Jacqueline Ferrante
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Visual artist based in NY and Italy.
Three of Asawa’s looped-wire sculptures are on view alongside work by 20 other international artists as part of the When Forms Come Alive exhibition at the Hayward Gallery in London through May 6, 2024! Spanning over 60 years of contemporary sculpture, the exhibition highlights ways in which artists draw on familiar experiences of movement, flux and organic growth.
Pictured: Installation views, When Forms Come Alive, Hayward Gallery, London, UK. February 7-May 6, 2024. Photographs by Jo Underhill, © Hayward Gallery. Artwork © 2024 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc./DACS, London. Courtesy David Zwirner
Art piece by Injiri
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Want to make your wardrobe more sustainable? Cut your new clothing purchases by 75% In the past 15 years, clothing production has doubled, draining our natural resources and using up Earth’s limited carbon budget. Here, sustainability researchers share four things that we ca…
Art piece by Clara Saldarriaga
Photo by Leyre Lopez de La paz
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Carpets by Atelier Talasin
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Art piece by Kelgwo
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Many thanks to all who came out for the egg tempera workshop at The Calling Bell!
Coming up soon // join us for some fun artist workshops at The Calling Bell this weekend and next! Contact [email protected] to register.
experiments with squid ink 🦑
my heart is so full from all the love in support of 𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑖 🧄 special thanks to .tattoo + everyone at for premiering the new space with my work and creating such a great community. The exhibition is on view until June 24!
The Calling Bell . 51 Gibson Ave, Huntington NY
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my heart is so full from all the love in support of 𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑖 🧄 special thanks to Brittany + everyone at The Calling Bell for premiering the new space with my work and creating such a great community. The exhibition is on view until June 24!
The Calling Bell . 51 Gibson Ave, Huntington NY
📷
my heart is so full from all the love and support this past weekend! special thanks to Brittany + everyone at The Calling Bell for premiering the new space with my work and creating such a great community. 𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑖 is on view until June 24!
📷 Julian Bracero
𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑖 opens tomorrow April 15 from 5-8pm at The Calling Bell in Huntington, NY. I hope to see you there 🌱
Getting ready for my upcoming solo exhibition 𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑖 opening this Saturday, April 15 from 5-8pm at The Calling Bell in Huntington, NY 🧄
The works featured in this 𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑖 were produced during my time spent in Puglia, Italy over the last few years. Radici, or “roots” in Italian, refers to the exploration of my familial roots in Puglia and the raw pigments I sourced from the land to create the series.
I hope to see you there!
intrecci di pietra
Grateful for | our connection, continued dialogue + her beautiful write-up on . Check it out below!
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It was such an honor to invite artist Jacqueline Ferrante [] for an on-site library visit a week or so ago. I first connected with Jacqueline over our mutual (art) interests in decoding/examining the surfaces and subtle narratives of historic, patinaed environments. The artist also divides her time between the U.S. and Italy, where she has participated in site-specific residencies and ongoing cultural exchanges.
As part of a new initiative where artists, designers, researchers, and writers are invited to our NYC-based library to exchange in creative dialogue, Jacqueline was an ideal guest, as we had so many threads in common. The visit felt like more of a reunion than a first encounter. We discussed her time in residency in Puglia as well as recent showings in Brooklyn and upstate New York. I was particularly struck by Jacqueline’s commitment to environmental concerns in Southern Italy and rural Sicily, and her sustained visits to these regions for research and outreach. Her process demonstrates care for these places as well as the inhabitants she feels deeply connected to.
Several library books that might resonate or sit in dialogue with Jacqueline’s work:
Architecture without Architects by Bernard Rudofsky
Marisa Merz: The Sky Is a Great Space edited by Connie Butler
The Neri Oxman Material Ecology Catalogue published by MoMA
The Oldest Living Things in the World by Rachel Sussman
‘Jacqueline Ferrante is a visual artist based in New York and Italy. Her work stems from her acute fascination with surfaces often overlooked in our natural and urban environments. Through various mark-making techniques, she captures imprints of these surfaces as a means of discussing the ever-increasing change in our natural world.’ – from the artist’s website [www.jacquelineferrante.com]
Thank you, Jacqueline, for taking the time to visit and share your process, travels, and evolving vision.
Photo credits: 1. 2. photo of the artist 3.
Excited to have this painting in 440 Gallery's annual small works show curated by Johnny Thornton! Join us for the opening reception this Saturday, November 19 from 4-6pm
440 6th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215
Thrilled to have two of my works included in 𝙃𝙚𝙧𝙚 𝙞𝙣 𝙎𝙥𝙞𝙧𝙞𝙩 🕷 a one night event honoring the occult and human connection, curated by +
Join us this Saturday for art, music, performances, poetry, a bonfire, potluck, and dancing. Costumes encouraged! 👻
𝙃𝙚𝙧𝙚 𝙞𝙣 𝙎𝙥𝙞𝙧𝙞𝙩
Saturday, October 29, 4pm to late
15 Nobletown Rd, Hillsdale, NY 12529
Select works are now available with Collective131 🖤
catch me at .outpost.apothecary for SUNDAZE tomorrow August 7 from 12-5pm. I'll be selling some small sculptures, paintings, brass hair pins + bracelets 🌞
Antidote Outpost Apothecary
381 Mcguinness Boulevard
Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY
Mar Grande in Taranto, Italy ~ September 2020
memories captured by during my residency in Puglia, Italy 🌻🌱🤎
impronte della cava, 2020 ~ mineral pigment on canvas at Cava di Bauxite, Italy
impronte di bosco, 2020 ~ charcoal rubbing in Bosco Dei Cuturi, Italy
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