K-Town Studios in Baltimore, Maryland at The Cheon Kroiz Building

At the heart of Korea Town in Baltimore, Maryland, a three-stories commercial building rents out artist studios in varying sizes. The goal of the building is to provide a healthy and productive studio culture for young and professional artists in the area with affordable rent. The owners are artist Mina Cheon (professor of Maryland Institute College of Art, MICA) and architect Gabriel Kroiz (professor of Morgan State University) who both have studio and office in the building.

Address: 100 W. 22nd Street, 21218, Baltimore, MD, between Howard and Maryland, directly across from Nakwon Restaurant, walking distance from MICA Graduate Studio Center, and between Station North Arts District and Remington.

Currently available studio spaces: 

1.  250-300 square feet that is 300 dollars plus 50 utilities (second floor)
2.  900 + square feet that is 1200 dollars and separate utilities (ground floor) the ground floor can open up to a larger usable space with construction and based on need, may be divided into smaller studio spaces. This ground floor is also a promising rental for several artists, collective studio use, larger office space, or made into a gallery.

Studios currently leased on second floor but may open up in the future: Varying sizes: 125, 150, 175 square feet with cost that matches size from 125, 150, 175 dollars + 25 utilities. All studios have windows and shared bathrooms outside its space, on each floor.

Contact: Mina Cheon at minacheon@gmail.com, 410 522 6669

This is the fourth in a series of interviews with each of the Sondheim Award Semifinalists. Finalists will be announced in mid-April, and will be on exhibit at the Walters Art Museum June 21 to August 17; those not selected as finalists with be exhibited at the Decker, Meyerhoff and Pinkard Galleries at MICA  July 17 to August 3, 2014.

Name: Diane Szczepaniak
Age: 57
Website: www.dianeszczepaniak.com
Current Location: Potomac, Maryland
Hometown: Detroit, Michigan
School: BA, Economics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Studio 70, Sculpture Studio of Michael Skop, (assistant to Ivan Mestrovic)
BFA, Sculpture & Drawing, Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY
Welding Certification, Northern Kentucky Vocational-Technical School, Covington, KY
MA, Art Education, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio

From Behind the Stars, 2013, watercolor on paper, 42”W X 45”H

From Behind the Stars, 2013, watercolor on paper, 42”W X 45”H

Current favorite artists or artwork: Aristide Maillol, Paul Klee, Isamu Noguchi, Martin Puryear, Deborah Ehrlich, Julie Hedrick, Martin Creed

What is your day job? How do you manage balancing work with studio time with your life? I am a substitute teacher for MCPS. I can easily work five days a week, but also have flexibility to arrange my schedule to fit my financial needs and art-related commitments and endeavors. I often substitute for art classes. In addition to the fresh ideas my daily interactions with young people inspire, I’m finding the challenge of communicating quickly and effectively the goals and processes of artists to be helpful in approaching my own new projects.

For example, recently I talked to very receptive elementary school students about space and its usefulness for movement, breathing and holding light and also when designing patterns. I so appreciated their attentiveness, but more important was that the artwork they did next was to my eye both spatial and bold. It appeared to me that space became meaningful to them and the meaning translated into drawings with a lot of dimension. Observing young minds at work adds to my understanding of how we learn and see. I also teach drawing and color workshops about space and the senses. These workshops have attracted a wide range of adults involved in a variety of disciplines, including a fair number of neuroscientists.

How would you describe your work, and your studio practice? I am an abstract painter whose training in drawing and sculpting the figure has led me to create work driven by the dynamics of form. One could almost say that the subject matter of my artwork is form itself, an attempt to capture the essence of an object as I see it in space. I play with light, contrast, scale and how movement and color fill space. Rather than try to reproduce a thing, I work to make visible that which the thing expresses, the natural energy within it that manifests itself in space.

The paintings being shown to the Sondheim Prize committee for this year are watercolors. The paintings are compositions where form emerges from layers of color. I paint with a wide brush and a lot of water. The colors of paint are mixed and then applied one on top of another, red on top of blue, blue on top of red, sometimes yellow over everything. I turn the painting to allow the colors to run and to work from all vantage points. I see relationships among elements of color, space and objects that surround me and fill my thoughts. I translate my sensory experiences into color and space. I use my senses to look through color to content and find links between idea and form.

I work on multiple paintings at once. I paint with watercolor paint on paper and on absorbent ground canvas and also with oil paint and oil/wax sticks on canvas and board. My sculptures range from cast figures to constructed boxes with metal to presently playing with layering colored sheets of glass.

The studio I paint in is a room in my house. I also use the basement, garage, and sometimes the living and dining room to work on sculpture projects or to frame. I like having my studio in my home because I work all odd hours. I work most days or nights of the week. I try to think about my art all the time. I also design frames out of steel and aluminum for my paintings. Formerly I welded them myself, but now I hire someone to weld for me.

Pillow of Winds, 2013, watercolor on paper, 42”W X 50”H

Pillow of Winds, 2013, watercolor on paper, 42”W X 50”H

What part of art making do you like or enjoy the most? The least? I enjoy working toward ideas that have to do with creating space, and/or changing the feeling of a space. I like doing things with my hands, this includes painting, sculpture, welding and sewing my own clothes.

I like walking through open doors so probably the thing I like the least is approaching galleries. I have not had good luck with cold calls. All the galleries that sell my work approached me first.

What research do you do for your art practice? I began my art career in the late 1970s with sculpture, and how objects fill space and be space continues as a predominant theme in my work. Early on, I noticed changes in the way my mind and body feels after spending time looking at space. To heighten this sense experience, I felt I needed to achieve a level of focus that was new to me. My goal became to eliminate the clutter, what people often refer to as “noise,” in my consciousness. To explore my theme, I try to let go of all preconceived ideas and socialization when having a new sense experience. I practice witnessing my thoughts when I see, taste, smell, hear, or feel something for the first time and then work to recreate this first-time sense experience in the studio. It is a practice akin to meditation. I find it is a nice place to be. It is freeing. So I enjoy the work it takes to get there.

Incorporating mindfulness into the creative process is a goal shared by many. Part of my research is to discover and study the writers, musicians, and artists that succeed in inspiring the kind of sense experience I’ve described. Another source of this experience is the natural world. So I garden–an activity that parallels sculpture–and observe how trees grow and flowers bloom. Walking in forests and observing insects and wildlife always feels like time well spent to awaken the senses and clear any mental debris. As I read, listen, and watch, I try to put myself in the writer’s, musician’s or flower’s space to experience their way of being.

For ten years, 14 years ago, I sold my paintings at street art fairs in the Midwest and on the East coast. I was often able to anonymously watch and see how folks reacted to my work. I could see the amount of time they spent looking and hear comments they made to their friends and I noticed that many had a physical reaction to the work. It was then that I realized that the feeling I had while making the art could be transferred to the viewer.

What books have you read lately you would recommend? Movies? Television? Music? Most recently, I have been listening to music by Pink Floyd, Chopin’s Nocturnes and Chick Corea, the words, rhythm, drums chords and the tempo have a way that lulls me into a wonderful state of contentment. I listen to music to preoccupy me enough to drive out conscious thought.

Books that have helped me reach my goal are…

  • Open Focus Brain, by Les Fehmi, PhD, and Jim Robbins
  • The Poetics of Space Gaston Bachelard
  • Hidden Dimension by Edward T. Hall
  • The Seven Taoist Masters, A folktale of China translated by Eva Wong
  • Color, A Natural History of the Palette by Victoria Findlay
  • Poetry written by Wallace Stevens, George Trakl, Freidrich Holderlin, Basho, Wislawa
  • Szymborska
Behind the Night, 2013, watercolor on paper, 24.25”W X 38”H

Behind the Night, 2013, watercolor on paper, 24.25”W X 38”H

Do you ever get in creative dry spells, and if so, how do you get out of them? I think of any state of mind as part of the process; dry spells force me to try something new. Of course, my productivity varies and if I find that I just can’t work or the work I am doing is empty, I put it aside. Sometimes, I just need to go for a walk in the woods. Of course, there are “non-creative” art related things to do. At my worst, I throw the I Ching and I usually get something positive to think about.

How do you challenge yourself in your work? When I was starting out, the challenge was to not give up entirely on art as a professional pursuit. Now I know I will work at it as long as I am able. Watercolor painting can challenge me because it has a memory of the water and paint that came before, and the paper is not forgiving. And as the paper gets larger the problems get more challenging too. I try to use problems to my advantage. I never, or almost never give up. I have done paintings that have more layers than is rational but I work until each sheet of paper holds a painting that passes my test. A few paintings happen quickly, most take a while. Years back, I had one series I called Struggle I, II and III. I knew I had to get through them, that I would learn something from them, though I couldn’t tell you in words what that was and after I finally finished them, something changed in me. I answered some questions for myself but those answers lie in something difficult to define or explain.

Another challenge has been working to change my medium to canvas so as to eliminate expensive framing. It has not been easy for me. I have finished a few small canvases that I think are successful. I know that if I had more space to have different workstations I would switch between different media more often.

What is your dream project? To create a room where the paintings, each one setting off the next one, hung 360 degrees around the room. I would also like to experience other cultures and make rooms based on my experience of each culture, land, and people.

Deadline: April 15, 2014 

Open Call––Exhibition opportunity at Montgomery College, Silver Spring, MD

Mark, Trace, Impact: Themed Exhibition Series The mark is at the heart of what it means to be human. It led to the development of writing by attaching meaning to lines and scribbles. The mark fulfills a fundamental need to leave a physical trace. It creates impact, a message, or a memory in addition to its material presence.

The Department of Visual Arts and Design is calling for exhibition proposals for the Open Gallery in The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation Arts Center that address the theme, “Mark, Trace, Impact.” Four exhibitions will be scheduled for the 2014–2015 academic year.

Proposals must be received by April 15, 2014. Applicants will be notified by June 1.

For detailed information about the exhibition space and the application process visithttp://cms.montgomerycollege.edu/arts-tpss/exhibitions/opportunities.html

2014 Annual Juried Exhibit: Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center

Deadline: 04/04/14

Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center located in historic downtown Frederick, Maryland announces the 2014 Annual Juried Exhibit. Dates: May 3 – June 22. Open to any artist living or working in the United States, all media is eligible. $1150 in prize money awarded, $500 first prize. Juror: Margaret Winslow, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art at the Delaware Art Museum.

For details on how to enter: http://www.delaplaine.org/site/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/AJE-2014.pdf

or contact dsibbison@delaplaine.org

This is the third in a series of interviews with each of the Sondheim Award Semifinalists. Finalists will be announced in mid-April, and will be on exhibit at the Walters Art Museum June 21 to August 17; those not selcected as finalists with be exhibited at the Decker, Meyerhoff and Pinkard Galleries at MICA  July 17 to August 3, 2014.

Name:  Ding Ren
Age:  30
Website:  www.dingren.net
Current Location: Amsterdam, NL and Columbia, MD
Hometown: Columbia, MD
School: George Washington University, MFA (2009)

DingRenBopa1

studies on becoming a closet formalist: smoke
Hand-Printed Analogue Chromogenic Print on Expired Kodak Endura Paper
11″ x 8.5″
2013
Trying to capture the essence of Duchamp’s definition of Infrathn: “When the tobacco smoke smells also of the mouth which exhales it.” Painterly gestures, romanticism and a turn towards the sublime are channeled through analogue photographic processes in this ongoing series.

Current favorite artists or artwork :  Joachim Koester (Danish Conceptual Artist), Ciarán Murphy (Irish Painter), Robert Kinmont (American Conceptual Artist), Daido Moriyama (Japanese Photographer)

How would you describe your work, and your studio practice? My work is field-driven, as in I gather my inspiration from direct experiences and observations from my day to day life.  Currently, I have returned to analogue photographic practices.  I allow external factors attributed to the geography and environment to directly influence how and what I photograph.

What part of art making to you like or enjoy the most? The least? I enjoy the unknown of wandering and photographing both foreign and familiar places.  I also enjoy planning and producing, especially if it is specifically for an exhibition, project, or residency.  I am fortunate to be part of a “doka collectif” in Amsterdam where we maintain the last remaining independent analogue color darkroom in Holland.  I can spend endless hours printing and enjoy the slow, hands-on quality of analogue photography.

DingRenBopa2

Shifting Between (Portal Studies)
Hand-printed Analogue Chromogenic Print on Expired Kodak Endura
11” x 14”
Photo: 2012, Printing: 2013
For the past year I have been moving around, never staying in one place for more than 2 months. The experience has been exciting and fulfilling, but has taken a toll on my health. I started this series as a means of therapy and it is helping me get through the discomforts. I am trying to capture the very essence of transience and what it might look like through the use of analogue photography. This is a portal opening, it is a means of transport from a foreign place to a familiar place. I have begun to search for these familiar places within the foreign, so that I am able to find stability and balance once again, to find lightness to take me out of the darkness.

What research do you do for your art practice? I usually come across small fragments for ideas through taking walks, reading books (especially classics), and seeing exhibits.  I find looking at early landscape paintings from the 1600s to be quite poignant, especially the way in which light is captured and in the way the skies are painted.  I like to go to the Rijksmuseum and look at the Dutch Master paintings.

What books have you read lately you would recommend? Movies? Television? Music?  After spending 2 months in Cork, Ireland at a residency, I have been in the mood to read Irish writers like Samuel Beckett.  I especially like his writing style for his “Texts on Nothing.”  I also enjoy reading poetry, recently I discovered Cuban poet, Heberto Padilla, who often writes about the ever-changing qualities of water and the sea.  The band I can’t stop listening to these days is Woods and singer, Ashley Eriksson.

DingRenBopa3

the waves would welcome it beneath the sea (rock frottage studies)
C-prints: unique, Rock frottage drawings: graph paper, crayon
8.5” x 11”
2014
Created while in residence at The Guesthouse in Cork, Ireland. I traveled to Ireland to search for the sublime feeling of both beauty and fear that comes with standing on the edge of a cliff, overlooking something. I wanted to investigate geo-cultural patterns and phenomena within the landscape. To prove that these coincidental patterns exist, I made rubbings of the rocks along the coast of Nohoval Cove while also photographing the cliffs and rocks. By chance, the rock rubbings echoed the photographs I took and vise versa.

Do you ever get in creative dry spells, and if so, how do you get out of them? Yes of course, but I try to think of it all as nature’s way of balancing itself out and make the most out of all phases and stages.  There can be months where I am only doing administrative things like editing and organizing and applying to opportunities while other times I take a break from any art-related things and other times I am out photographing everyday.

How do you challenge yourself in your work? It is all about comfort zones and pushing beyond them.  This is the way in which I approach my work and all facets of life.

What is your dream project? I would love to shoot several 16mm films in various locations around the world with dramatic landscapes: think cliffs, lush green mountains, waves crashing, swaying trees, flickering light.  It would be an extended visual poem and I would project the films layered over one another.

This is the second in a series of interviews with each of the Sondheim Award Semifinalists. Finalists will be announced in mid-April, and will be on exhibit at the Walters Art Museum June 21 to August 17; those not selected as finalists with be exhibited at the Decker, Meyerhoff and Pinkard Galleries at MICA  July 17 to August 3, 2014. (UPDATE: Finalists have been announced, congrats Kyle!)

Name:  Kyle J. Bauer
Age: 29
Website:  www.kylejbauer.com
Current Location: Roland Park, Baltimore City
Hometown:  Benton, IL
School: BFA – University of Illinois @ Urbana Champaign; MFA – Louisiana State University–Baton Rouge

KJBauer_Composition 864 2013

Current favorite artists or artwork: My absolute favorite artists are Martin Puryear and Robert Raushenburg, specifically Raushenburg’s “Gluts” series.  Others I consistently follow are Rachel Whiteread, Anders Ruhwald, Paul Sacaridiz, Blue Curry, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Dan Flavin, Eva Hesse, Ken Price, John McCracken, and Ed Ruscha.  A friend also recently turned me on to Ron Nagle’s ceramic sculptures; they are really worth checking out.

What is your day job? How do you manage balancing work with studio time with your life?  I am the conservation technician of prints, drawings, and photographs at the Baltimore Museum of Art.  My life is a delicate balancing act, but as each year passes, it gets a little easier.  I am constantly using my phone’s calendar to stay up to date with meetings, shows, and artist talks.

How would you describe your work, and your studio practice?  I am a mixed media sculpture and installation artist.  My studio practice is equally conceptual and process based with a strong focus on formal composition.

What part of art making do you like or enjoy the most? The least?  I enjoy everything about making my sculptures, from the first sketches to the final assembly and documentation.  I live for the completion of individual pieces or a series of sculptures.  The one exception is the anxiety I feel when loading a kiln to fire my slip cast porcelain pieces.  The unpredictability is daunting, despite years of experience.

What research do you do for your art practice?  I draw in my sketchbook, stack objects for compositional studies, follow the happenings of the art world through blogs (bmore.com, Art F City, Contemporary Art Daily), read art magazines (Art in America, Frieze, Sculpture), and observe as much about my environment as possible.

KJBauer_Composition 953 2013

What books have you read lately you would recommend? Movies? Television? Music?  I am currently reading the first chapter of David Pye’s The Nature and Art of Workmanship.  It is really striking a cord with me, and I cannot wait to read more.

Do you ever get in creative dry spells, and if so, how do you get out of them?  I have the ever present ebbs and flows of production.  When I do feel stifled or in a funk, I usually break my routine and take several days to engage in different activities or give time for reflection.

How do you challenge yourself in your work?  By staying busy, always applying myself, and never settling for what is comfortable.

What is your dream project?  To be making and creating art for the next 50+ years.