The Julia C. Butridge Gallery will host the artist reception for "Access" by Neal Flynn, "The Parallax Project" by Zoe Pettit and "Boxed In" by Jacob Guzman.
Neal Flynn’s exhibition of mostly new assemblage, collage, and site-specific intervention explores ideas relating to nostalgia, loss, violence, ownership, and modern Western culture. Flynn’s artistic practice involves collecting, journaling, photographing, researching, and responding to the rapid changes in our society, and is informed by his experience as a young, white, cisgender male, gay artist, arts professional, and learner/educator. The materials and imagery he works with are sourced from a restless, Americentric culture of advancement and forgetting.
"The Parallax Project" is a series of works that belong to an ongoing narrative that will one day become its own publication. The narrative is a loosely assembled collection of moments, meaningful places, and introspective thoughts put to paper by a lonely robot living through an apocalypse set on Mars. The fanciful illustrations are his own search for purpose and beauty in a post-civilization world that would otherwise appear devoid of meaning and art.
Jacob Guzman depicts people of color and aspects of daily inner-city working class struggles. Largely inspired by Guzman’s personal experiences and resistance to stereotypes and comparisons, "Boxed In" challenges viewers thoughts about the experiences of those born in to or currently living in poverty, and their survival responses misunderstood by dominant society.
The Julia C. Butridge Gallery will host the artist reception for "Access" by Neal Flynn, "The Parallax Project" by Zoe Pettit and "Boxed In" by Jacob Guzman.
Neal Flynn’s exhibition of mostly new assemblage, collage, and site-specific intervention explores ideas relating to nostalgia, loss, violence, ownership, and modern Western culture. Flynn’s artistic practice involves collecting, journaling, photographing, researching, and responding to the rapid changes in our society, and is informed by his experience as a young, white, cisgender male, gay artist, arts professional, and learner/educator. The materials and imagery he works with are sourced from a restless, Americentric culture of advancement and forgetting.
"The Parallax Project" is a series of works that belong to an ongoing narrative that will one day become its own publication. The narrative is a loosely assembled collection of moments, meaningful places, and introspective thoughts put to paper by a lonely robot living through an apocalypse set on Mars. The fanciful illustrations are his own search for purpose and beauty in a post-civilization world that would otherwise appear devoid of meaning and art.
Jacob Guzman depicts people of color and aspects of daily inner-city working class struggles. Largely inspired by Guzman’s personal experiences and resistance to stereotypes and comparisons, "Boxed In" challenges viewers thoughts about the experiences of those born in to or currently living in poverty, and their survival responses misunderstood by dominant society.
WHEN
WHERE
TICKET INFO
Admission is free.