Topic: Invitation.

Game Exhibition Opens : April 27 2011

Topics: Work on View and Invitation
Posted:March 29, 2011 by Julia

LTMH Gallery

39 East 78th Street

New York, NY 

Phone: +1 212 249 7695

Opening 6:00-8:00pm on Wednesday 27 April 2011

The exhibition continues through May 20, 2011 

 

New York - An exhibition of new politically charged work by Gayle Wells Mandle and Julia Mandle entitled GAME will be on view at LTMH Gallery from April 27 through May 21, 2011.  Both artists unceasingly question the world through a lens focused on power struggles in  the Middle East through their painting, sculpture, photography, and works on paper. Both are American artists, mother and daughter, living abroad - Gayle Well Mandle in Qatar and Julia Mandle in Holland - which has sharpened their perspective on the American conflicts in the Arabic world. 

Julia Mandle's new installation of work relating to piñatas explores the dark side of a well-known children's game. Lamiya's Last Game includes photographs, works on paper and fabric, and bronze and ceramic sculpture.Mandle's body of work was inspired by a photograph of a young Iraqi girl's body being prepared for burial taken by Stephanie Sinclair for the Chicago Tribune in 2003. In an uncanny coincidence, the opening date of exhibition marks the anniversary of Lamyia's death eight years ago. She was killed by a cluster bomb on April 27, 2003.  

Piñatas originally were created for redemptive ceremonies whereby revelers would violently strike a ceramic seven-pointed star shape and wish for the sweet hereafter symbolized by the gifts contained within. Taken by the combination of brutality and naivety, Mandle builds on the concept of piñatas to call attention to the youngest victims of America's invasion of Iraq.

Gayle Wells Mandle's mixed media paintings represent the games that people play as individuals, nations, and cultures. One important theme is the discrimination game played by the native Qatari population against the giant labor force of immigrants. A collage entitled Boom Town, 2009, uses photography of construction sites, exploring issues of labor rights. HyperMarket, 2010-11, is an installation of 38 collaged paintings relating to the mega-store game plan that hypes goods from food to electronics. Wells Mandle's mixed media paintings reflect a rapidly growing Gulf State and a changing socio-political environment.

Julia Mandle is currently working in Amsterdam after 15 years in New York City. She is best known for her performance art, which highlights such issues as human rights, urban planning, and environmental issues. Her work has been shown/performed at The New Museum, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, Cabinet, and Storefront for Art and Architecture. Media coverage has included The New York Times, Village Voice, Washington Post and White Wall Magazine. 

Born in Pennsylvania, Gayle Wells Mandle has lived in Doha, Qatar since 2008. She earned her MFA later in life in 1997 at the Rhode Island School of Design.  Since then her work has been shown in numerous exhibitions in the U.S. including at the Addison/Ripley Fine Art in Washington D.C. GAME is her first major exhibition in New York City. In 2010, she curated Beyond the War, an acclaimed exhibition at LTMH Gallery of work by seven Iraqi artists.     

For further information, please contact Anahita Varzi at Anahita@ltmhgallery.com

To view the exhibition catalogue please click here:    

 

Gayle Wells Mandle and Julia Mandle: Game PDF Catalogue 

 

In-Stitches Exhibition

Topics: Work on View and Invitation
Posted:November 11, 2009 by Julia

Please come to see my work that will be a part of an exciting group show

curated by Beth de Woody.

 

OPENING RECEPTION
Thursday, November 12, 6-8 pm

 

Leila Taghina-Milani Heller Gallery 39 East 78 Street at Madison Avenue, Suite 3001

Gallery Hours: Tues-Sat 11:00-6:00pm

Exhibit Closes: December 19

 

IN STITCHES, curated by Beth Rudin DeWoody, will present works in various media by more than 50 U.S. and international contemporary artists.
 
IN STITCHES focuses on both well-known and emerging artists who incorporate stitching and thread as prominent features in the concept and structure of their work. The artists' process includes wrapping and embroidery as well as assemblage.  The exhibition title is a double entendre of the Shakespearean idiom, and now common expression, when one is laughing so hard that it causes physical pain. While some of the work presents elements of humor, other work explores the role of women in society or questions the threads or painful truths of our social and moral existence.  Threads literally and metaphorically form the connections which tie the artists' works together.
 
The exhibition will include work by Ghada Amer, Ramazan Bayrakoglu, Louise Bourgeois, Nancy Brooks Brody, Ambreen Butt, David Byrne,Margarita Cabrera,Orly Cogan, Adam Cohen,Anita Cooke, Matthew Cox, E.V. Day, Lesley Dill, Chris Duncan, Alinka Echeverria, Tracey Emin, Angelo Filomeno, Robert Forman, Zoi Gaitanidou, Sabrina Gschwandtner, Guerra de la Paz, Selma Gürbüz, Joseph Heidecker, Kent Hendricksen, Todd Knopke, Steven & William Ladd, Mike Latham, Charles LeDray, Pooneh Maghazehe, Julia Mandle, Christian Marclay, Victoria May, Bradley McCallum & Jacqueline Tarry, Thomas McDonell, Darrel Morris, William J. O'Brien,  Maria E. Piñeres, Elaine Reichek, Jacob Robichaux, Gulay Semercioglu, Donna Sharrett, Jean Shin, Chiharu Shiota, Kiki Smith, Devorah Sperber, Berend Strik, Marc Swanson, Frances Trombly, Vadis Turner, Paul Villinski, Andy Warhol, Debora Warner, Megan Whitmarsh, Rob Wynne, and Darius Yektai.
 
Beth Rudin DeWoody is a New York art collector and curator. She is the executive vice president of Rudin Management and on the board of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Creative Time, The New School, New Yorkers For Children, and the New York Police Foundation. Her other exhibitions include I Won't Grow Up at Cheim & Read, New York, Just What Are They Saying... at the Jonathan Ferrara Gallery, New Orleans, What's Your Hobby? at The Fireplace Project, East Hampton, NY, A House Is Not A Home at Caren Golden Fine Arts, New York, as well as Luxury Goods and It'll cost you...at Kathleen Cullen Fine Arts, New York.

NYC Premier Sept 19

Topics: Invitation
Posted:August 20, 2009 by Julia

The French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF) in partnership with Cabinet
presents Crossing the Line 2009

Fabrication of Blindness
an installation and intervention by
Julia Mandle

Exhibition Dates: Saturday, September 19–Sunday, September 27, 2009
Opening Reception:
Saturday, September 19, 5-8pm

Artist Talk: Julia Mandle with Marc Falkoff moderated by Drawing Center's Aimee Good:
Monday September 21, 7-9pm 


Embroidery Circles:
Saturday and Sunday, September 26-27, 1-5pm

Where: Cabinet 300 Nevins Street, Brooklyn, NY
Subway:
F, G to Carroll St, walk north on Smith to Union St, turn right,
3 blocks to Nevins St. M, R to Union St, 2 blocks west to Nevins St
Information:
cabinetmagazine.org  | 718 222 8434 | fiaf.org | 212 355 6160

 

 

Public Lecture

Topics: Invitation
Posted:August 19, 2009 by Julia

PKNY 7 - MONDAY SEPTEMBER 14TH, 2009
Music 7:30 - Speakers 8:30

Outdoors & solar powered at SOLAR 1!
$5 suggested donation
Nullsleep will be performing a Famicom DJ set

Annie Kwon investigates Nauru
Chris Neidl hearts solar
Irwin Chen redubs reading
Jason Kibbey briefs on boxers
Jean Oei morphs for Cooper
Julia Mandle fabricates blindness
Ken Tanabe creates a multicultural holiday
LoCurativo repurposes community
Mark Randall ignites change
Dr. Martin P. Schreibman farms tilapia
Tina Manis investigates the permanence of temporary
Xanthe Jory schools excellence with art

PKNY is hosted by Marc McQuade & Beverly Liang info@ihpkny.com

DIRECTIONS TO SOLAR 1:
Solar One is about a 10 minute walk from the closest subway stations, but the area is also serviced by several bus lines. See Solar 1's website for a map and more detailed info: www.solar1.org