Rebecca Ustrell: Permanence Opening Reception

Permanence presents the work of 2023-24 Pitzer College Activist/Artist-in-Residence Rebecca Ustrell. Ustrell’s video work and photography series of cyanotypes printed on paper and ceramic tiles document her collaborations with faculty and students across several Pitzer College SRX Courses. These photographs celebrate community collaboration, explore the embodiment of student and teacher, and reinforce the impact of access to experiential learning and cultural exchange. The exhibition explores how stories are passed down, fade over time, and reemerge as told from a different perspective.

 

Rebecca Ustrell is an artist, educator, and documentarian in the Inland Empire region of Southern California. Ustrell founded Curious Publishing, a non-profit artbook publishing company that supports queer, BIPOC, and femme creatives through the publication of limited edition art books, zines, and print collections. She is the 2023-24 Activist/Artist-in-Residence, a collaborative initiative of the Community Engagement Center and Pitzer College Art Galleries, and the Event Coordinator for Museum Arts & Culture at the City of Ontario.

This exhibition is organized by the CEC and Pitzer College Art Galleries.

Exhibition
Feb. 29 – Mar. 28, 2024
Hinshaw Gallery, 
Grove House
Pitzer College 

Pitzer Campus Community Reception
Thursday, Feb. 29, 4:15 – 6:30 p.m.

Visit: Tues. – Sat., 12 – 5 p.m.

Night at the Gallery

A night filled with lively jazz music, good wine, snacks, cheeses, still life drawing and gallery tours of the current Gala Porras-Kim exhibition in the Broad Center Nichols Gallery. Come drink, eat, draw, and dance! This is an event put on by the Pitzer College Art Galleries Fellows.

Gala Porras-Kim: Between Lapses of Histories

Gala Porras-Kim: Between Lapses of Histories

Gala Porras-Kim’s work is based on research into archaeological objects, institutional histories, museum ethics, and collecting practices. Her work often takes the form of meticulous drawings of ancient objects in various states of disrepair, relocated from the site of excavation to museum exhibition halls and storage facilities. The exhibition will focus on an evolving body of work based on artifacts extracted from Chichén Itzá, an important archeological site of the Classic and Postclassic Maya in the Mexican state of Yucatán.

Since the twentieth century, archeologists have removed, often by dubious means, thousands of objects from this site, objects which have then found their way into museum collections across the world. The series of works by Porras-Kim featured in this exhibition references the work of antiquarian Edward Herbert Thompson, who extracted objects from the “Sacred Cenote” at Chichén in the first decade of the twentieth century using a dredge and divers. Site of ritual offerings, the well contained many ceremonial objects sent there as tribute to the Rain God. Many of the objects represented in her drawings were recovered through techniques that irreparably damaged the artifacts and obliterated contextual information. While Porras-Kim’s work exposes this complicated history, her primary focus is on the relationships between objects and artifacts and the institutions that care for, collect, and display them.
Gala Porras-Kim: Between Lapses of Histories is curated by Jesse Lerner, Professor of Media Studies and Director of the Munroe Center for Social Inquiry, and Ciara Ennis, Director of the de Saisset Museum, Santa Clara University.

This exhibition is generously supported by the Munroe Center for Social Inquiry.

Exhibition
Jan. 27 – Mar. 22, 2024
Pitzer College Art Galleries

 

Artist Lecture: Julia Haft-Candell, The Yet To Be

The interdisciplinary work of artist Julia Haft-Candell comprises ceramic and bronze sculptures, drawings and paintings, and installation. Her evolving entity known as The Infinite is an alternative world with its own, values, ethics, and visual language; all documented in The Infinite: Glossary of Terms and Symbols. The Infinite seeks to produce forms of knowledge unconstrained by conventional systems or classifications, while referencing ancient structures of communication. This ethos is reflected in The Infinite School, the experimental art school that she runs from her studio, which seeks to produce alternative forms of knowledge that challenge conventional institutional practices and
pedagogies.

 

RECEPTION
Coffee, tea, and pastries will be provided from 11am in the lobby of the Broad Center at Pitzer College
(intersection of Platt Boulevard and Mills Avenue).