Featured Faculty

 In this mesmerizing work by Carolyn Jacobs, part of The Missing Mountains series, the artist explores the relationship between beauty and destruction.  Growing up in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky was to bear witness to both on a daily basis.   In works like Hazard, Kentucky, she utilizes coal, oil, wax and reductive techniques to create aerial landscapes that hint at the destruction left by strip mining.

 Carolyn Jacobs has been a beloved Studio Art Instructor for 18 years at CPCC, who teaches Drawing I and II, Figure Drawing I and II, Design I, Watercolor, Art Appreciation, Painting I and II, and Portrait Painting.  Her impressive accolades include an MFA in Drawing from the University of Tennessee, and a BFA in Painting from Eastern Kentucky University.  She is on the National Steering Committee for the League for Innovation Art Competition; in 2007 Carolyn received a Parr Fellows Award for Excellence in Teaching and Advising, and in 2014, she was awarded Instructor of the Year.

 The timeless magic of symmetry, mystical creatures from Russian folk tales and a fascination with nature all combine to inspire artist, Advertising & Graphic Design Instructor, Nelli Levental, in her new series, Symmersion (Immersion in Symmetry).

Nelli’s process begins with captured photographs of “insignificant” moments she experiences during nature walks. These walks are a treasure hunt for Levental, and she can barely stand the anticipation of viewing these shots on the large screen.  As Nelli states, “every shot that I kept was telling some story, but the story was not loud enough for the world to hear.  Until one day, I decided to duplicate and flip… the outcome was totally unpredicted!    My “insignificant” findings turned into the gates into the mystical world of Imagination.”

With over twenty years professional experience in the design sector, Nelli holds an MFA from DMAC in Graphic Design, Arts and Design, and an MFA from Art Moscow Academy of Printing Arts in Fine Art, Graphic Design, and  Digital Media Art.

 Photography Instructor James Spence’s chillingly beautiful Sarah is a cyanotype, an early form of light sensitive printing from the 1840’s.   James brushes a mixture of light sensitive potassium ferracyanide and ferric ammonium citrate onto watercolor paper.   He then places an eight by ten inch black and white negative in contact with the sensitized paper, and it is left under glass out in bright sunlight for fifteen minutes.  Spence rinses away the unexposed material and tones the image in a tannic acid solution this gives it a rich brown tone.

James states, “I like the process because the contact printing creates excellent resolution, and the brushing, exposing, and toning create a one-of-kind quality often absent in photography.”   A crowd favorite, this exemplary work simply must be studied ‘in the real’ to absorb its dramatic depth and haunting intonation.

Featured artist Felicia Van Bork, whose works are exhibited courtesy of Jerald Melberg Gallery, presents several examples from her recent series:  collage assemblages composed from sections of her monotype prints.  Gentle hues abound in Van Bork’s work, with subtle references to undulating landscapes, far-flung natural vistas, and shadowed forest glens.

Felicia’s impressive artistic pedigree includes an MFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA, as well as residencies at Byrdcliffe, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and at the McColl Center for Visual Art.   She has taught art at Davidson College in Davidson, NC; the University of North Carolina at Charlotte; and Penn State University the Behrend College in Erie, PA, and some lucky students at CPCC are fortunate to have her currently as their Painting or Art Appreciation Instructor..

Ashley Knight is a sculpture and three-dimensional design instructor at CPCC, who received his BFA and MFA in Sculpture from UNCG.  Ashley has always been inspired by the capability and expressiveness of the human body, and finds his deepest meditative moments are within strenuous physical activities like running, hiking, and yoga.   This composition is based on a yoga movement called ‘side crane,’ which strengthens the core of the body and relieves tension.

Holding the World in Balance not only represents a moment of energy release, but also a heightened state of sensory awareness.   His latest monumental work from this series, Movements that Transform, was recently installed in the lauded 27th Annual Sculpture in the Garden at UNC Chapel Hill.

2015 Visual Arts Faculty Exhibition

Now – October 29 in Pease Gallery

Opening Reception: Thursday, September 24, 4 – 6:30 pm

A tradition that spans decades, the CPCC Faculty Exhibition celebrates the art and educators whose original and innovative works influence the artists of tomorrow.   Contemporary works in a variety of media including painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, photography and ceramics will be shown, and represents the fascinating and varied vision of more than 20 instructors at CPCC.

CPCC Art Galleries receives BOB award in Charlotte Magazine!!

Shaun Cassidy's "The Sound of Everything" at CPCC's Ross Gallery
Installation view of Shaun Cassidy’s “The Sound of Everything” at CPCC’s Ross Gallery, on view now through July 16, 2015.

Charlotte Magazine has announced that CPCC Ross and Pease Art Galleries has received a Best of the Best award as the city’s Best Art Gallery!

The galleries at Central Piedmont Community College have always served students and faculty, providing a space for their work and occasionally bringing in outside talent. But recently, the spaces have evolved. The Ross and Pease are now home to emerging and professional talent, from Shaun Cassidy’s The Sound of Everything (which runs through July 14) to a recent exhibition made entirely of animated GIFs, a medium never before presented in Charlotte galleries.

New Geographic One

"New Geographic One", a pop-up exhibition of animated gifs in Pease Gallery January 14-20, 2015

Currently on display in Ross Gallery is Shaun Cassidy’s The Sound of Everything, on view through July 14. Cassidy was also recognized with a BOB award as Best Artist by Charlotte Magazine.

The Annual Student Exhibition is now on display in Pease Gallery, and has been extended through mid-July.

CPCC Art Galleries remains committed to our mission of inspiring, educating, and engaging students, faculty, and community members through access to exceptional visual art in all media. The Galleries constantly support the teaching mission of the college by serving as a lab for the visual arts curricula and enhancing a variety of other subjects. Additional educational programming celebrates artistic achievement and cross-discipline collaboration.

Look for more exciting events and artist’s lectures in the coming year!

 

Matthew Steele: “ONE”

Matthew Steele: “ONE” will open Monday, January 26 in Pease Gallery. Please join us for a reception with the artist on Thursday, February 5 from 5-7 p.m., and a lecture in Pease Auditorium on Wednesday, February 25 at 6:30 p.m.

Matthew Steele, Monument to Regret, 2014.

Monuments were the first, and are still the most publicly accessible, form of art. With a visual vocabulary that stylistically echoes the commissioner’s culture and time, monuments will typically fall into one of three categories: nationalism, heroism, or tragedy. These celebratory undertones are what separate monuments from public art, which is usually integrated, interpretive, and representative of other ideas.

In this new body of work, Matthew Steele seeks to reclaim the monument from its location specific nationalism. With basic elements like wood and glass, Steele creates models for more universal monuments dedicated to the thing humanity has in common: emotion. Our feelings, our intuitive responses, are what connects us all, pervading the self-imposed separations we adhere to (culture, language, nation, histories, etc.). Fear, joy, futility, vulnerability, indecision, regret, relief; everyone knows those feelings. These monuments represent the human technologies of the self (emotions and responses to those emotions) through architectural vernacular and the aesthetic of function.

Pop-Up Exhibition: New Geographic One

We’re happy to announce our first ever pop-up exhibition, “New Geographic One,” which will take place in Pease Gallery January 14 – 20, with a reception to coincide with the Adrian Rhodes reception in Ross, January 15, 5-7 p.m.

 New Geographic One

Designers Dan Romanoski and Eric Hurtgen explore the intersection of physical and digital space through the medium of animated GIFs. The inherent abstraction of imaging the physical world is accentuated by the action of the endless loop. Mathematically modeled filters systematically destruct these images frame by frame according to preset functions, only to be reconstructed again in a seemingly eternal configuration.

Eric: http://newgeographic.tumblr.com/post/100516115166

Dan: http://newgeographic.tumblr.com/post/102396223486

Coming soon to CPCC Art Galleries – Adrian Rhodes and Matthew Steele

The CPCC Art Galleries are pleased to announce the new exhibitions that will open our 2015 year. Click the exhibition titles below to learn more.

Adrian Rhodes: UNDER MY SKIN

Ross Gallery
January 12 – March 5

January 15
Reception: 5-7 p.m.
Lecture: Tate Hall, 4 p.m.

Matthew Steele: ONE

Pease Gallery
January 26 – March 5

Reception: February 5, 5-7 p.m.
Lecture: Pease Auditorium, February 25, 6:30 p.m.

Art Gallery Holiday Hours

The CPCC Art Galleries will close at noon on Wednesday, November 26, 2014 and reopen on Monday, December 1 at 10 a.m. for regular hours.

For the winter holiday, the Galleries will close again at 2 p.m. on December 18 and reopen on January 12  at 10 a.m. when classes resume.

Aspen Hochhalter Lith Printing Photography Workshop

The CPCC Art Galleries were pleased to host our first ever workshop with an exhibiting artist. Aspen Hochhalter taught a group of 12 students and community members the art of Lith Printing Photography. The technique is simple and easy for darkroom neophytes to catch on to, but is full of surprises as well.

Thanks to Aspen for teaching the class! Look for more opportunities to learn from our exhibiting artists soon; more darkroom photography and printmaking classes are in the works!

Learn more about Lith Printing Photography here

Objects in Perspective reception

Thank you to everyone who joined us for the reception for “Objects in Perspective: Collaboration by Aspen Hochhalter and Natalie Abrams.” About 100 attendees enjoyed light refreshments while looking at the art and asking the artists questions.

Looking forward to seeing you at Aspen Hochhalter’s lecture on Thursday 10/9 at 3 p.m. in Pease Auditorium! (Save the date for Natale Abrams’ lecture on 10/22 at 3 p.m.).