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Beyond/In Western New York 2007

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The Albright-Knox has issued its press release for Beyond/In Western New York for 2007. The expanded regional art exhibition Invites artists from Central New York, Northwestern Pennsylvania, Northeastern Ohio, and Southern Ontario to submit work, with applications due on Thursday, June 1, 2007. The press release follows.

Thanks to the resounding success of the expanded biennial exhibition Beyond/In Western New York 2005, 12 local visual arts institutions will again join forces with the Albright-Knox Art Gallery for the 2007 presentation of this ambitious project. The new format has reenergized this long-standing exhibition, originally conceived by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in 1977 as the invitational In Western New York. It is open to both emerging and established artists in the eastern Great Lakes region.

Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, 14222, 716.882.8700.
For more information, contact Cheryl Orlick, Director of External Relations, 716.270.8204, corlick@albrightknox.org.

Beyond/In Western New York 2007 is again extending the geographical parameters outside In Western New York’s original scope to encompass multi-points North, South, East, and West by showcasing artists from Central New York (west to Utica), Southern Ontario (to Toronto and London area), Northeastern Ohio (to Cleveland), and Northwestern Pennsylvania (Erie region).

Artists working in all media—film, installation, multi media, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture, and video—are encouraged to submit examples of their work.

In praise of Beyond/In Western New York 2005, Buffalo News art critic Richard Huntington wrote that it was ”…an extraordinary cultural idea…indeed a serious look, and wildly ambitious. The exhibition bites off so much that has the very real possibility of bringing the region to the attention of critics, commentators, curators, and other artists in the participating cities, if not beyond.”

In her review for Canada’s national newspaper The Globe and Mail, Toronto-based art critic Sarah Milroy wrote, “One thing is immediately clear; here, in this new environment, collaboration is the name of the game. Art people in Buffalo work well together, creating in this instance, a multivoiced extravaganza that explores the region and expands its sense of place.” In the 2005 exhibition, Ontario was particularly well represented with 17 artists from Toronto and Southern Ontario.

Due to the magnitude of this project, the selection process is a lengthy one. A committee of curators representing each of the participating institutions will review all submissions. After an initial review, studio visits will be made to determine the final group of participants. Last year out of 85 studio visits, 58 artists were selected. Once selections have been made, the committee will choose the appropriate exhibition site for each artist’s work.

Big Orbit Gallery, Buffalo Arts Studio, Burchfield-Penney Art Center, Carnegie Art Center, Castellani Art Museum of Niagara University, CEPA Gallery, El Museo Francisco Oller y Diego Rivera, Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, Langston Hughes Institute, Squeaky Wheel, University at Buffalo (UB) Art Gallery, and UB Anderson Gallery will be both co-organizers and co-curators.

“It was extremely gratifying to collaborate so successfully with so many exceptional local arts organizations and their professional staffs on the first Beyond/In Western New York exhibition,” said Albright-Knox Art Gallery Director Louis Grachos. “This time we are hoping to expand the project even further by increasing the number of submissions from artists outside of Western New York.”

Beyond/In Western New York 2007 will premiere at all 12 venues during a single weekend of openings in September 2007.





Gabrielle Bouliane January 15, 2007 12:42 AM

Hmm.. .Rather than merely saying "it's crap", how about starting a show *you* like, instead? I frequently hear people talking about what's wrong without offering any other solution. Things only get better by offering answers.

Af January 16, 2007 04:29 PM

Why crap Stagboy? Because it won't contain any large, airbrushed epic paintings of unicorns and monster trucks?