“OUT and OUT” six visual artists working in art photography today JAN.6 – 31, 2015


Clockwise from top left:

Heidi Sussman, Another Cracked Face, Archival Pigment Print, 20" X 16"

Trix Rosen, Changed Landscapes, Silver Gelatin Print, 72" X 48"

Ellen Denuto, Woman With Large Crucifix

Alice Jacob, The Pleasure Seekers, Archival Print, 18" X 22"

Masayo Nishimura, The Crossing at Noon - Tokyo, June 2014 #3, Digital C-print, 33.5” x 25”

Pauline Chernichaw, Waiting For The Train,  2014, Archival Pigment Print, 22" X 28"


“OUT and OUT”

JANUARY 6 – JANUARY 31, 2015
Opening Reception:  Thursday, January 8, 2015    6 – 8 pm


Ceres Gallery New York is pleased to present “Out and Out”, a group exhibition on view January 6 - January 31, 2015.
Curated by Pauline Chernichaw, the show brings together six visual artists working in art photography today.
The works by featured artists Trix Rosen, Ellen Denuto, Heidi Sussman, Alice Jacob, Masayo Nishimura, and Pauline Chernichaw explore individual and communal identity transfigured within the framework of public and private spaces.  

For more information please contact:

Stefany Benson
Director, Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001

phone: 212-947-6100
fax: 212-202-5455

art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/

Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm - 6pm and Thursday 12-8pm.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

“OUT and OUT”


Ceres Gallery New York is pleased to present “Out and Out”, a group exhibition on view January 6 - January 31, 2015. Curated by Pauline Chernichaw, the show brings together six visual artists working in art photography today. The works by featured artists Trix Rosen, Ellen Denuto, Heidi Sussman, Alice Jacob, Masayo Nishimura, and Pauline Chernichaw explore individual and communal identity transfigured within the framework of public and private spaces.  

Trix Rosen
’s evocative photographs examine individual identity and gender ambiguity pressing beyond the public and private parameters of self-liberation. In the portrait “Changed Landscapes”, Rosen expands the convergence of unconfined boundaries querying “what should be made public and what should remain private”.   In her photograph, “Ravaged”, Rosen explores the plausibility of male and female transposition within the home environment. Her work elegantly exposes her subject’s transformations into self-validating portraits of alternate selves. What haunts Rosen is “finding the essence of a visible and invisible timeline; finding the quintessential moment that can be revealed in the stillness of a portrait, or in the melding of male and female imagery.”  

Equally captivating, Ellen Denuto’s alluring photographs examine gender identity by incorporating personal self-portraits within her private spaces. Denuto’s exploration and emphasis on portraits of self, tempered by solitary and self-contained cryptic rooms, create constructed narratives bursting with psychological meaning. In Denuto’s entrancing photograph, “Woman with Large Crucifix”, the symbolic crucifix embraces the contour of the female body, occupying a disquieting spatial void that clearly engages, directs and masterfully holds the spectator’s attention. Instead of seeming as intruders, Denuto invites the outside world into her secluded refuge, not only to witness her self-discovery but simultaneously summon the viewer to partake in an openly visual exchange of self-examination.    

Heidi Sussman’s riveting images depict subjects, whose identities are not observantly and clearly delineated, compelling the viewer to take a closer look. In Sussman’s close-up photograph, “Another Cracked Face”, Sussman elicits an allegorical portrayal of seemingly scorched human surrogates, replicas of unsettled beings amid indistinct spaces. Her fossilized portraits, reminiscent of classical sculptures, appear distant and abandoned in secretive locations. Sussman scavenges randomly deteriorating and out-of-the-way locales, often discovering body ‘breakables’ like mannequins with their unpreserved expressions. Her images of illusive, life-like figurative forms exist in their own space and time. Sussman’s moving photos are a guessing game that requires more questions than answers.

Similarly, Alice Jacob’s images focus on people in publically identifiable spaces. Jacob worked in the past as a Carney girl in an Illusion Show for a traveling circus, and gained insight into the unfamiliar world of the strange and unconventional.  This experience has influenced her work, especially the time she spent photographing ‘Carnival’; the masquerade of the voluptuous and mysterious in Venice, Italy.  This 16th century tradition plays out where identity and gender are unresolved. In Jacob’s “The Pleasure Seekers”, beauty becomes unclear and unsettling. Shadowy figures with faces concealed by masks, rendezvous in the backstreets of Venice. Jacob invites the viewer into a secretive, guarded and paradoxical city that seems self-contradictory or absurd and meant to be ‘guessed at’. Her photographs spellbind the spectator with an overall sense of mystery and drama. 

While Alice Jacob captures elusive figures that diffusely appear in the alleyways of Venice, Italy, Masayo Nishimura photographs portray people traversing Tokyo Japan’s open cityscapes. Her sequential series of photographs, “The Crossing at Noon”, are checkered with pedestrians scattered and on a scramble crossing busy business streets seemingly unaware of one another’s presence. Her successive depictions denote a clear and precise period of time when the traffic signals at intersections change from green to red. Nishimura’s quick–fire succession of shots, and paused frames, capture a time-based march of pedestrian traffic at city crosswalks, vying for the same public corridor as the vehicular traffic. At first glance Nishimura’s people seem removed and robotically detached. On closer examination, these paused frames reveal engaged expressions of a percolating populace on the move, appearing to fuse with Tokyo’s densely populated “corporate” backdrop.

Pauline Chernichaw’s eye-catching pictures call attention to individual and communal identity as they relate to the New York area’s openly urban environment. In Chernichaw’s engrossing photograph, “Waiting for the Train”, she intrudes on the public’s usable space, intentionally creating an unintentional physical intimacy among strangers. Unknowingly, these disconnected individuals form a geographical identicalness, an egalitarian camaraderie, due solely to the surroundings in which they find themselves. In her thought-provoking street photograph, “Upper East Side”, Chernichaw reveals a disparate division of disengaged human beings   who avoid any eye contact, collective acknowledgement or mutual identification. Chernichaw’s self-absorbed figures co-exist as organically sprouting visual markers, carefully placed and synchronized within the pictorial and architectural framework of the city’s sidewalks.
      
The photographs in this provocative group exhibition bring to light an awareness of unconstrained individual and communal identities, unbound by the Out and Out constraints of public and private spaces. The show allows the viewer an entry point into how we live our lives.  We survive in our own malleable and sacred safe havens that we knowingly or unknowingly continue to create for ourselves.

Pauline Chernichaw, Curator 

“Out and Out”, a group photography exhibition, January 6 - January 31, 2015

 

“OUT and OUT”                                                                                                                           

JANUARY 6 – JANUARY 31, 2015
Opening Reception:  Thursday, January 8, 2015    6 – 8 pm


Ceres Gallery New York is pleased to present “Out and Out”, a group exhibition on view January 6 - January 31, 2015. Curated by Pauline Chernichaw, the show brings together six visual artists working in art photography today. The works by featured artists Trix Rosen, Ellen Denuto, Heidi Sussman, Alice Jacob, Masayo Nishimura, and Pauline Chernichaw explore individual and communal identity transfigured within the framework of public and private spaces.  

For more information please contact:

Stefany Benson
Director, Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001

phone: 212-947-6100
fax: 212-202-5455

art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/

Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm - 6pm and Thursday 12-8pm.

Masayo Nishimura: The New Horizon – Scenes in northern Japan nearly two years after the disaster, April 29, 2014 – May 24, 2014.

Masayo Nishimura, a native of Japan, took a bike trip up the north Pacific coast of Japan to record the devastation of the Great Tohoku Kanto Earthquake & Tsunami of March 11, 2011 and the later consequential Nuclear Disaster. The first noticeable feature of Nishimura’s work is the quality of the photographs: clear, clean, crisp and intelligible. The second is the stark, barren, exposed burnt slabs of concrete foundations and stretches of black grass, and land cleared of structures and remains: evidence of tragedy.

Masayo does not romanticize nor dodge the truth; she uses frontal, flat horizons that hold the disaster in plain view inviting us to understand the magnitude of the trauma. Masayo takes these pictures with a deep reverence for the dead, focusing on impromptu altars and mourning sites. She spoke of her own shaking hands while holding the camera, acutely conscious of the essence of the souls still occupying the space and the heavy loss. Yet she is careful to connect with hope: a dragonfly alights on a steel rod; rows of sunflowers (planted both to absorb the salt but also to ease the pain for mourners); trucks and workers busy wiping away the debris preparing for the new. She has memorialized the devastation and loss and evidenced the beginnings of renewal of a beautiful seaside area ravaged by nature combined with human error. Beautiful show!

---One of the Ceres member wrote this after our monthly meeting in early May. I was quite impressed with the quality of the writing as well as very flattered with this rave review. Thank you very much!! Tomorrow, I'm going back to Osaka Japan.

"The New Horizon" Exhibition Events: May 15th, 7pm Jazz dance performance by Yumiko Suzuki & friends,


 

I saw the Jazz dance performance by Yumiko Suzuki & friends at the Ceres gallery. Yumiko was introduced by my longtime friend Miriam. Miriam has been taking classes with a famed NY Jazz dancer, Sue Samuels for years, and Yumiko was the member of Sue's company - Jazz Roots Dance Company. Miriam saw Yumiko's dance performance there and thought she would be perfectly fit for "The New Horizon" exhibition's event.

Miriam was right. Yumiko Suzuki and her friends, Kyoko & Marina danced their hearts out in honor of people who suffered as well as survived the Tsunami. I definitely felt emotional connection from their performance. Thank you!

"into the crystal" Butoh dance performance by Mario Endo at Ceres gallery




I saw Butoh dance performance by Mario Endo  "into the crystal"  at Ceres gallery opening. What a beautiful & inspirational dancer she was!!  She literally transformed herself into an insect or a bird about to regenerate from the ground, like a Cicada or a small wounded bird crawl out of the earth after many years in the darkness. Her performance reminded me how seasonal cycles remain strong and unchanged even after the devastating loss like Japan's Tohoku tsunami & earthquake.

I felt her 20 minutes performance like a life long drama. Tibetan music played for her dance was excellent too. Thank you!

"The New Horizon" photography exhibition, Events: May 15th, 7pm Jazz dance performance by Yumiko Suzuki & friends, May 22nd, 7pm, Vernita N'Cognita


May15th, 7pm 
At Ceres Gallery (547 West 27th St Suite 201)

Performance by Yumiko Suzuki and friends from Jazz Roots dance company


1) “Listen”  (Jazz Roots dance company's number)
Choreography by Sue Samuels,   Dancer: Yumiko Suzuki

2)Forward
Choreography by Marina Yuri,  Dancer: Marina Yuri 

3) “Battlefield
Choreography by Yumiko Suzuki, Dancers: Kyoko Koshika,  Marina Yuri, Yumiko Suzuki 


Yumiko Suzuki is originally from Gunma, Japan. She started Ballet at the age of 6. After studying at Japan woman's physical education college in Tokyo, she started to teach yoga, pilates and dance and moved to New York for improving her dance. She is a one of the Jazz Roots dance Company's original member and has been performing at numerous performances. 



Closing event
Saturday May 24th, 4pm

Vernita N'Cognita will be performing with Cat Casual


Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001

phone: 212-947-6100
art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/

"The New Horizon" photography exhibition, Opening Event: May 1st, 7pm "into the crystal" Butoh performance by Mariko Endo



May 1st, 7pm  
at Ceres Gallery (547 West 27th St Suite 201)

 "into the crystal" 
Butoh dance performance by Mariko Endo   


photo©FredHatt  


Mariko Endo is a professional Japanese Butoh Dancer who trained with Akira Kasai, one of the co-founders of the Butoh movement.  She toured Japan and the United States as a principal dancer in Japan’s representative Butoh companies, Dairakudakan.  In addition to her foundation of dance, she studied anthropology and energy healing, all which influence her approach to dance as a sculpture of consciousness.  Since moving to New York, she has been active in many dance and multi-media projects.  Mariko collaborates with legendary sound artist Liz Phillips, one of the pioneers in creating interactive sound sculptures, and with Tobias Hutzler, an international photographer, a regular contributor to The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine and The New York Times. She appears in Fabrizio Chiesa's short film, Forest Jewels (Aurora Lopez Mejia Jewelry).
http://mariko-butohnyc.blogspot.com/
  
Ceres gallery 

547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001
 phone: 212-947-6100
art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/


New Horizon -- Artist Note


On March 11, 2011 at 2:46 PM, an earthquake with a magnitude of 8.9 struck off the coast of northern Japan – Tohoku – and triggered a 30-foot Tsunami that wiped out entire towns and villages, and killed more than 20,000 people. At the time, I was in Japan visiting my cancer-stricken mother in my hometown of Osaka. Luckily, Osaka is located about 400 miles west from Tohoku and was affected by only a few tremors, but I witnessed the devastation on television every day for the next few weeks with my mother. She passed away in June that year.

A year later, in June 2012, I returned to Osaka again from NYC for the one year anniversary of my mother’s passing, and got an opportunity to visit my old friend from NY who now lives in Sendai city, which is the capital city of Miyagi Prefecture in the Tohoku region. She suggested that I visit the area hit by the tsunami and photograph the recovery process. She knew some of the areas well, since she had been working as a volunteer caseworker for tsunami survivors who were living in temporary housing. As a result, by December of that year, I had made three trips to the coastal towns hit hardest - Higashimatsushima, Ishinomaki, Onagawa and Minamisanriku in Miyagi, and Rikuzentakata in Iwate Prefecture.

During my first visit in June to one of those regions – Shizugawa, Minamisanriku town, I was struck by the emptiness of the vast landscape on the flat horizon. The massive tsunami water had swept away not only the seaside area, but had reached as far as six miles (10 km) inland, and had destroyed the entire region, including train stations and railways. Since it was 15 months after the disaster, most survivors had been moved from evacuation shelters to temporary housing units, which were located in elevated places. But the town was not silent, rather, it was filled with the lively noise of truck traffic and the sound of heavy machinery.

By then, many tsunami-wrecked houses had been roughly removed from the sites and only their foundations were left on the muddy ground with other debris. A few concrete buildings remained standing, with exposed steel frames and broken windows. By the seaside, mountains of debris were lined up and construction workers with cranes kept working busily. The debris was a reminder of the lost community. Among the scattered fragments I encountered a vintage steam locomotive which had drifted from the town’s park.

During my trip, I noticed that every city I went had a special spot for visitors to mourn. One of those in the town of Minamisanriku was a metal-framed former Disaster Management Center. The building stood alone in a field of weeds, decorated with thousands of paper cranes where visitors and tour buses routinely stopped to pay their respects. In the city of Kesennuma, the memorial was a big fishing vessel - the Kyotokumaru No.18, which stood in a residential district next to a busy intersection. The ship had been swept over a half mile inland from the city's dock by the tsunami. (*The ship was destroyed in the fall of 2013 after a citywide vote to do so).

The “Miracle Pine Tree” in the city of Rikuzentakata in the Iwate Prefecture may be the most well known of all; a sole surviving tree among 70,000 pine trees which had been standing along the town's coastline for 250 years. The tree became a symbol of hope in the region, but was cut down in September 2012 after its roots died. The tree was later returned to the original spot by inserting a metal skeleton into its trunk and adding replica branches, to be preserved forever. I was fortunate to visit the original tree and could feel its spirit and energy before it was replaced.

During my visit in early September, I found sunflowers widely blooming across the coastal regions in the cities of Ishinomaki and Rikuzentakata. Their bright yellow colors accenting the landscape reminded me of the people who passed there, as well as a celebration of new life. I heard later that the sunflowers were planted as part of a project to cheer up the people in the region, as well as for the effectiveness of the flowers in removing sea-salt from the soil with their roots. (*Some other prefectures like Fukushima, where the situation was much more complicated, were using sunflowers for absorbing radiation).

On December 10, 2012, I made my last trip to Tohoku. The first thing I noticed in Minamisanriku was that the once muddy ground was now widely flooded by seawater, and the bottoms of the remaining building lots were submerged under sea level. As I talked to local residents, I sadly found out that these lands were at increasingly high risk of submersion with the tide level change by the ground subsidence that accompanied the earthquake. Because of this situation, there was on-going discussion of the relocation of the entire community into much more elevated inland areas, and of the original town being turned into a memorial park.

The next day, I visited the city of Higashimatsushima via Ishinomaki. This day marked one year and nine months since the disaster. At 2:46 PM, I heard a long siren go off, and then the construction noises suddenly stopped. I saw a group of people gathered in the yard of one of the broken houses start chanting quietly. The house was visible from afar with its colorful flower designs and the English word “Home” painted on its outer walls.

When I first visited the town six months before, I was speechless at the view I encountered, of many wrecked houses standing ghostlike. Now I recognized that the town was in the slow process of restoration, and those remaining shattered houses were being removed one after another by crane trucks. Under the cloudy winter sky, weeds had changed their colors from green to gold, and shone brightly along with a makeshift altar on the fields. On the horizon, I saw a hawk flying low over the houses and dry trees.

I have not returned to Tohoku since then. At this time, I just want to say thank you to the people there, who provided me with a great opportunity to learn about the region and photograph their beautiful land. 

I believe and pray for their recovery.

Thank you.

The Sunset, Shizugawa, Minamisanriku, Miyagi, Dec. 10, 2012


The New Horizon - Scenes in northern Japan nearly two years after the disaster - Photography







*The Sunflower, Ishinomaki, Miyagi, Sept. 11, 2012
*The Hawk, Higashimatsushima, Miyagi, Dec. 11, 2012       



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Masayo Nishimura
The New Horizon - Scenes in northern Japan nearly two years after the disaster
Photography

April 29 - May 24, 2014
Opening Reception, Thursday, May 1st, 6pm - 8pm



Ceres gallery is pleased to present Masayo Nishimura’s The New Horizon - Scenes in northern Japan nearly two years after the disaster, a solo exhibition of Nishimura’s photographs. The Opening Reception will take place on Thursday, May 1st from 6pm until 8pm. The artist will be present.

This exhibition features Nishimura's color photographs that were shot in the regions of the northern Pacific coast of Japan from mid to late 2012.  This is the area hit hardest by the Great Tohoku Kanto Earthquake & Tsunami on March 11, 2011.

In this series, Nishimura focuses on capturing moments in the restoration process by setting the scenes on the horizon under the sky. She captures images such as a field full of sunflowers under rain clouds, a locomotive lying in a mountain of debris, a bird flying over shattered houses in a field, a metal-framed building standing alone on a flooded seawater plain, and a makeshift altar shining brightly among the winter grasses.

She also photographed noted monuments in regions such as the Kyotokumaru No. 18 in Kesennuma city, a fishing vessel which was swept over a half mile inland from the city's dock by the tsunami, and the Miracle Pine Tree in Rikuzentakata city, the sole surviving tree among 70,000 pine trees on the coast. Nishimura visited right before the tree was cut down as part of the project to preserve it.

As we have seen in Nishimura’s previous series of NYC subway photographs, her image making is simple and spontaneous in style but appears uniquely quiet, fictitious and somehow meditative. However in this exhibition, each of her images also directly communicates with the viewer about what the regions have been through since the day of disaster, such as devastating loss, overwhelming sadness and emptiness as well as a glimpse of hope and strength in the areas’ long recovery process.

March 11, 2014 marked the three year anniversary of the disaster. Nishimura hopes her images will help people outside of Japan gain a better understanding of the regions’ on-going recovery effort.


* All the shots are taken handheld with a 120 mm film camera and digitally C-printed on Kodak & Fuji paper.


About the Artist

Masayo Nishimura is a native of Osaka, Japan. In 1993, she began her study of photography at CUNY Hunter College under Professor Mark Feldstein, where she discovered her interest in NYC subway stations. Since then, her subway-themed photographic works have been exhibited in various galleries around New York City.  In 1999, while continuing her study of photography, she also completed her MFA in Computer Art. Her thesis animation film, Dream – a subway love story – has been screened worldwide, including at the Museum of Modern Art as an official selection of the New Directors/New Films Festival, sponsored by the Cinema Society of Lincoln Center and MOMA.


In 2000, she started working on a series of color photographs dealing with the lights and shadows created by subway architecture. The work, entitled Uptown Bound, was first exhibited in September 2001 in New York City and has been receiving enthusiastic responses from viewers. Since 2008, she has often returned to her native land and captured everyday scenes in the Tokyo subway and street. Those works were first exhibited in 2011, in an exhibition titled Recollections: From New York to Tokyo, which evoked responses from viewers as the transformation of an everyday scene into a unique expression that unexpectedly tells a story.


For more information please contact:

Stefany Benson
Director, Ceres Gallery
547 West 27th St Suite 201 New York, NY 10001

phone: 212-947-6100
fax: 212-202-5455

art@ceresgallery.org
http://ceresgallery.org/

Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm - 6pm and Thursday 12-8pm.

Masayo Nishimura:
mniart@aol.com
http://multisoup.com