Photography

Naomi Spellman

Title: 
Lecturer
FirstName: 
Naomi
LastName: 
Spellman
Contact Info: 

lspellman@ucsd.edu

Biography: 
Naomi Spellman is a transmedia artist and educator. Exhibited work includes locative media, networked narratives, video, interactive computer-based works, photography, and graphic prints. Her work has been exhibited in the U.S. and abroad. Venues have included Futuresonic <4> (Manchester, UK), the LA Freewaves Festival (Los Angeles) the Art in Motion Festival (Los Angeles), ASCII Digital 2000 (New York), The Harvard Map Collection (Cambridge), and the DART IV Symposium on Digital Arts and Culture (London, UK). She teaches computing arts in the Interdisciplinary Computing Arts Program at the University of California, San Diego, at San Diego State University, and the Orange Coast Community College. Currently Naomi and artistic collaborator Jeff Knowlton are Artists in Residence at California Institute of the Arts.

Rubén Ortiz-Torres

Title: 
Professor
FirstName: 
Rubén
LastName: 
Ortiz-Torres
Contact Info: 

ruortiz@ucsd.edu

Location: 
Visual Arts Facility 602
Biography: 
Rubén Ortiz-Torres is an artist who joined the Visual Arts Department effective Fall 2001. He began his career as a photographer, printmaker, and painter in the early 1980s, well before he received his M.F.A. from the California Institute of Arts in 1992. Ortiz-Torres is a Mexican-born artist who has been living and working in Los Angeles since 1990. Ortiz-Torres is widely regarded as one of today's leading Mexican artists and as an innovator in the 1980s of a specifically Mexican form of postmodernism. Over the past ten years, he has produced a body of work in a wide range of media -- extended series of photographs, series of altered readymades, a feature film, several videos (including three in 3D), large scale video installations, major painting series, sculptures, customized cars and machines, photocollages, performances and curated exhibitions. Since 1982, Ortiz-Torres's work has been featured in 25 solo exhibitions, over 100 group shows in the United States, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, and more than 50 screenings of his films and video works. Over 150 written pieces cover his work in mainstream media such as The Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, Reforma (Mexico), La Jornada (Mexico), and El Pais (Spain); in significant art world publications with international circulation such as ArtForum, Art Images, Frieze, New Art Examiner, Poliester, Bomb, Flash Art, and Art in America; and in numerous exhibition catalogues and books. Ortiz-Torres has been the recipient of numerous awards and grants from, to name a few, teh Andrea Frank Foundation, the Foundations for Contemporary Performance Art, the U.S. Mexico Fund for Culture, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the Banff Center for the Arts, and the Fullbright Foundation.

Fred Lonidier

Title: 
Professor
FirstName: 
Fred
LastName: 
Lonidier
Contact Info: 

flonider@ucsd.edu

Biography: 
Fred Lonidier studied at Yuba College and San Francisco State (graduate work in sociology and photography) before becoming a member of our graduate program. He joined the faculty in 1972. Lonidier's work deals with the sociological possibilities of photography applied to social change and has been exhibited at the Houston Center for Photography, the Oakland Museum, the Long Beach Museum, the San Francisco Art Institute, the Focus Gallery, the Kitchen, the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York City, the Los Angeles Institute for Contemporary Art, the Whitney in New York, and the Friends of Photography in Carmel. He has also had exhibits in a number of union halls such as the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, ACTWU, SEIU, CWA, and Gallery 1199 of the NYC Hospital Workers Union. In 1983 he placed a large photo/text installation in the San Diego-Imperial Counties Labor Council. He has been the guiding energy behind Labor Link TV which cablecasts on three channels in San Diego County. His work has recently turned toward cross-border labor struggles and solidarity between U.S. and Mexican workers. He had a show of this work at the University of San Diego in the fall of 1997. Selected reviews of his work include "Post-documentary," Diane Nuemaier, Afterimage, January, 1984; "Art & Ideology" catalog, Benjamin Buchloh, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City, 1984; "Dismantling Modernism, Reinventing Documentary...," Allan Sekula, Photography Against the Grain: Essays and Photo Works 1973-1983, October, 1984; "Popular Expressions," Fred Pfeil, The Nation, February 14, 1987; "Toward a New Social Documentary," Grant Kester, Afterimage, March, 1987; "Living With Contradictions," Abigail Solomon-Godeau, in Universal Abandon?, Andrew Ross, ed., U of M Press, Minneapolis, MN, 1989; "Class Pictures: Teaching About Photography to Labor Studies Students," Fred Glass, Exposure, vol. 28, nos. 1/2, 1991 (photos); "A Sense of Positive Horizons: For Labor, About Labor, By Labor at SFAI," Barrett Watten, Artweek, July 9, 1992; "Rise of New Documentary Photography in the US," Shaohua Huang, People's Photography, Aug. 5 & 12, 1992, People's Rep. of China. Courses taught by Lonidier include Introduction to Photography, Photographic Strategies, Camera Techniques, Generating the Narrative, and Art and Politics.

Louis Hock

Title: 
Professor
FirstName: 
Louis
LastName: 
Hock
Contact Info: 

lhock@ucsd.edu

Location: 
VAF 453
Biography: 
Louis Hock began making films when he was studying psychology and poetry at the University of Arizona, graduating with a BA in Psychology in 1970. In 1973 he received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Louis Hock's artwork - films, video tapes, and media installations - have been exhibited in solo shows at numerous national and international art institutions including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. In 1986 Hock completed a four part, four-hour video about the life and times of a community of undocumented Mexican workers in southern California, THE MEXICAN TAPES: A Chronicle of Life Outside the Law. The series was broadcast internationally on the PBS in the U.S., BBC in the U.K., and Televisa in Latin America. THE AMERICAN TAPES, a follow-up to that series is now in production with an anticipated release date of 2010. Along with the production of work for institutionalized sites such as theaters and galleries, since 1980 Hock has been engaged in a public art practice. The early 80s works, Southern California, an itinerant cinema mural, and NATURE, a searchlight/freeway signage installation, directly addressed the audience at public sites. This was followed by a series of seven collaborative, intentionally provocative media events initiated by an art gesture. Dealing with the Superbowl and San Diego's undocumented Mexican work force, the first was a bus billboard project in 1988, Welcome to America's Finest Tourist Plantation. In 1990, the “NHI”(No Humans Involved) project --- a billboard, book, gallery installation, performance, and panel -- addressed the fate of 45 locally murdered women. In 1993, Art Rebate/Arte Reembolso, sponsored by the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego and the Centro Cultural de La Raza, opened a dialogue on the “undocumented taxpayer” through as a media event. Installations based on these collaborative projects have traveled to the Wexner Center (2004), the Puerto Rico Triennial (2004), Museo del Barrio in New York City (2008), and Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City (2011) and other locations. Friendly Fire, was sponsored in 1996 by the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. The collaborative project consisted of a store and factory installation in San Diego, a website, and exhibition in Los Angeles at the Museum site. In 2000, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art commissioned Hock, in collaboration with David Avalos, Elizabeth Sisco, Deborah Small and Scott Kessler, to develop a new art project for “Made in California: Art, Image, and Identity, 1900-2000” titled oracle@casa_de_cambio. These public and collaborative projects have been reviewed in Artforum, Art in America, The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times, most recently “Money Changes Everything,” Ken Johnson, July 14, 2006. Writings on Hock's public artwork appear in Afterimage, Summer 1994; Is It Art?, Bay Press, 1994; Dialogues on Public Art, MIT Press, 2000; Art After Appropriation: Essays on art in the 1990s, Breach & Gordon, London, 2000; Intervention: Issues in Installation and Site-Specific Art, Univ. of Minnesota Press, 2000, and The Expediency of Culture: the Uses of Culture in the Global Era, George Yudice, Duke University Press, 2004.                                                                                                                                          In 1997 Hock participated in inSITE97, an international exhibition spanning the U.S./Mexico border region with his installation, International Waters / Aguas Internacionales. Poinsettia, a multimedia installation by Hock, was commissioned by the Ex Teresa Arte Actual in Mexico City in 2000/01. The work centered on the Flor de Noche Buena (the Poinsettia plant), and its emblematic relationship to U.S.& Mexico. La Panaderia in Mexico City exhibited Hock's Piramide del Sol: A Monument to Invisible Labor in 2002. In the fall of 2003 the International Center for Photography in New York showed Hock's photos, the Nightscope Series, in their traveling exhibition, “Only Skin Deep,” curated by Brian Wallis and Coco Fusco. At LAMOCA 2004, Hock screened a new media installation, FERAL, as part of the LA Freewaves event and again in 2009 at the Montalvo Center.  A single channel version of the FERAL work has traveled to many international locations including the Oberhausen Film Festival, Casa de Cultura de Espana in Buenos Aires, and Reina Sofia in Madrid.  The Long Beach University Art Museum filled its space with Hock’s installations, including American Desert, as a large one-person show in 2006. Hock's commissioned permanent video installation, Homeland, opens in 2011 at LAX.   In 2004, Hock screened a new digital version of his 1979 cine-mural, Southern California, at the Getty Center for a one-person event and again, as part of the Pacific Standard Time pan-institution exhibition in 2011, portions of that work will be a component of a gallery installation at the Getty.                                                                                                                                                      Hock has been the recipient of numerous awards and grants including the National Endowment for the Arts, the American Film Institute, the Rockefeller Foundation, and California Arts Council (2002). At the University, his research is associated with the Center for Latin American Studies (CILAS), Center for U.S./Mexican Studies, and the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA).                                                                                                                       More information and images: www.louishock.info

Eleanor Antin

Title: 
Professor Emeritus
FirstName: 
Eleanor
LastName: 
Antin
Contact Info: 

eantin@ucsd.edu

Biography: 
An artist/filmmaker working for many years in installation, photography, video, film, performance, drawing and writing, Antin has an international reputation. She has had one woman exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, the Wadsworth Atheneum, the La Jolla Museum (now the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art), the Long Beach Museum, etc., as well as a major 30-year retrospective at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, which traveled to several venues in the U.K. and included a book catalogue. She has created major installations at the Hirschhorn Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Fine Arts, the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, the Jewish Museum in New York City, among others. She is represented in major collections including the Art Institute of Chicago, the Whitney Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Jewish Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, etc. As a performance artist she has appeared in venues around the world including the Venice Biennale and the Ford Theatre in Washington, D.C. Several of her mixed media, groundbreaking works such as 100 Boots, CARVING: A Traditional Sculpture, The Angel of Mercy, Recollections of my Life with Diaghilev, The King of Solana Beach, The Adventures of a Nurse, are frequently referred to as classics of feminist, postmodern art. As an artist she is represented by the Ronald Feldman Gallery in New York. She has written three books, Being Antinova (Astro Artz) and Eleanora Antinova Plays (Sun & Moon) and The Man Without A World; a film script (Green Integer) and a photo book 100 Boots (Running Press). She has made nine videotapes, among them Representational Painting, 1971, The Ballerina and the Bum, 1973, The Little Match Girl Ballet, 1975 and From the Archives of Modern Art, 1989, (all tapes distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix). She has written, directed and produced narrative films, among them the feature, The Man Without a World, 1991, (Berlin Film Festival, U.S.A. Film Fest., Ghent Film Fest., London Jewish, San Francisco Jewish, Women in Film, etc.) and The Last Night of Rasputin, 1989, (premiered with a live performance in a two-week run at the Whitney Museum), (all films distributed by Milestone Film & Video, N.Y.), and the video installations Loves of a Ballerina, 1986, Vilna Nights, 1993, and Minetta Lane, 1995. Her most recent awards include several AICA (International Association of Art Critics) awards including one in 2003 for best gallery show for “The Last Days of Pompeii”, a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1997 and the National Foundation for Jewish Culture Media Achievement Award in 1998. Antin has been a Professor of Visual Arts at the University of California at San Diego since 1975 where she was the recipient of the UCSD Chancellor's Associates Award for Excellence in Art in 1996. Antin's most recent work includes the Sydney Biennale with performances at the Sydney Opera House and the premier of a major new photographic work The Last Days of Pompeii at the Ronald Feldman Gallery in New York, the Kunsthalle in Vienna, the Craig Krull Gallery in Los Angeles and the Marella Arte Contemporanea Gallery in Milan, Italy. Her newest photographic piece “Roman Allegories” premiered in New York at the Ronald Feldman Gallery in Feb. 2005 and the Marella D’Arte Contemporary Gallery in Milan.

Amy Adler

Title: 
Associate Professor
FirstName: 
Amy
LastName: 
Adler
Biography: 
Amy Adler received her BFA at Cooper Union in 1989 and her MFA from UCLA in 1995. Before coming to UCSD in the fall of 2004 Amy taught at UC Irvine, Art Center and CalArts. Amy has had one person shows in galleries in Los Angeles, New York, London, Berlin, Tokyo and Milan. In 1998 she had one person show at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. Her project, Amy Adler Photographs Leonardo DiCaprio, was shown at the Photographers Gallery in London in 2001 and then at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles in 2002. She has been included in many international museum group exhibitions including The Kwanju Biennial, in Korea, Form Follows Fiction, at the Castello Di Rivoli in Turin, Italy and The Americans, at the Barbican in London. In the spring of 2005 Twin Palms Press released a monograph of her work entitled, Amy Adler Young Photographer. In 2006-2007 Amy will have one person shows at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego and The Aspen Art Museum in Aspen, Colorado. Amy's website: http://www.amyadler.com
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