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Established in 1996 |
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Thursday, September 11, 2025 |
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The Real Art World at the American University |
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Sculpture detail from Genna Watson's. Bones of the Tiger,/Knitting Warm Garments. Courtesy the artist.
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WASHINGTON, D.C.- The American University Museum presents the exhibit The Real (Art) World: 5 Curators, 5 Artists, 1 Museum through August 20. Adapting its title from the popular MTV program, this show offers five unique views of whats real in the art world today. The organizers are five first-time curators who, in conjunction with American University Museum Director and Curator Jack Rasmussen's Curatorial Practice Course, each chose and worked with an artist to make a solo presentation.
Roxana Martin, an AU alum (SPA/MPA 82) and docent at the American University Museum currently living in Bethesda, Md., will be presenting a sculpture installation by Genna Watson, Bones of the Tiger/Knitting Warm Garments. Watsons installation consists of four ladders juxtaposed with four sculptural elements and an androgynous figure made of wire mesh covered with an array of media. Watson covers the floor with tar paper where lines of talc and chalk form a matrix creating a unified space. A well known sculptor in the Washington, D.C. area, Watsons work deals with issues of mortality.
Bernard Birnbaum, an American University undergraduate student from Rochester, N.Y., will be presenting works of blown glass by Dave DOrio. DOrio has created a connected series of blown glass vessels specifically for The Real (Art) World. The series embodies his ideas of modern currents within the art world. DOrio has been working with glass for a number of years and is currently based in the Washington, D.C. area.
Daniela Rutigliano, an American University graduate student from Boonton, N.J., will be presenting an Ariel Goldberg photography project called Watching Television. This series of large format, color photographs documents several television viewers, revealing how people react, watch and feel when they are in front of television screens. Goldberg is a New York City based poet and photographer who believes that her role as an artist is to conduct social experiments.
Nicole Ferdinando, a Catholic University undergraduate student from Staten Island, N.Y., will be presenting recent works by Marie Ringwald. Ringwald uses the simple architectural language of buildings such as warehouses, factories and farm houses, as a source of inspiration for her work. Her works of sculptural reliefs and free standing pieces are made out of wood, rubber, glass and sheet metals the same materials as her sources of inspiration. Rural by nature, these works offer a temporal escape from the hum of city living, particularly for Ringwald, a Washington, D.C.based artist.
Meg Ferris, an American University graduate student from Wilmington, Del., will be presenting five works of ink and acrylic on silk by Jiha Moon. Moons pieces focus on works of nature and landscape that juxtapose traditional Korean and contemporary American symbols, images and colors, creating works that are familiar, yet completely unexpected. Trained in her native Seoul, Korea as well as in the United States, Moon is currently a resident of Atlanta, Ga.
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