709B by TangenT is on exhibition from March 12 - June 4 at the International House at Univ of Penn.
TangenT
 is a collaborative dedicated to mixed-media, project-based, immersive 
art environments exploring socially relevant and politically current 
themes.  TangenT is comprised of artists William Cromar, Yvonne Love, and Gabrielle Russomagno.
709b is a diptych video that takes the 
viewer on a virtual video voyeur voyage. Originally presented as two 
simultaneous projections for a DesignPhiladelphia event in Rittenhouse 
Square during October 2009, the footage has been expanded and sound has 
been added. It is an  artwork that explores identity and place as well 
as the private and public expressions of daily life. The mask we wear 
and the identities we project to others are not the ones we use when we 
think we’re not being seen… an idealization of a more messy reality, not
 unlike map-making generally. Map-making’s most modern iterations, 
Google Maps and Google Earth, become for us a metaphor for this human 
proclivity.
The soundtrack features guitar work by Mike Brenner and public domain found sound, including human body sounds from FindSounds,
 as well as recordings of so-called “number stations” purportedly used 
by spy organizations for one-way, coded communication. Tracks of the 
numbers stations have been compiled at The Conet Project. 709b
 also stars performance artists Joel Richard Gori (Google Man) and Sasha
 Tomato (Fire Juggler).  Students at Penn State Abington Art Program are
 assisting with the creation of the Rittenhouse Carpet.
Gabrielle Russomagno received her MFA in photography from Yale 
University in 1989. She has exhibited nationally and internationally 
since 1985. Her work is included in many permanent collections including
 The Museum of Modern Art in New York. She chairs the Visual Arts 
Department at Germantown Academy in Fort Washington and is a visiting 
artist at Lafayette College in Easton, PA.
Yvonne Love received her MFA in sculpture from the University of 
Pennsylvania in 1994. A sculptor and installation artist, she exhibits 
her work nationally and is represented by Sidetracks Gallery in New 
Hope, PA. Dedicated to arts and arts education, Love founded an art 
school for visual and performing arts in New Hope, PA and a non- profit 
regional artist in residence program. She is a senior lecturer at Penn 
State Abington College.
William Cromar
 received his MFA from the University of Pennsylvania in 1994. He is an 
architect, animator and musician who has exhibited his work nationwide 
since 1983. The recipient of a Silver Medal at the 1983 International 
Biennial of Architecture in Sofia, Bulgaria, he was awarded a National 
Endowment for the Arts Grant, a Samuel Fleisher Art Memorial Challenge 
Exhibition and was a finalist for the Pew Fellowships in the Arts. He 
currently teaches at Penn State Abington College.
Gallery Hours at the International House are Monday through Friday, 10am to 6pm. Admission is
FREE to International House art exhibitions.
 

No comments:
Post a Comment