Meet our Fellowship Recipient in Photography!

Each year, RISCA presents a fellowship and a merit award in 13 disciplines. These grants encourage the creative development of artists by enabling them to set aside time to pursue their creative work, and celebrate the amazing artists that make Rhode Island home. In the spring grant deadline, fellowship and merit award recipients are selected in 7 disciplines: crafts, film & video, fiction, poetry, play & screenwriting, photography, and three dimensional art. Over the past week or so, we have featured the 14 recipients.

Barboza-GuboJuan Jose Barboza-Gubo
Fellowship Recipient in Photography

Juan submitted 10 images from his series Virgenes de La Puerta, which honors the transgender women of Peru. Panelists described this work as political and important and human, as well as praising the technical aspects, especially the lighting and composition, of the works.

Juan Jose Barboza-Gubo (Peru, 1976) received his Bachelors Degree at Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru. He has received MFA degrees in both painting and sculpture from Massachusetts College of Art and Design. He has had numerous exhibitions in the US, including shows at the Nielsen Gallery; The Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University; Chazan Gallery, Providence; The Fitchburg Museum; the06_Carol Attleboro Museum; and the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center. His work has been featured internationally in galleries and museums in Tokyo, Athens, and Italy, as well as the Cecilia Gonzales Gallery of Lima, Peru. Recent awards of note include first prizes in the 2008 Ceramic Biennial of the New Hampshire Institute of Art, and the 78th Regional Exhibition at the Fitchburg Museum in 2014. Also in 2014, he was named the Breakout Artist of the Year by Artscope Magazine. He is the recipient of two previous RISCA fellowships: painting in 2015 and sculpture in 2016. Barboza-Gubo currently teaches at Rhode Island College. www.barboza-gubo.com

 

Meet our Fellowship and Merit Recipients in Crafts!

Each year, RISCA presents a fellowship and a merit award in 13 disciplines. These grants encourage the creative development of artists by enabling them to set aside time to pursue their creative work, and celebrate the amazing artists that make Rhode Island home. In the spring grant deadline, fellowship and merit award recipients are selected in 7 disciplines: crafts, film & video, fiction, poetry, play & screenwriting, photography, and three dimensional art. Over the course of this week, we are pleased to introduce you to the 14 award recipients.

Copy of S85A5689.tiffJungil Hong
Fellowship Recipient in Crafts

Jungil submitted fiber works that are based in the sound of the loom weaving translated into binary code. The panelists described this work as visually striking, and appreciated the relationship between the abstract visual product and the creation process.

Jungil Hong is a Korean-American visual artist.  Since graduating RISD in 1999 with a BFA in Ceramics, she has been immersed in a strong community of artists and musicians in Providence RI. In the thirteen years of studio practice between receiving her BFA and returning to RISD for an MFA in Textiles, she developed work that incorporates printmaking, collaging, casting and metal. A professor helped herJungilHong.Image3 150 understand a philosophy of creation in which one’s hand is present in every aspect of making. As an undergrad, this idea of constructing the rope to suspend the object was revolutionary, and it fueled her curiosity to learn multiple processes.

“My interest in how an idea is manufactured has shifted as my work branches out into the textiles industry. It is vital for me to develop and understand relationships with manufacturers and producers, and this understanding helps build a new language to incorporate into my practice; a practice with themes rooted in systems and relationships.”

chris headshotChris Taylor
Merit Recipient in Crafts

Chris submitted primarily cold worked glass pieces. The panelists commented that this work takes craft technique and history and moves it forward into the contemporary art space in a surprising way, and that this work is inviting and inclusive by its familiarity.

Providence, RI artist Chris Taylor turns the mundane into the extraordinary. For twenty years, Taylor has been close-copying readymade objects in glass such as bubble wrap, Styrofoam, soap, plastic, and paper. These objects combine his interests in subversion, irony, and humor with beauty, elegance, and a reverence for the tradition of glassmaking. What is unique to Taylor’s practice is that his objects exist as both sculptures and functional parts of the home. Taylor aspires to expand his audience,

Explode Every Day: An Inquiry into the Phenomena of Wonder (installation view)

allowing his viewers to indulge in the tactile nature of these objects outside of an art context, by transforming his sculptures into functional objects that can be experienced physically in the everyday. Taylor was a part of the group exhibition Explode Every Day: An Inquiry into the Phenomena of Wonder at MASS MoCA in 2016, where his bubble wrap sculptures Apparent were on view.

Chris Taylor’s work transforms the daily conventional experience with things into a sculptural and performative art interaction. Particularly examining glass tradition and conventions, Taylor’s projects have included learning to blow glass upside down. Taylor teaches at the Rhode Island School of Design.

 

Meet our Fellowship and Merit Recipients in Poetry!

Each year, RISCA presents a fellowship and a merit award in 13 disciplines. These grants encourage the creative development of artists by enabling them to set aside time to pursue their creative work, and celebrate the amazing artists that make Rhode Island home. In the spring grant deadline, fellowship and merit award recipients are selected in 7 disciplines: crafts, film & video, fiction, poetry, play & screenwriting, photography, and three dimensional art. Over the next week or so, we are pleased to introduce you to the 14 award recipients.

Pickworth, 7-13-17Amy Pickworth
Fellowship Recipient in Poetry

Amy submitted 9 individual poems. The panelists particularly appreciated this work when read aloud, and described the language as elegant and assured.

Amy Pickworth’s poems have appeared in Dusie; Forklift, Ohio; New Ohio Review; Smartish Pace; Two Serious Ladies; and other journals. Her book Bigfoot for Women (Orange Monkey Publishing, intro by Matt Hart) was released in 2014. She lives in Providence with her husband and two children, and works as the editor of publications at the RISD Museum.

SatterleePhotoSarah Satterlee
Merit Recipient in Poetry

Sarah submitted 13 individual poems from a book currently in development. The panelists described these poems as carrying emphasis and significance, having an attunement to things in daily life that risk going unseen.

Sarah Satterlee was born in Westerly and grew up in Ashaway, Rhode Island. She is a graduate of Rhode Island College. Her writing has appeared in McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Rattle, The Pittsburgh Poetry Review, The Maine Review, Gamut, The Nasty Woman Project, and elsewhere. She has worked in the mental health field for several years, most recently as an acute care psychiatric nurse on the night shift. She lives in East Providence with her daughter. www.sarahasatterlee.com