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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231128T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231128T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220343
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000463-1701162000-1701190800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-28/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231127T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231127T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220343
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000405-1701082800-1701100800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-27/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231127T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231127T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220343
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000462-1701075600-1701104400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-27/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231124T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231124T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220343
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000461-1700816400-1700845200@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-24/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231123T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231123T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220343
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000404-1700737200-1700755200@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-23/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231123T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231123T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000460-1700730000-1700758800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-23/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231122T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231122T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000403-1700650800-1700668800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-22/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231122T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231122T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000459-1700643600-1700672400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-22/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231121T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231121T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000402-1700564400-1700582400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-21/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231121T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231121T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000458-1700557200-1700586000@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-21/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231120T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231120T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000401-1700478000-1700496000@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-20/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231120T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231120T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000457-1700470800-1700499600@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-20/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231117T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231117T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000456-1700211600-1700240400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-17/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231116T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231116T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000400-1700132400-1700150400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-16/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231116T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231116T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000455-1700125200-1700154000@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-16/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231115T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231115T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000399-1700046000-1700064000@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-15/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231115T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231115T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000454-1700038800-1700067600@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-15/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231114T205117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231114T232552Z
UID:10000447-1699984800-1699992000@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore Artist Reception
DESCRIPTION:The Harris Gallery is pleased to present this exhibition of paintings\, assemblage\, and installations. Join us for an artist reception on November 14th from 6-8 PM.
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-artist-reception/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition,Artist Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/ULV-HARRISGALLERY_MASTHEAD_CLUTTERCORE.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000398-1699959600-1699977600@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-14/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000453-1699952400-1699981200@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-14/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231113T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231113T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220344
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000397-1699873200-1699891200@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-13/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231113T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231113T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000452-1699866000-1699894800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-13/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231110T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231110T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000451-1699606800-1699635600@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-10/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231109T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231109T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000396-1699527600-1699545600@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-09/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231109T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231109T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000450-1699520400-1699549200@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-09/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231108T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231108T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000395-1699441200-1699459200@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-08/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231108T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231108T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000449-1699434000-1699462800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-08/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231107T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231107T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000394-1699354800-1699372800@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-07/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Harris Art Gallery 1950 3rd Street La Verne CA 91750 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1950 3rd Street:geo:-117.7732346,34.1008542
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231107T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231107T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231115T012856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T212942Z
UID:10000448-1699347600-1699376400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Wonderland: Selections From the La Verne Art Collection
DESCRIPTION:By Damairis Lao\, Rachel Sheng\, and Yek Wong \nWonderland presents paintings by AAPI artists and celebrates voices that explore self-expression as portraiture\, landscape\, and abstraction. \nDamairis Lao’s acrylic on-panel portrait Branovan presents a figure with carefully rendered warm tones and defined features. The background is a cool atmospheric blue that may allude to an imaginary space that is calm and contemplative. With his vision obscured by a brassiere\, the subject seems to be caught between feelings of vulnerability and desire. \nRachel Sheng’s Untitled acrylic on canvas painting has eye-catching optic energy dancing around airy and gentle open spaces. Expressive marks of concentrated colors tangle\, twist\, smear\, and spread; these gestural maneuvers and compositional layers build a complex abstract picture. \nSingaporean-born artist Yek Wong’s Cabriolet Las Vegas to Los Angeles is a shaped canvas in a landscape format. While living in Las Vegas and driving back-and-forth to Los Angeles he photographed the desert\, roadway\, and setting sun through the windshield and side windows of his VW Cabriolet. With black\, orange\, and ochre color block sections\, the abstract canvas becomes a record of his road trip experience and presents a minimal\, almost sci-fi\, landscape. \nFor additional information please contact Dion Johnson djohnson@laverne.edu or 909.593.3511 x 4383
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/wonderland-selections-from-the-la-verne-art-collection/2023-11-07/
LOCATION:Campus Center\, West Gallery\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Wonderland.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231106T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231106T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T220345
CREATED:20231026T202903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T230319Z
UID:10000393-1699268400-1699286400@laverne.edu
SUMMARY:Cluttercore\, Rasquachismo\, and the Indelible Need to Display
DESCRIPTION:For millennia\, humans have sought to arrange possessions in a way that was aesthetically pleasing\, or at least\, that pleased that specific person. Cluttercore\, a recent maximalist interior design aesthetic that focuses on presenting one’s collections\, has been gaining popularity as many strove to beautify and personalize their dwellings during the throes of COVID lockdowns. Cluttercore is based in a desire to display the objects that bring comfort and describe the owner’s life through collections\, and push back against sparse\, anesthetized interiors that define fashionable living. Similarly\, rasquachismo is also an aesthetic and lifestyle born of a scrappiness and necessity to beautify\, tied with identity projection\, and in rejection of minimalism. Rasquachismo describes the mentality and design technique of Chicanos (Mexican Americans) in creating splendor from whatever is at hand\, in what could often be described as detritus\, junk\, or kitsch. In these modes of presentation\, what is centerstage is repurposing\, recontextualizing found objects\, and arranging them in an appealing way. \nThis exhibit recognizes the shared kinship between rasquachismo and cluttercore as domestic aesthetics\, and seeks to interrogate the core purposes of each as they relate to curating\, display\, lifestyle\, and distinct opposition to dominant trends. \nParticipating artists: Mandy Cano Villalobos\, Melora Garcia\, Julia Emiliani\, Tessie Salcido Whitmore\, Anna Valdez\, Jacqueline Valenzuela \nCurated by Rachel T. Schmid
URL:https://laverne.edu/event/cluttercore-rasquachismo-and-the-indelible-need-to-display/2023-11-06/
LOCATION:Harris Art Gallery\, 1950 3rd Street\, La Verne\, CA\, 91750\, United States
CATEGORIES:Art Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://laverne.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/art-exhibition-mandy-cano-villalobos_whistle-for-a-fly-2023.jpg
GEO:34.1008542;-117.7732346
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END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR