Thursday, December 18, 2014

Tamsen Wojtanowski - Seer, 2014
11"x12", Cyanotype


Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Philadelphia Magazine's October First Friday Picks!


 Philadelphia Magazine's First Friday Picks
_________________________________________________________________________________


Tamsen Wojtanowski: Shelter

Come see the show through November 22nd. 
Gallery hours: Th/Fr 1:30 - 6pm; Saturdays Noon-4pm.
Artist's Reception: Saturday, October 18th 3-6pm.
POST EAST: Saturday, October 25th & Sunday, October 26th, Noon- 6pm. 

www.tamsenwj.com
www.heavybubble.com/110-church

Monday, September 15, 2014

Upcoming @ 110 Church Gallery, Philadelphia, PA.

Tamsen Wojtanowski. Untitled. 2014. 

From the upcoming exhibition, "Shelter". 
@ 110 Church Gallery
Opening Reception: First Friday, October 3, from 5-8pm. 
Exhibition Dates: 10.2.14 - 11.22.14

http://heavybubble.com/110-church


Friday, August 8, 2014

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Repeated Sets

Tamsen Wojtanowski, Cyanotype, 22" x 30", 2013


Tamsen Wojtanowski, Cyanotype, 22" x 30", 2013
Tamsen Wojtanowski, Cyanotype, 22" x 30", 2013

Tamsen Wojtanowski, Cyanotype, 22" x 30", 2013
Tamsen Wojtanowski, Cyanotype, 22" x 30", 2013

Monday, May 12, 2014

Tamsen Wojtanowski,
"I fantasize."

Saturday, April 12, 2014

APPLY! Open Call! July 2014 Solo-Show @ NAPOLEON




Our Third July Open Call!

Your chance to have a solo-show at NAPOLEON

OPEN CALL for JULY SHOW 2014

NAPOLEON, Philadelphia, PA

NAPOLEON is now accepting applications for a solo exhibition in our gallery during the month of July 2014. Applications should include a written proposal (300 words), a CV, an artist statement, and 5 images or 2 videos all saved as a single PDF. If you're including video work, please include a hyperlink in the .pdf to youtube, vimeo, or other video hosting site where we can find your work.

Show opens First Friday, July 4th and close July 25th; with an Opening Reception on Friday, July 11th. The artist will be responsible for supplying all materials required for displaying their work (framing, media equipment, pedestals, hanging wire, etc.). The artist will also be responsible for installation during June 30 - July 4 and will deinstall the exhibition by July 26-27. Gallery dimensions and floor plan can be found http://napoleonnapoleon.com/about/floor-plan/

Email materials to napoleon.philadelphia@gmail.com and title the email with your name and “July Show Submission 2014.”  $20 application fee will be billed via PayPal upon receipt of materials.

NAPOLEON is collectively-run project space located in Philadelphia that strives to provide a platform for new work and new ideas.  We are located in the Rollins Building on the edge of Philadelphia’s Chinatown and Callowhill neighborhoods.  The building also houses other galleries such as Vox Populi, Tiger Strikes Asteroid, Marginal Utility, Practice, and Grizzly Grizzly and is a major hub for Philadelphia’s emerging art scene. For additional information or clarification, please email napoleon.philadelphia@gmail.com and view our website www.napoleonnapoleon.com to get to know us better.

APPLICATION DEADLINE WEDNESDAY MAY 7, 2014 @ 11:59pm.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Friday, April 4, 2014

TONIGHT @ NAPOLEON

Tamsen Wojtanowski - I/You/We (Detail)

Tonight! Tonight!

Come see for yourself @ NAPOLEON!

Inside Voices: C. Pazia Mannella and Tamsen Wojtanowski


Opening Reception
First Friday, April 4th

6pm – 10pm
NAPOLEON
319 N 11th Street, 2L
Philadelphia, PA
Exhibition Dates: 4.4.14 – 4.25.14
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and Sundays 2pm – 6pm or by appointment

C. Pazia Mannella - Trace


Not New, Still Great - John Baldessari




John Baldessari


I return again and again.

And as I look, I listen.

Songs On Conceptual Art



John Baldessari



You should look again too, John Baldessari


And you should also listen.



Thursday, April 3, 2014

Discovering the Space Between: C. Pazia Mannella and Tamsen Wojtanowski An Essay by Jillian Matthews

Discovering the Space Between: C. Pazia Mannella and Tamsen Wojtanowski

AN ESSAY BY JILLIAN MATTHEWS

As the stars illuminate and move through a dark sky as night falls or a summer breeze rustles the delicate petals of a flower in bloom, memories of experiences are not static, but constantly shifting. As time passes, perspectives change; memories evolve, or simply fade away. Artists Tamsen Wojtanowski and C.Pazia Mannella capture the ephemerality of memory in their shared exhibition at NAPOLEON, Inside Voices. Each piece included in the exhibition functions as a visual autobiography by which both Tamsen and Pazia express their intimate accounts of the everyday. Both artists have unfolded their internal lives and intimate relationships and have reflectively responded to collecting various ephemera from exchanges with their respective companions. These private archives serve as a source of inspiration and discovery and range from thoughtfully written letters to spontaneous photos shared via text. Though the two bodies of work on exhibit are distinctly different, each artist explores universal notions of love, longing, uncertainty, and commitment.Inside Voices shows a dichotomy that reflects on the comforts of domesticity and the beauty of sharing your daily life with another, but also the fear of an unknowable future, and the fleeting nature of recollection.
Our memories are precious because they provide us with a link to the past, to knowledge and meaning. Today we frequently attempt to preserve a moment by snapping a photo on our camera phones or sharing personal experiences through social media outlets. However, our most intimate memories are often those that affect us most deeply. Philosopher John Sutton initiates a discourse on the role of memory in our daily lives stating “Remembering is often suffused with emotion, and is closely involved in both extended affective states such as love and grief, and socially significant practices such as promising and commemorating” (Sutton).Our recollections of love and loss, our experiences of personal and collective events, our sentimental longing for home, all continually form our perspectives on the present. Time quickly passes us by, and we are left to decipher the sometimes ambiguous residue that it leaves behind.
Tamsen Wojtanowski, I/You/We, 8” x 10” Silver Gelatin Prints, Masonite, Wood. 5'x5' grouped installation, 2014
Tamsen Wojtanowski, I/You/We, 8” x 10” Silver Gelatin Prints, Masonite, Wood. 5′x5′ grouped installation, 2014
Tamsen Wojtanowski’s series of Photograms titled “I/You/We” considers a yearning for a sense of home and the physical absence of her partner. Gazing into the night sky, stars pierce through the darkness. With each night, configurations of constellations shift into new views. It takes years for even the closest star’s light to reach the earth. Every night as we look up into a clear sky, we share in the history of the universe, both together and alone. Wojtanowski calls on the paradox of this shared experience by visually closing the physical distance between the artist and her partner in her series.  By employing an antique printing process called Cliché Verre, Latin for “glass picture”, the artist creates a handmade negative. The technique involves carefully painting the glass and then exposing it to light. The light penetrates the unpainted portions creating the final print, known as a Photogram. Using this intuitive process the artist reinvents the private letters exchanged between her and her partner. Wojtanowski creates a pattern based on the unique locations of only the words “I”, “You” and “We” penned in each of the letters. The resulting Photogram dissolves into darkness, revealing only the “light” of the words I, You and We. What emerges from this process is veiled and mysterious, a kind of unbreakable semantic code. Each individual print maintains the intimate scale of the original letters, but functions as a pixel in a larger image. The installation of the series standing 5 feet high and 5 feet wide is a unified presence in the small scale of the NAPOLEON Gallery. The piece evokes the essence of the vacuous beauty of the cosmos, but also underscores the mystery of what lies ahead and the volatility of memory itself.

Standing apart from this series are also two photographs, both aptly titled “home” and “Home”, drawing the viewer back into the seemingly mundane routines of the everyday. The artist offers abbreviated and sometimes voyeuristic glimpses into her private domestic environments. However, with little context the images are ambiguous and pose questions regarding place and time, blurring the lines between moment and memory. Wojtanowski’s body of work reflects on both the anticipation and vulnerability of a growing relationship and the longing for physical and psychological refuge in a chaotic world. When viewed collectively the pieces transport the viewer to that liminal space between the past and the more recent present.

Perception and time are central concepts in the material-based work of C. Pazia Mannella. Her floor installation titled“Force” recalls the beauty of an urban garden contained- a meticulously manicured natural oasis in the midst of a harsh concrete city. Mannella’s unnatural garden “grows” from the center of the gallery floor contained within a large wooden flower box. At first glance Mannella’s painterly garden appears to be a delightful installation juxtaposed against the stark white walls of the gallery. However, the embroidered blooms belie the fact that these vibrant flowers could never exist harmoniously in nature.
Mannella, who has taken a strong interest in horticulture considers the practice of forced blooming, a process in which plants are grown in greenhouses and forced to bloom prior to their natural growth cycles. By subverting our notions of “natural” beauty, the artist initiates a dialogue about our voracious desire for the harmony and tranquility of the natural world and the tensions which lie just beneath the surface of this yearning.
Similar to artist Tamsen Wojtanowski’s body of work, Mannella’s work fluctuates between the tangible and the ethereal with her piece titled “Trace”. A panel of white silk, printed with a subtle light blue watercolor quietly hangs from the wall at the back of the gallery. A ghostly, corporal image seems to emerge from the silk in the likeness of two arms clasped together, one seemingly vanishing from sight. Faint white embroidery can be seen carefully defining edges, and then it too fades away into the folds of the silk. The haunting quality of the print reminds us of the fading light of memory as time passes and our sometimes futile attempts to preserve it.
Inside Voices oscillates between the commonplace and the otherworldly, between the idyllic and the weight of an uncertain future. It provides a striking visual contrast between the enigmatic imagery presented in Wojtanowski’s black and white prints and photographs and the rich textures and vibrant colors woven throughout Mannella’s embroidered textiles. The pairing of the works calls the viewer to the threshold that exists between tangible realities and the dreamlike quality of memories. The artists each reflected on their own personal archives, laying bare the complex relationships between the past, the present. Inside Voices provokes questions about what it means to remember, while living in a fast paced and often transient contemporary world.In an age where we have the capability to record our daily lives at our finger tips and the access to massive amounts of digital memory, forgetting may not be our greatest fear, but perhaps it is the fear of being forgotten by the ones we love most.
Bibliography
Mannella, C. Pazia. Artist Interview. 22 February 2014.
Sutton, John, "Memory", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2012 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = <http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2012/entries/memory/>.
Wojtanowski, Tamsen. Artist Interview. 22 February 2014.

About the Author:
Jillian Matthews is an artist and designer. She received her MFA in Jewelry and Metals
from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2013. She currently lives in Philadelphia
and works as an Installation Design Assistant at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
For more information please visit http://www.behance.net/JillianMatthews.

April FIRST FRIDAY: Inside Voices @ NAPOLEON


Inside Voices

AN EXHIBITION BY ARTIST C. PAZIA MANNELLA AND FOUNDING NAPOLEON MEMBER TAMSEN WOJTANOWSKI

“I remember in order to be unhappy/happy – not in order to understand.” – Proust
In their two-person exhibition, Inside Voices, artists Tamsen Wojtanowski and C. Pazia Mannella use their practice to investigate the past; compliant with the quicksand that is memory, they delve deep into the dopamine inducing daydreams.
Opening Reception
First Friday, April 4th

6pm – 10pm
NAPOLEON
319 N 11th Street, 2L
Philadelphia, PA
Exhibition Dates: 4.4.14 – 4.25.14
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and Sundays 2pm – 6pm or by appointment

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Too Long...

Ok. I know it's been too long. And I only tend to come here when I want something, but it's been a busy year. To catch you up - 

We got married.


And it was awesome.

I set up a darkroom at home.


And it was awesome. 

My dog turned eleven. 


And we're going to have a party for her this weekend. 

There were a few other things here and there, but really these are the high points. These, and the rededicated commitment to this blog and our sister blog over at,  The Mountain and The Sea

To remind you how this works - 

Here you will find announcements for my upcoming exhibitions and events, works in progress, and artist's who inspire me; lots of photographers and painters and printmakers (sometimes installation). 

There, you'll find some of the same, though my voice is not alone (I have The Sea to contend with). At The Mountain and The Sea, look for announcements for upcoming exhibition and events, notice of sales and new postings to our etsy store (coming in the next few months), and artist's and designers who inspire us in both the fantastic and the everyday. 

So enjoy, I am going to. And where ever you are out there - Happy Spring!!!