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GALLERY TWO
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| Freeman,
Personal Demon-Rhino |
Subotnick,
Jelly Fishers video still |
Intimate Animals
Heather Freeman & Steve Subotnick
February 5 - March 27, 2010
Opening Reception: February 5, 6 - 10pm
Both
Heather Freeman and Steven Subotnick employ personification in their work,
utilizing animals to represent human emotions and traits in various scenarios.
The series presented by Freeman combines digital imaging with animation
to explore personal demons. Utilizing social networking technologies,
Freeman asked people to depict their own personal demons. Responses often
reflected self-perceived flaws or anxieties. These personal demons, however,
often pointed directly to a notable strength or positive quality of the
individual. Freeman’s series aims to celebrate self-perceived insecurities
as great unbeknownst strengths. Subotnick’s animated films are associative
explorations of themes found in history, folklore, and his own unconscious.
He treats each film as an intuitive essay on a particular subject. His
techniques are varied, but the poetic quality of the visual image is always
his primary concern. In the case of Jelly Fishers, a hand-drawn
animation (music by Igor Ballereau, Kenneth Kirschner, Aiden Baker, and
QQQ), Subotnick has created a psychological fantasy about hunger. A family
of anthropomorphic creatures lives in a little house at sea. They have
nothing to eat, but a visit from an irritating fly starts a chain of events
which leads to a meal for them all. Jellyfish are the currency of this
world. They are everything - from clouds to cradles, from fishing nets
to food.
Freeman is Assistant Professor of Digital Media at the University of North
Carolina-Charlotte where she teaches digital print, animation, video,
installation, and drawing. Freeman holds a BA in Fine Art and German Studies
from Oberlin College, OH, and a MFA in Studio Art from Rutgers University,
NJ.
Freeman’s work has been exhibited regionally and nationally and
has appeared in international exhibitions in Canada, China, Cuba, Germany,
Hungary, New Zealand, Sweden, and Thailand.
Subotnick earned his MFA in Experimental Animation from California Institute
of the Arts, Valencia, CA, in 1986. His independent films have screened
in festivals, galleries, and curated shows around the world, including
at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA and the Cincinnati Art
Museum, Cleveland, OH. He has worked as an animator, director, illustrator,
and author, and has taught animation at numerous institutions, including
Rhode Island School of Design, Harvard University, and most recently at
Wheaton College in Norton, MA.
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