Elly Reitman
energy
August 16 - September 20, 2024
Michelle Grabner, Kathleen Morris & Bronson Smillie
The Weather, or some other accident, curated by Danica Pinteric
Tiziana La Melia
Country Mouse City Mouse Hamster
June 7 - July 6, 2024
Jacob Jackmauh, Caitlin McCann & Benjamin Stallings
As for me, I’m just passing through this planet
March 8 - April 14, 2024
Irina Jasnowski Pascual
Wipers
September 15 - October 29, 2023
Coco Klockner
honesty
July 8 - August 6, 2023
Morgan Canavan, Ben Estes, Marisa Takal
More Coming Back & More Returning
May 5 - June 11, 2023
Sylvie Hayes-Wallace
Center of the Universe
August 5 - September 18, 2022
Amanda Horowitz
Bad Water, True West or Between Myself the Crickets and the Coyote
performed by Sophia Cleary and Ada Friedman
July 14 & July 15, 2022
Suzanna Zak
Coming Home to the Ice Age
opening May 13 - June 24, 2022
Strauss Bourque-LaFrance, Milano Chow, Jenni Crain,
Kristin Dickson- Okuda, Rubens Ghenov, Ann Gillen, KB Jones,
Michael Kennedy Costa, Sean Macalister, Sarah McMenimen,
J. Parker Valentine, Anna Rosen
XX Perfect Souls, curated by Natalie Smith
April 1 - May 6, 2022
Justin Chance, Cameron Cameron, Tristan Higginbotham
Serendipity Trail
February 12 - March 25, 2022
Noah Furman
Beginners
December 3, 2021 - January 25, 2022
Angélique Heidler
Piselli
October 8 - November 19, 2021
Natalie Smith
Nothing Within or Without
August 13 - September 14, 2021
Celia Lesh & Esther Sibiude
A Hole Filled With Noise, curated by Colleen Billing
July 2 - August 2, 2021
E. Saffronia Downing
Field Dug Over
May 21- June 27, 2021
Thew Smoak
Body Without Organs
April 2 - May 2, 2021
Eleanor Conover
Learning From the Steep Slope
March 5 - March 30, 2021
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About
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open by appointment
located beside
320 E. Churchwell Ave
Knoxville, Tennessee
paper guillotine, felt pads, buttons
Bronson Smillie, Paper Guillotine 1, 2024
paper guillotine, felt pads, buttons
Michelle Grabner, Untitled, 2024
acrylic and oil on burlap
The Weather, or some other accident, installation image
Michelle Grabner
Untitled, 2024
Untitled, 2024
acrylic and oil on burlap
The Weather, or some other accident, installation image
Kathleen Morris, Imbibe Like Roots: Linden, Euonymus, Eastern Redbud and Rhododendron , 2024
linden and euonymus leaves, eastern redbud pods, rhododendron leaves, chive blossoms, hemp & paper threads
Kathleen Morris, Imbibe Like Roots: Linden, Euonymus, Eastern Redbud and Rhododendron, detail
Michelle Grabner, Untitled, 2024
acrylic and oil on burlap
Bronson Smillie, Paper Guillotine 3, 2024
paper guillotine, felt pads, buttons
Bronson Smillie, Paper Guillotine 3, 2024
paper guillotine, felt pads, buttons
Kathleen Morris, Red Pine Study 1 & 2, 2024
red pine needles, hemp & paper thread and red pine needs & twine
Bronson Smillie
Stack I,O,D, 2024
Stack X,C,O, 2024
Stack U,D, 2024
wooden alphabet blocks
The Weather, or some other accident, installation image
The weather, or some other accident
Michelle Grabner, Kathleen Morris & Bronson Smillie
Curated by Danica Pinteric
July 12 - July 29, 2024
Unfurling from a rare formal impulse, I’ve been hesitant to trap the idea with the butterfly net of language. So I cut a hole in the mesh right before this. Michelle, Kathleen, and Bronson, three artists with distinct ways, materials, and individual paths to Bad Water. A throughline: an interest in, and perhaps a rebellion against, systems of measure and organization. An attunement to the quotidian, utilitarian, public and private ways grids and other geometric imperatives permeate our lives. A way of asking how we might complicate that truth. I’m interested in how these artists challenge the arbitrary nature and coldness of the grid as foundation by exploring how this pattern, and others like it, are subject to our mess. Noticing the organic, social, and worn-in geometries that coat our environments, we may start to understand how, over time, these templates become us.
Bronson’s new series adopts retired manual paper cutters. Responding to the weathering marks, scrapes, and slivers from their past lives as scores for collaboration, he introduces new forms composed of found objects. His abstract interventions perform a magnetic divination, conceiving new logic systems of color and form that ignite these objects from dormancy. Michelle’s Gingham paintings on burlap reflect her longstanding interest in common textile patterns that permeate visual culture. Their material matter-of-factness reminds me of the heroic linens and domestic textiles passed on through a family. Individuals with perfect patina and remarkable work ethic. Kathleen’s weaving practice incorporates the plants growing in her immediate surroundings. Introducing these unruly collaborators to the rigid structure of her loom, her hanging panels embrace their own compositional logic. A collaboration between technique and natural geometry. Between planting seeds, warping the loom, and air drying the ‘woven’ foliage, the process has multiple points of departure, working across their own temporality adorned with incremental change, craft, and pedagogy.
Our exhibition title comes from “Desire and the Diagrammatic,” by Margeret Iverson. Repurposing a second-hand anecdote, the author recounts the time Gabriel Orozco came across discarded prints of Josef Albers paintings that had been damaged. Crinkled water ringlets had formed on the paper, contravening his iconic square compositions. To Orozco, the exposure to the weather or some other accident made them all the more interesting.
★★★
Bronson Smillie (b.1992, Calgary, Alberta) holds a BFA in Painting and Drawing from Concordia University and currently lives in Tiohti:áke/Montréal. He is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice involves sourcing objects and creating works with materials that no longer fulfil their purpose within late-capitalist modes of consumption. Solo presentations include Almost Begin, Afternoon Projects, Vancouver (2023), A Place for Everything, april april, Brooklyn, NY (2023), Tempo 85, Espace Maurice, Montréal (2022), NADA New York, with april april (2022), and Forever is Closing in, MoMAPS311, Ottawa (2019). Group exhibitions include Depa Archive, Ghent, Belgium (2024); Zalucky Contemporary, Toronto, Canada (2024); Pictura Bienniale, Stewart Hall Gallery, Montreal, Canada (2023); Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, New York, NY (2023); AXENÉO7, Gatineau, Canada (2022); Petrohradská Kolektiv, Prague, Czechia (2021).
Kathleen Morris is a maker and educator working in the field of textiles. Her textiles practice centers on ideas of place-making and ecophenomenology, recognizing the human body as a primary site for experiencing the world, and its fundamental interdependence with innumerable species and organisms. Through her work, Morris explores notions of inhabiting a place, and plumbing the imperceptible web that connects humans to the more than human. The slow pace with which her work unfolds strengthens this sense of reciprocity, and infuses the work with time, depth, and lived understanding.
Morris holds a Bachelor of Design from OCAD University, and a Master’s degree from the University of Toronto. Morris was a faculty member in the Material Art and Design program at OCAD University from 2005-2022. Currently, she is a collaborator on a SSHRC international research project entitled Craft and the Digital Turn, as well as a past and present Board member of the Canadian Craft Federation and Craft Ontario.
Michelle Grabner (b. 1962, Oshkosh, WI; lives and works in Chicago and Milwaukee) is an artist, curator, teacher and writer. Her work in painting and sculpture draws equally from a rigorous formal investigation of patterns and domestic life, and a sometimes cheeky flirtation with high modernism's affection for seriality, grids and geometries. Grabner has exhibited extensively over the past three decades, spanning solo exhibitions at galleries including James Cohan, New York; Galerie Gisela Clement, Lotharstraße; Gallery16, San Francisco; Hedreen Gallery at Seattle University, Seattle; Green Gallery, Milwaukee; Rocket Gallery, London; Autumn Space and Shane Campbell Gallery, Chicago. Solo museum exhibitions include Museum of Contemporary Art, Cleveland; Indianapolis Museum of Art; Ulrich Museum, Wichita. She has been included in group exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Akron Art Museum; Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Tate St. Ives, UK; and Kunsthalle Bern, Switzerland. She is a Professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.