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.

Mi Sur/My South

A Survey of Latina/o Artists Working in Memphis

Organized by Centro Cultural in collaboration with Crosstown Arts and Caritas Village

Made possible by the First Tennessee Foundation/ArtsFirst

Gallery Talks: Thursday, December 3, 5:30-7:30 & Saturday, December 5, 2-4 pm

Call to Artists: Spanish | English


“Mi Sur/My South: A Survey of Latina/o Artists Working in Memphis attempts to show a cross section of contemporary Latina/o artists creating artwork in the Memphis area. Mi Sur/My South is concerned with amplifying the artistic voices that have largely been ignored but are in fact and deed contributing to the changing demographic and cultural dynamic disrupting the once binary racial understanding of the South. This exhibition is part of the efforts of Centro Cultural (a Latina/o cultural center based at Caritas Village) to survey and document the artistic life and production of Latina/os in Shelby County. To this end, the Centro is additionally working to compile an Artist Registry that would include not only visual artists but all creative disciplines.

According to a 2012 paper,  A Profile of the Hispanic Population in the State of Tennessee, researched and compiled by the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Tennessee, “Latinos were the fastest growing racial or ethnic group in Tennessee during the last ten years.” In fact, the growth rate of the Hispanic population in Tennessee was the third-fastest in the nation. According to the 2010 Census, there were 290,059 Hispanic persons in Tennessee, representing 4.6 percent of the population. With Shelby County being home to a significant share of Tennessee’s Latina/o population it would be safe to assume that not only have Latina/os contributed to the economic growth of Memphis but to its cultural vitality as well.”
-Centro Cultural

Since the inception of the Centro in 2012 there have been annual exhibitions of Latina/o art in the Hope Gallery at Caritas Village, as well as a fruitful collaboration with the Dixon Gallery and Gardens in producing the highly attended exhibition of Latina/o artists titled Memphis Vive.

Centro Cultural is proud to participate in partnership with Crosstown Arts and Caritas Village, the Centro’s homebase, in organizing this exhibition.


 

“Mi Sur / Mi Sur – Una encuesta de Latinas / os artistas que trabajan en Memphis (Mi Sur) intenta mostrar una sección transversal de contemporánea Latina / o artista obra creando en el área de Memphis. Mi Sur / Mi Sur está preocupado con la amplificación de las voces artísticas que en gran parte han sido ignorados pero que son de hecho y de obra que contribuye a la cambiante dinámica demográfica y cultural interrumpir el entendimiento racial vez binaria del Sur. Esta exposición forma parte del Centro Cultural, una o centro de Latina / cultural basado en Caritas pueblo, los esfuerzos en la topografía y la documentación de la vida artística y la producción de Latina / o en el condado de Shelby. Para ello, el Centro está trabajando en un Registro artista que incluiría no sólo a artistas visuales, pero todas las disciplinas creativas.

De acuerdo con un documento de 2012 titulado “UN PERFIL DE LA POBLACIÓN HISPANA EN EL ESTADO DE TENNESSEE”, investigado y compilado por el Centro de Negocios e Investigación Económica de la Universidad de Tennessee: “Los latinos fueron el grupo racial o étnico de más rápido crecimiento en Tennessee durante los últimos diez años. De hecho, la tasa de crecimiento de la población hispana en Tennessee fue el tercero más rápido en la nación. Según el Censo de 2010, había 290,059 personas hispanas en Tennessee, lo que representa un 4,6 por ciento de la población. Con el condado de Shelby ser el hogar de una parte significativa de la población Latina / o de Tennessee sería seguro asumir que no sólo tiene Latina / os contribuyó al crecimiento económico de Memphis, pero a él es la vitalidad cultural.”
-Centro Cultural

Desde la creación del Centro en 2012 ha habido exposiciones anuales de Latina / o arte en la Galería de la Esperanza en Caritas Village. También hubo una muy fructífera colaboración con la Galería de Dixon y Jardines en la producción de la exposición altamente asistido de Latina / os artistas titulado, Memphis Vive.

El Centro se enorgullece de participar en sociedad con Crosstown Artes y Caritas Village, base de operaciones del Centro, en la organización de esta exposición.


 

Special thanks to the First Tennessee Foundation/ArtsFirst for their support of this exhibition and the partnership between Crosstown Arts and Centro Cultural.

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Lance Turner: Residency Open Studio

Lance Turner, the inaugural artist in the Studio Residency program, is opening his space to the public for an afternoon reception. Come meet Lance and hear more about his works in progress and creative process. At 3 pm, Lance will give an informal artist talk.

Joel Parsons: You Are the Hole, An Exhibition in Four Acts

Opening Reception: Friday, October 9, 6 – 9 pm
Performance: Sunday, October 25, 2 pm

You Are the Hole is the theatre of desire, abstracted. By presenting the self as something constructed and performed, Joel Parsons gently prods the human dichotomy of yearning to divulge and yearning to conceal.

Using the structural components of a theatre, he establishes an installation space that is simultaneously formal and intimate. Occupying the transformed stage are sculptures in voluptuous pinks and nudes, a flesh-like latex curtain and dozens of small drawings. Parsons has made a zine to accompany the exhibition, which will be available in the gallery.

The culmination is Parsons’ performance of his originally-choreographed piece, “Beholding and Being Held.”


Joel Parsons is an artist, writer, and curator based in Memphis, TN. He is an Assistant Professor of Art and Director of Clough-Hanson Gallery at Rhodes College, co-director of Beige, an otherwise space for art and performance, and a founding member of the ArtsMemphis Artist Advisory Council. A graduate of Rhodes College and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, he has exhibited his work in Memphis at the Powerhouse, Material, and Southfork Gallery, as well as at Western Exhibtions in Chicago, and venues in Peru, India, and South Africa.

 

Nick Canterucci: Lane Changer

One-night-only exhibition of Nick Canterucci’s new works.

 

Nick Canterucci (Landscape)

A MouseMeat Production thru Team Skeletor.

Daniel Harris Studios Presents: A Night of Art and Illustration

Join Fallen Walls founder, Daniel Harris, for an engaging evening of art and fellowship.