BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//COLLEGE OF ART & DESIGN - ECPv5.16.4//NONSGML v1.0//EN CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH X-WR-CALNAME:COLLEGE OF ART & DESIGN X-ORIGINAL-URL://www.ellaruby.net X-WR-CALDESC:Events for COLLEGE OF ART & DESIGN BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Chicago BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:-0600 TZOFFSETTO:-0500 TZNAME:CDT DTSTART:20240310T080000 END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 TZOFFSETTO:-0600 TZNAME:CST DTSTART:20241103T070000 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241009T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241009T180000 DTSTAMP:20241120T151443 CREATED:20240826T181854Z LAST-MODIFIED:20240910T180001Z UID:29103-1728493200-1728496800@www.ellaruby.net SUMMARY:Gina Osterloh Artist Lecture DESCRIPTION:Artist Gina Osterloh will give a LSU School of Art lecture on Wednesday\, October 9 at 5 p.m.in 130 Nicholson Hall.\nAbout Osterloh\n\nPhotography is the foundation of Gina Osterloh's oeuvre.Osterloh's photography\, video\, performance art\, and steel sculptures with text activate photographic conditions including replica\, representation\, flatness and volume\, presence and absence\, illusion and the Real\, desire and repulsion.\n\nOsterloh's photography and live performances present strategies of abstraction\, mark-making\, the tracing of her own silhouette\, and her body bound in reflective tape– to interrogate the boundaries of a body and preconceived notions of identity. Osterloh's meticulously constructed photo tableaux and drawings for the camera expand our understanding of portraiture and what photography can be.Symbolic themes and formal elements such as the void\, orifice\, camouflage\, and the grid\, in addition to a heightened awareness of color and repetitive pattern appear throughout Osterloh's work. Osterloh cites her experiences as a multiracial Filipino American woman in Ohio as a set of formative experiences that led her to photography\, larger questions of perception\, and how a viewer perceives difference in tandem with sameness– who belongs and who is considered alien.\nSolo exhibitions and performances include Osterloh's first museum survey Gina Osterloh: Mirror Shadow Shape at the Columbus Museum of Art curated by Anna Lee!Her Demilitarized Zone / Image Without Weapon at MOCA Detroit curated by Jova Lynne and M.Pophal!her demilitarized zone at Silverlens Galleries (Manila\, Philippines)!Gina Osterloh at Higher Pictures Generation (NY)!Shadow Woman as part of En Cuatro Patas at The Broad Museum (Los Angeles)!ZONES at Silverlens Galleries!Slice\, Strike\, Make an X\, Prick!at Ghebaly Gallery (Los Angeles)!Nothing to See Here There Never Was at Silverlens Galleries!Group Dynamic at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE)\, and Anonymous Front at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.Group exhibitions include Multiply\, Identify\, Her at the International Center of Photography in New York City!Not Visual Noise at Ateneo Art Gallery!Ateneo University in Quezon City\, Philippines!an idea of a boundary at the San Francisco Art Commission Gallery!Ours is a City of Writers at the Barnsdall Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in collaboration with Sharon Mizota!Energy Charge: Connecting to Ana Mendieta at ASU Museum\, Demolition Women curated by Commonwealth & Council at Chapman University and Fragments of the Unknowable Whole Urban Arts Space OSU. Reviews of her work have been featured in The New Yorker Magazine\, Aperture Magazine\, Art in America\, The Brooklyn Rail\, Lens/cratch\, Contemporary Art Daily\, Hyphen Magazine\, Art Asia Pacific\, Asian Art News\, Art Papers\, Artforum Critics Pick\, Art Practical\, ABS/CBN Philippines\, and KCET Artbound Los Angeles.\n\nEssays about Osterloh's work are featured in books and anthologies such as Energy Charge / Connecting with Ana Mendieta: Simone Leigh\, Gina Osterloh\, Antonia Wright\, Ana Teresa Fernandez\, and Kate Gilmore published by the Arizona State University Museum!Multiply\, Identify\, Her published by the International Center of Photography!and An Anthology of Art and Literature by Southeast Asian Women in the Diaspora: Troubling Borders.\nIn 2024\, Gina Osterloh was named a Guggenheim Fellow by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.Additional awards include the Nancy Graves Foundation Grant for Visual Artists\, an Ohio Arts Council Grant for Individual Excellence\, The Wayne P.Lawson Columbus Museum of Art Acquisitions Award\, a Fulbright in the Philippines\, a Woodstock Center of Photography residency\, a Create Cultivate Grant with the LA County Arts Commission and LACE\, a Greater Columbus Art Council Grant\, and multiple Arts & Humanities Grants from The Ohio State University. Osterloh has also contributed writing\, including "The Shadow and The Gap: a Rare Look at Charles Gaines' Shadow Series\," published by Ursula Magazine\, Hauser & Wirth and the essay "Somewhere Tropical" for the anthology California Dreaming edited by Lucy San Pablo Burns and Christine Balance\, published by University of Hawaii Press.She has been a visiting critic and guest lecturer at Yale University\, Rochester Institute of Technology\, Scripps College\, Point Park University\, Kenyon College\, Denison University\, University of Cincinnati\, Ohio University\, Ateneo de Manila University\, University of the Philippines\, the Arizona State University Museum\, Hamiltonian Artists Washington D.C.\, Carnegie Mellon University\, Cranbrook Academy of Art\, and University of South Florida to name a few.Gina Osterloh is an Associate Professor of Art at The Ohio State University.URL://www.ellaruby.net/calendar/gina-osterloh-artist-lecture/ CATEGORIES:Art & Design,Art,Lectures,Doctor of Design ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg://www.ellaruby.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/GinaOsterloh-headshot-byAnneliseDuque-e1725914477294.jpg END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR