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The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage

Find a Fellow

Posted by Asimina Chremos | March 21, 2012

Hidden in the nonsense text below are Pew Fellows Charles Cohen, Zoe Strauss, Dito van Reigersberg, Quinn Bauriedel, James Sugg and Tobin Rothlein. Can you guess which fellow you’ll find under the red word or phrase before you click?

circles of hopes beeps and boops mid-project realization that she could either continue with her project or have a child—she chose the project selling cut flowers along the highway an exploration of the strangely familiar this is your brain on pig iron

Image source: http://filmdrunk.uproxx.com/2011/11/wheres-waldo-is-still-really-being-made





 

 

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Labels:  beeps and boops  caconrad  charles cohen  dito van reigersberg  james sugg  miami beach  pew fellows  pig iron  quinn bauriedel  tobin rothlein  where’s waldo  zoe strauss 

They don’t have bodyguards, and they’re nice.

Posted by Asimina Chremos | February 1, 2012

Guess what? The Pew Fellows in the Arts are not floating around on a golden art cloud, inaccessible to mere mortals. They are not rarified individuals you must have a golden credit card and A-list social connection in order to meet. No. Despite the fact they have won one of the largest fellowship prizes currently available to individual artists in this country, many of the Fellows are right here on earth creating and performing down on the gritty ground of Philadelphia where anybody who's can come see, meet, and even create with them. 

Below are ways you could meet Charles Cohen, CAConrad, or the members of Headlong Dance Theater.

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Labels:  amy smith  andrew simonet  buchla music easel  caconrad  charles cohen  dance advance  david brick  headlong dance theater  part time studios  pew fellows  pew fellowships in the arts  somatic poetry  this town is a mystery 

Fellows News & Events Online

Posted by Asimina Chremos | November 3, 2011

 

Mick Moloney (Pew Fellow, 2000) performs tonight (November 4) at the Puffin Cultural Forum in Teaneck, NJ. Moloney “traces the wondrous evolution of old-time American country and bluegrass music in 18th and 19th century Southern Appalachia where Irish, Scottish, German, and English immigrants, African Americans, and indigenous Cherokee all lived amid their music, songs, and stories.”  More info >  

Contrabando, an exhibition of work by 1993 Pew Fellow Rafael Ferrer, opens tomorrow November 5 at Guild Hall in East Hampton, NY. Click here to read a recent interview with Ferrer. For even deeper insight, consider attending the following talks: On November 12, Mr. Ferrer will speak with Barry Schwabsky, the art critic of The Nation. On December 10, Edward J. Sullivan, a professor of art history at the Institute of Fine Arts and New York University, will also examine Mr. Ferrer’s work with the artist in attendance. The talks are free with museum admission. Exhibition info > 

Tim Portlock (Pew Fellow, 2011) and Jennifer Levonian (2009) are among the visual artists whose work is being shown at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art in here., an exhibition that considers...

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Labels:  al-bustan seeds of change  alex kanevsky  atlanta contemporary art center  august wilson dance center ensemble  ballet x  baltimore museum of art  bob perelman  bruce graham  cerise press  charles cohen  chicago reader  chris forsyth  daniel heyman  dito van reigersberg  east end black film festival  edward j. sullivan  emily brown  gallery joe  greer reed  guild hall  hanna khoury  highwire gallery  if sons then heirs  j. cacciola gallery  jennifer levonian  kate watson-wallace  king britt  laurence salzmann  lorene cary  losang samten  matthew cox  mick moloney  mystery of irma vep  night catches us  odean pope  orrin evans  packerschopf gallery  pafa  pattie mccarthy  pennsylvania academy of fine arts  pew fellowships in the arts  philadelphia inquirer  philly 360  pittsburgh post-gazette  poetry trading cards  puffin cultural forum  rafael ferrer  rennie harris  robert maggio  robin rice gallery  ruffin gallery  sonia sanchez  tanya hamilton  tim portlock  toronto nujazz festival  umbrella music festival  usa projects  washington post  zoe strauss 

Fellows News & Events Online

Posted by Asimina Chremos | October 27, 2011

Artist Tristin Lowe (Pew Fellow, 1995) works to install Visither I, a neon light sculpture which is part of his exhibit, "Under the Influence," in the Perelman Building of the Philadelphia Museum of Art Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 in Philadelphia. 

Image above: AP Photo/Alex Brandon, taken from Yahoo News.

Ryan Trecartin (Pew Fellow, 2009) leaves Elizabeth Dee Gallery, reports the Huffington Post. Read article >

Philagrafika has announced the release of its ninth Philagrafika Invitational Portfolio, a suite of fine art prints created annually by invited artists and participating print shops. 2009 Pew Fellow Jennifer Levonian collaborated with Silicon Gallery Fine Art Prints on July in Philadelphia, a digital print.

Belated congratulations to architect Brian Phillips (Pew Fellow 2011): Last month (September 2011), his company, Interface Studio Architects, was one of three winners of Boston, MA Mayor Menino’s E+ Green Building Program Design Challenge. Learn more >

Literary artist Essex Hemphill (Pew Fellow, 1993) continues to be remembered...

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Labels:  brian phillips  bruce graham  charles cohen  chris forsyth  david ellsworth  emmet gowin  essex hemphill  gabriel quinn bauriedel  jan krzywicki  jennifer higdon  jennifer levonian  kara crombie  king britt  lily yeh  lorene cary  matthew suib  pepon osorio  pew fellow  pew fellowships in the arts  richard torchia  ron silliman  ryan trecartin  sonia sanchez  tristin lowe  whit maclaughlin 

Fellows News & Events Online

Posted by Asimina Chremos | October 7, 2011

 

"Disco Mosul," 2006, a drypoint print by Daniel Heyman, is at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Have you visited the exhibit “Here and Now” at the Philadelphia Museum of Art yet? It opened September 10 and will be so through December 4, 2011. Curated by Innis Howe Shoemaker, it is meant to an represent some of the remarkable work being produced in Philadelphia today. “Here and Now” includes work by Pew Fellows and visual artists Astrid BowlbyDaniel Heyman, Virgil Marti and Joshua Mosley. In a recent issue if the Philadelphia Inquirer, Heyman lauds the exhibit “not just for his own sake but because of what it means for the museum to show support for Philadelphia artists.”

Speakers for the upcoming (November 8) TedX Philly have been announced, and one of them is 2007 Pew Fellow, music producer and DJ King Britt, who will speak with his creative partner, vocalist Rucyl as their duo Saturn Never SleepsMore info >

Poet CAConrad (Pew Fellow, 2011) will be reading October 13th...

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Labels:  astrid bowlby  beth kephart  brian phillips  bruce graham  caconrad  charles cohen  daniel heyman  denyse thomasos  emmet gowin  hanna khoury  here and now  king britt  mick moloney  philadelphia museum of art  rennie harris  ron silliman  rucyl  saturn never sleeps  sonia sanchez  tedxphilly  virgil marti