Andy Pepper Administrator
Hi my name is Cong Keenan and I have been the Creative Director on Medunten Technology. The languages only differ in their grammar, their pronunciation and their most common words
Website URL: http://themesoul.com
Title: Flat Projection
Date: 2015
Materials: Silk screen print onto cut cartridge paper.
Framed size: 25 x 25 x 4.5 cm
Production: Nottingham Trent University print studio, Nottingham.
Notes: The initial print was produced as part of Nottingham Trent University's Fine Art Summer Lodge research event 2014.
The original silkscreen prints were developmental works form an animated scanned laser projection.
This small shaped print was specially produced for a BA (Hons) 2015 third year art auction, to raise funds for the student degree show in May/June 2015.
Portfolio Workshop.
Thursday 26th February 2015
Promoting yourself and your work online - free of charge*.
Here are links to each of the examples discussed during our sessions.
This is not a diffinative lists but might act as a starting point for further research.
Andy Pepper
Portfolio Sites
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Single Pages
Content Hub
After graduation www.axisweb.org Charge- Curated www.re-title.com Charge- Curated |
The World of Holography
Sunday, 09 June 1996 Published in Group Exhibitions Be the first to comment!1996
Tempozan Contemporary Museum , Osaka, Japan.
Group exhibition curated by Patrick Boyd
Included work by:
Jon Mitton, David Pizzanelli, Andrew Pepper, Patrick Boyd, Dean Randazzo, Michael Teitel, Steve Weinstock, Jean Francois Moreau.
Exhibition dates 9th - 15th June 1996.
A new work is being shown for the first time in Drawology at the Lanchester Gallery, Coventry University, UK.
Developed within the Summer Lodge (a research and teaching initiative at Nottingham Trent University), this installation, is made up of a theatrical spotlight on a stand, directed towards a small, digitally produced, hologram which leans against the gallery wall.
More details about the exhibition here.
Drawology, originally seen at the Bonington Gallery, Nottingham Trent University, in Autumn 2013, explores how drawing has the ability to record both its own making and the movement of the thoughts and body of the drawer. Bringing together the work of several artists with differing practices, Drawology aims to consider whether this premise is applicable to a specific process or genre of drawing or whether it is applicable to drawing generally. In this respect the works in the exhibition represent an expanded field of contemporary drawing in a Fine Art context to include: works on paper, performance, moving image, installation, projections and three-dimensional drawings. The exhibition is part of a larger research project currently being undertaken by Deborah Harty entitled ‘Drawing is phenomenology'.
Supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England.
The exhibition is open 12noon-6pm Monday-Saturday.
A printed catalogue, including work from each of the included artists, is available from the Lanchester Gallery, Coventrey or Bonington Gallery, Nottingham. Online version available here.
T: 024 76887831
E: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
www.coventry.ac.uk/lanchestergallery
Coventry University, The Hub, Jordan Well, CV1 5FB
As part of the gallery space, movable wall panels have been located in front of the large gallery side windows to offer extra exhibition space. This 'artificial' wall (a transient upright) is beautifully reminiscent of theatrical 'flats' and connects conceptually, and practically, with the location, placement and illumination of the piece.
There is a natural synergy with Deborah Harty's large folded drawing - reminiscent of theatrical curtains - which stands close to the black tripod spotlight.
The massive luminous source - radiating heat from the large bulb inside - makes visible the tiny marks, hovering in space, released by the holographic surface. A sledge hammer to crack a nut.
An almost insignificant object not offered the 'credibility' of eye level display and invisible from most of the gallery.
Exhibition dates: 26th September - 26th October 2014