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)

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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.

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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.

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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.

New York Times profile on Alice Aycock’s new public art project on Park Avenue in Manahattan

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Profile of Texas artist Cakky Brawley’s public art work in San Antonio.

“Caruso’s Dream” is a new public art installation by Brian Goggin and Dorka Keehn displayed at 55 9th Street near Market in San Francisco.

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Slideshow of 13 must-see public art projects in San Francisco.

Ann Arbor, Michigan city council defunds public art program, read about the debate here.

Virginia Beach to convert lifeguard stands into public art.

Washington, DC to commission 25 new public art projects.

Join the Arts Leadership Digital Classroom!

www.americansforthearts.org/digitalclassrooms

Registration is now open for the first Arts Leadership Digital Classroom: Arts Leaders as Community Leaders. This four-part digital classroom series will cover in-depth the steps required to successfully lead your community. We will discuss analyzing the environment, building relationships and partnerships, community planning, developing mutually beneficial objectives, and leading communities and plans. You will build skills in community analysis, networking, case-making, project planning and management, and leadership and come away with the skills and knowledge you need to be a strong community leader. Registration closes on March 3.

Station North reviewed in the American Craft Council blog.

12 O’Clock Boys‘ Lofty Nathan interviewed in Rolling Stone.

Maryland Art Place to move to Bromo Seltzer Arts and Entertainment District in April.

Baltimore City Paper explores city’s murals, here and here.

Baltimore Sun article about the new Single Carrot Theatre in Remington.

Remington businesses

Profile of new Baltimore Clayworks Executive Director Sarah McCann.

Review of the BMA’s German Expressionism show in the Baltimore Sun.

German Expressionism

MICA student turns cyber-bullying into art.

From the Walters Art Museum’s ART BITES program last weekend, there is a new blog, http://bmorepublicart.dreamhosters.com/, intended to function as a crowdsourced site to collect images of our city’s murals, sculptures, monuments and artworks and help to make them more accessible. More info to come soon but definitely worth taking a look at!

 

10 days until deadline! Submit artifacts, art, and documents…

The Reginald F. Lewis Museum is currently soliciting submissions of flag-related art and historical objects for the upcoming exhibition, For Whom It Stands: The Flag and the American People. The Call for Submissions is posted on the museum’s website and is listed as an event on the museum’s Facebook page. Please forward the call to your contacts who are military veterans, immigrants or refugees, activists, artists, and ordinary citizens of diverse cultural backgrounds. The museum is interested in capturing a wide range of stories and experiences, in addition to the objects selected for display. The deadline for submissions is January 31, 2014. Details below and on the website.

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONShttp://www.rflewismuseum.org/FWIS-call-for-submissions

www.RFLewisMuseum.org

forwhomitstands@maamc.org