[Frameworks] CORRECTION: "Quiet Disruptions" works by Belantara, Ciarrocchi, Ferrailolo, & Ortiz, MON 3/11, 7PM at Microscope in Brooklyn

LBurchill elle.burchill at gmail.com
Sun Mar 10 19:39:07 UTC 2013


My apologies. Meant to save, not send the previous one.
Here is the complete info.Monday March 11, 7PM
 QUIET DISRUPTIONS
Videos by Amanda Belantara, Maya Ciarrocchi, Angela Ferraiolo, and
Charmaine Ortiz
several artists will be in attendance
*admission $6*

Microscope presents “Quiet Disruptions”, a program of short videos by
Amanda Belantara, Maya Ciarrocchi, Angela Ferraiolo, and Charmaine Ortiz,
with works ranging from a visual “documentary” of mountain top mining in
Appalachia and the aftermath of a massive snow storm in Japan to those
dealing with the image altering effects of camera motion and frame rate or
changes in pixel colors triggered by generative video. The works – all shot
in natural settings – are connected by their authors’ attention to seeing
and recording the subtleties in moments of disruption in the world around
them. This is the first time we have presented works by any of the artists
at the gallery.
**
**
*PROGRAM*
**
*Overburden*
 by Maya Ciarrocchi
 *HD video, color, sound, 20 minutes, 2012*

**
*TYB Gesture*
 by Charmaine Ortiz
 *video, color, sound, 61 seconds, 2010*

*The Courtyard XI*
 by Angela Ferraiolo
 *HD video, color, 8 minutes 30 seconds, 2012*

**
*Index of the Wagon Wheel*
 by Charmaine Ortiz
 *b&w video, silent, 2 minutes 49 seconds, 2011*


*Sonotoki*
 by Amanda Belantara
 *b&w video, sound, 18 minutes, 2012*

*
*

BIOS
**

*Amanda Belantara is an audio-visual artist with a background in visual
anthropology and ethnographic film.  Her work has been shown in film
festivals around the world and featured in exhibitions at SOMArts, San
Francisco, Aomori Contemporary Arts Centre and The John Rylands Library
Manchester.  She is also co-founder of the international artist collective,
Kinokophone.

Maya Ciarrocchi’s video installations present nuanced views of social,
political and cultural issues that are often part of common discourse yet
distant from our actual experience. Her work has been exhibited in New York
at chashama; The Chocolate Factory; New York Live Arts; Sasha Wolf Gallery;
and at Artisphere (VA); Hammer Museum (CA); the Borderlines Film Festival
(UK); and the Moving Pictures Festival (CAN). Additionally she has created
video and projections for performance with Merce Cunningham, Ping Chong,
Bebe Miller, and Donna Uchizono among others. Ciarrocchi has completed
residencies from the Kala Art Institute (CA) the Lower Manhattan Cultural
Council (NY) and the Ucross Foundation (WY). She is the recipient of a
Bessie (New York Dance & Theater Award) and a Jeff Award (Chicago Theater
Awards) for video design in performance and has received project grants
from the Jerome Foundation and the Puffin Foundation. www.mayaciarrocchi.com

Angela Ferraiolo is a writer and filmmaker who is exploring how
computational and procedural practices might affect the traditions of media
and art cinema. Her video work has been screened at the New York Film
Festival, Collectìf Jeune Cinema Paris, the Australian Experimental Film
Festival, Digital Fringe Melbourne, Die Gesellschafter Filmwettbewerb
Germany, Granoff Center for the Arts Providence, TechFest Bombay, and the
International Conference of Generative Art Rome. Her new projects include
further experiments in generative video and playable media. She is
currently a guest faculty member at Sarah Lawrence College.

Charmaine Ortiz is a visual artist based out of Carolina Beach, North
Carolina. Her work is rooted in her love for history and by her need to
connect with her father, who as a civil engineer drew with graphite until
the digital era. She received the Combined Honors Fellowship earning her
MFA in Painting and an MA in Art History from Savannah College of Art and
Design. She has earned other merit awards including SCAD’s Thesis Encore
Award as well as grants and fellowships from the Kimmel Harding Nelson
Center for the Arts, the Contemporary Art Center at Woodside, and the
Vermont Studio Center. She has exhibited her work both nationally and
internationally and has also presented her art historical research at
Universities across North Carolina and Georgia. Her work was most recently
accepted into the Drawing Center (NY) Viewing Program.
*

Complete program notes: www.microscopegallery.com

Microscope Gallery, 4 Charles Place, Brooklyn, NY 11221, tel: 347.924.1433,
info at microscopegallery.com

Nearest Subway: J/M/Z - Myrtle/Broadway

Other options - L Morgan Ave or Jefferson Street

B54  - Myrtle/Willoughby
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