Wide Eyed: Variations at The Alice Wilds
Feb
5
to Apr 10

Wide Eyed: Variations at The Alice Wilds

I’m very pleased to be opening a solo exhibition of “Wide Eyed” with The Alice Wilds in Milwaukee. The show will include many recent works I’ve not had the occasion to exhibit previously and there will be a companion publication to follow. Additionally, I’ll be rehanging the exhibition on multiple occasions in order to experiment with different methods of presenting the work. If you’re within visiting distance of Milwaukee I’d love for you to see the show.

Jon Horvath
Wide Eyed : Variations

On view from Friday, February 5 through Saturday, April 10, 2021. For this, his second solo exhibition at The Alice Wilds, the artist has selected photographs from his ongoing and open-ended body of work, currently in its 15th year. Horvath will rehang the exhibition multiple times throughout the run of the show in order to experiment with new sequencing strategies, image relationships, and poetic structures. A companion publication pairing Wide Eyed images with responsive text from various writers will be released in early March and available for purchase in the gallery. Wide Eyed persists as the undercurrent of Horvath’s full artistic practice, bridging the gaps between more pointed and scripted works. As such, the project embraces the act of photographic wandering, seeking moments of discovery and identifying parallels between seemingly unrelated events. Wide Eyed functions analogously to an archive or database; a repository for meditations, glimpses, and passing thoughts about anything he may come to encounter within the everyday. It is a breathing body of images that continues to change shape and embrace new arrangements upon each unique installation. We will be open on Fridays and Saturdays from 11-5PM. Please note that we are currently practicing social distancing guidelines; we ask that you please keep your distance from others and wear a mask.

Jon Horvath
“Untitled,” from “Wide Eyed,” 2018/2021
Archival inkjet print
16 x 20 inches, Edition of 6
24 x 30 inches, Edition of 3

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SPE Dialogic Presentation : Landscape Trauma
Mar
7
1:00 PM13:00

SPE Dialogic Presentation : Landscape Trauma

DIALOGIC: Landscape Trauma

Jeremy Bolen, Jon Horvath, Yan Wang Preston

Saturday, March 07 - 1:00PM to 2:45PM
Galleria I&II

2020 Society for Photographic Education National Conference : 20/20 VISION

2020 is coming, so… where are our jetpacks? Our reservations at the Moon Motel? And world peace?

2020 has yet to deliver on these futuristic dreams; instead, it looms full of conflict, crisis, and deep political division. This moment demands that we see the world unflinchingly, with eyes wide open, drawing on the clarity of hindsight and the perspectives that lenses and other photographic modes can bring to the world. What is photography's role at this turning point in history? How might it best respond to this moment? As we celebrate the 50th anniversary of Exposure, SPE's flagship publication, it is time to use the tools we have at hand, to reevaluate our past and actively establish our present as we forge our future. In the spirit of the essays and photographs Exposure has published over the years, 2020 Vision is an occasion to explore the connection between written and visual frames of understanding. Through image and text we have the power to soothe and enchant, unravel misrepresentation, provoke, investigate, inform, expose, advocate, collaborate, engage, and celebrate our connections as we work toward change.

20/20 Vision invites us, as artists, critics, curators, imagemakers, historians, theorists, and writers, to use our words and our images to define the state of contemporary photography. It challenges us to expand our vision of photography to be inclusive of adjacent modes; to build a new canon that accurately reflects our community and its diverse range of practitioners; and to see what is known to us with greater criticality and more probing analysis, and what is unknown with greater empathy.

As we approach 2020, knowing the risks of not speaking up or of speaking too loudly, let us be purposeful in our visual language. Though our discussions and explorations of contemporary photography and its relationships to and impact on the world, we can find inspiration to move our medium into the future.

Featured Speakers Zackary Drucker, Xaviera Simmons

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Snite Museum of Art Acquisition
Jan
24
5:00 PM17:00

Snite Museum of Art Acquisition

I’m pleased to share that the Snite Museum of Art at Notre Dame has acquired four prints for their permanent collection. The photographs were made during my time spent at the UNDERC / Yield Magazine Residency in Flathead, Montana in the summer of 2018. Thank you to all involved for making this happen.

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"This Is Bliss" Featured in Musee Magazine
Jan
24
5:00 PM17:00

"This Is Bliss" Featured in Musee Magazine

“This Is Bliss” is included in the recent online feature “Rural America : Photography as Cultural Narrative” by Musee Magazine. Also included in the feature are artists Tema Stauffer, Gregory Crewdson, Todd Hido, and Seph Lawless. Link to the article here:

https://museemagazine.com/features/2020/1/8/rural-america-photography-as-cultural-narrative

Screen Shot 2020-01-24 at 4.35.56 PM.png
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"This Is Bliss" Griffin Museum Exhibition reviewed by "What Will You Remember"
Jan
24
5:00 PM17:00

"This Is Bliss" Griffin Museum Exhibition reviewed by "What Will You Remember"

Thank you to Elin Spring from “What Will You Remember” for the write up of “This Is Bliss”, on view at the Griffin Museum of Photography until March 1, 2020.

Horvath’s images, too, are individually straightforward – a man lost in thought by the roadside, a lone dog trotting alongside a lit building at night – but develop into a complex assessment. Black and white views like “Skipping Stones Across the Snake River Canyon (after Evel),” “Points of Entry, Points of Exit, NSEW” or a grid of wet-plate collodion frames alternating between tumbleweed and beer bottles collected from a highway turnoff convey the paradoxical sensation of time passing and standing still. A seemingly apt metaphor for life in Bliss.

Read the full review here:

https://www.whatwillyouremember.com/amani-willett-jon-horvath-walker-pickering-barbara-diener-at-griffin-museum-ma/?fbclid=IwAR2hnQG7hz5_jff6rYqZh1UVWvl0rBzpLcS1VZWuoYHSCjlNv1BvT1cOasA

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2019 Wisconsin Triennial at Madison Museum of Contemporary Art
Oct
19
to Feb 16

2019 Wisconsin Triennial at Madison Museum of Contemporary Art

  • Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

A selection of photographs from “This Is Bliss” is included in the 2019 Wisconsin Triennial.

From October 19, 2019 through February 16, 2020 the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art will present the Wisconsin Triennial, a survey of contemporary Wisconsin art. As in previous years, the 2019 Triennial will be a juried exhibition selected and organized by MMoCA’s curatorial staff. Each of the selected artists will be represented by a single work or a small group of works.

The Triennial reflects current directions in Wisconsin’s visual arts scene. The exhibition will be installed in the museum’s main galleries, State Street Gallery, and Imprint Gallery; other spaces, such as the lobby and Rooftop Sculpture Garden, may be utilized as well. MMoCA will also produce an illustrated publication documenting the exhibition.

Admission: FREE for MMoCA members, $10 for non-members.
http://bit.ly/WITri2019

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"Street Scene" at /’fu:bar/ Glitch Art Festiv̔al 2019
Oct
5
to Oct 11

"Street Scene" at /’fu:bar/ Glitch Art Festiv̔al 2019

AKC Attack / Pierottijeva 11 / Zagreb / CRO

/’fu:bar/ is a yearly festival gathering focused on electronic error-themed reinterpretative multimedia art. The week long festival starts on the first Saturday of October and hosts an artist residency program, showcases diverse talks, workshops, performances and an inclusive group exhibition.


/’fu:bar/ is an open and free glitch art event, aimed at local communities in a physical space, and accessible to transnational communities in networked space, while including diverse local, regional and international authors and their collaborations.

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May
14
7:00 PM19:00

"Street Scene" reviewed in The Shepherd Express Milwaukee

VisualArt_WilsonCenter_C.jpg

Read the full transcript by contributing writer, Shane McAdams

'Street Scene' Maps Our Brave New World at Sharon Lynne Wilson Center

BY SHANE MCADAMS

MAY 07, 2019

Ages ago, when I was in art school in the heyday of site-specific installation art, we discussed notions of site and place exhaustively. A “place” we always concluded was simply coordinates on a map; a “site” was a place with cultural significance conferred by meaningful human activity. It seemed a bulletproof definition at the time.

Then came social media, Google Earth and virtual reality. Suddenly it seemed possible that these emergent forces had the potential to map an alternative set of mental coordinates onto a seemingly immutable physical map. Jon Horvath and Hans Gindlesberger’s exhibition, “Street Scene,” in the Sharon Lynne Wilson Center’s Ploch Gallery through June 8, explores the onset of this non-Newtonian, spatio-mental geography, visually remapping it for our brave new world.

The collection of digital collages builds from a well-chosen and diverse series of cultural sites—from the street in Paris where Yves Klein’s took his famous “Leap into the Void” to a now-defunct Greyhound bus station in central Chicago. Horvath and Gindlesberger layer glitchy impressionistic mixes on top of each site’s physical location—provided by the precise X and Y coordinates—incorporating movie stills, street-view imagery, text from blogs, user forums, historic images, public records, song lyrics and other supplemental data.

Each work is an archeological dig site, yielding artifacts layer by layer. One of the most intriguing (though there are many) is of a spot in Hernandez, N.M., where Ansel Adams snapped a famous shot of the moon over the Chama Valley. The image overlays Adam’s photo with one of it now and offers a first-hand and very detailed textual account of the artist’s attempt to capture that very precise moment on film. Adams’ own urgent words ground a work that might seem eternal and beyond context in an immediate and personal narrative.

The artists complicate things further by selecting subjects that come to us pre-layered in meta. One composite work builds from a scene taken from the movie Memento in which Guy Pierce is seen photographing a hotel sign with a Polaroid camera that he uses in the movie as a proxy for his own non-existent memory. The movie famously moves backwards, with the opening scene being the latest chronologically. Letters below the image in the work label the non-linear sequence, described as “devilish” by a film critic named Andy Klein. Another work builds from a real Tokyo street where Bill Murray’s and Scarlett Johansson’s characters part ways in the film Lost in Translation. Underneath the composite image of the street are a series of random guesses pulled from a fan forum about what Murray actually spoke in her ear in the final scene. Information lost and replaced; hope regained; reality about a fictional relationship set in a real place, rewritten. All lost in translation.

There are also moments of powerful social commentary, such as a sad street-view image of a derelict house in Love Canal, N.Y., long since abandoned after being declared unlivable because of chemical pollution. The digital photo is accompanied by an image of the letter written by Jimmy Carter declaring the community condemned in 1978. In another work, we see a hotel in Waco, Texas, where it turns out an illegitimate murder confession by Calvin Washington took place. Supplemental information reveals his later exoneration by the Innocence Project. Many of these works crack open yet another dimension by sending one immediately (as it did me) to a search engine for further investigation.

Horvath and Gindlesberger also give us Henri Cartier Bresson’s most decisive place: Wim Wenders’ Berlin and Spike Lee’s Bed Stuy. They aren’t simply collages about places, they’re investigations into the nature of consciousness and awareness in a digital age; into a more mature and far more complex discussion about place and site.

“Street Scene” explodes objective coordinates into messy composites for the viewer to finally reorganize into their own contingent realities. The works might also suggest the presence of a glitchy new horizon, one just as terrifying and limitless as those that were once navigated toward by starlight alone.

https://shepherdexpress.com/arts-and-entertainment/visual-art/street-scene-maps-our-brave-new-world-at-sharon-lynne-wilson/

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State of the Art 2018: Photography Invitational
Nov
12
to Feb 2

State of the Art 2018: Photography Invitational

  • Giertz Gallery at Parkland College (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

This Is Bliss
The Giertz Gallery at Parkland College, Champagne, IL

To learn more about the project, click here.

Curated by Christopher Schneberger

  • Reception: Thursday, November 15, 5:30–7:30 pm
    Curatorial talk at 6:30 pm
    Music by Cobra Lounge Trio

  • Additional Gallery Lectures:
    Exhibiting photographer Jon Horvath, Tuesday, February 5, at 1:15 pm
    Jason Reblando, Tuesday, November 27 at 6:15pm

  • Gallery Closed: November 21 (5 pm)–25; December 10–January 13; and January 21

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"My Top 5 Ito's" in The Nohl Fellowship at 15
Jun
8
to Jan 27

"My Top 5 Ito's" in The Nohl Fellowship at 15

  • Haggerty Museum of Art (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Monday – Saturday:
10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

  • Thursday:
    10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

  • Sunday:
    Noon to 5 p.m.

Over the course of fifteen cycles, ninety-six fellowships have been awarded. Most recipients have remained in the greater Milwaukee area. To commemorate this significant milestone, the Haggerty is exhibiting a selection of work by former Nohl Fellows. This installation is a testament to the lasting impact of this vital program, which has kept artists working—and sharing their work with a wider public— for the last fifteen years. This is an impressive legacy for Mary L. Nohl, for the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, and for our community.

This exhibition is presented at the Haggerty Museum of Art in part through generous support from The Lacey Sadoff Foundation.

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