and meditation?

The artist and curator will introduce the exhibition at 6:30 pm on Friday, November 14, at the opening reception. Crosstown Arts will host a roundtable discussion and lunch with the artist and curator on Saturday, November 15 at 11:30 am.

Download Curator’s Essay

About the Artist

Derek G. Larson has participated in a number of national and international exhibitions and residencies, with recent exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art (New York), Union South Gallery 1308 (Madison), May Gallery (New Orleans) and Vox Populi (Philadelphia). His work is featured in the upcoming issue of New American Painters.  Larson received a BFA from the Herron School of Art in Indianapolis, and an MFA from the Yale School of Art.  He currently lives and works in Statesboro, Georgia.

About the Curator

Miranda Lash is curator of contemporary art at the Speed Art Museum in Louisville, Kentucky, where she is overseeing new commissions for the upcoming Elizabeth P. and Frederick K. Cressman Art Park, and organizing the reinstallation of the permanent collection for the new building designed by wHY architecture, which will open in April 2016. Prior to the Speed, Lash was curator of modern and contemporary art the New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA). She joined NOMA in 2008 as the founder of the museum’s modern and contemporary art department. During her tenure at NOMA, Lash curated over twenty exhibitions, including the traveling retrospective exhibition Mel Chin: Rematch; Rashaad Newsome: King of Arms; Katie Holten: Drawn to the Edge;Swoon: Thalassa, and Camille Henrot: Cities of Ys.

About Crosstown Arts

Crosstown Arts is a contemporary arts organization dedicated to further cultivating the creative community in Memphis. Managing five types of spaces that integrate varying components of exhibition, performance, production, education and retail, Crosstown Arts supports multidisciplinary and collaborative projects that interconnect people and organizations. Crosstown Arts welcomes anyone in the community to join any of our events or projects, regardless of prior experience or expertise with creative interests.

Shop ‘Til You Droop, 2013
Digital video & animation (loop), projection, aluminum composite, wood, epoxy, paint, paper, fluorescent light, black light, electrical, hydrocal, 38 x 24in.
Courtesy of the artist

Media contact: Emily Halpern, emily@crosstownarts.org
Crosstown Arts’ Visiting Artist Series is sponsored by V02 Networx