Resident Resident

Curtiss Martin

Waynesville, North Carolina

March 15, 2009 - November 17, 2009

Curtiss was the Urban Green Coordinator in 2009. He is in charge of Elsewhere's Urban Green program, as well as Elsewhere's Back Alley Garden. Aside from encouraging more efficient uses of natural and material resources at Elsewhere, Curtiss also coordinates collaborative relationships with community gardens, local farmers, academic institutions and like-minded organizations in the Triad area. Curtiss hails from Waynesville, North Carolina, a delightful little town in the hills of Haywood County. He has a diverse background in organic farming, medicinal plants, new media production and clean technology consulting. Outside of contributing to Elsewhere's many successes, Curtiss is interested in permaculture systems design, appropriate biotechnology and all sorts of weird ideas having to do with water.

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Resident Resident

Sarah Roach

Portland, Oregon

September 24, 2009 - November 15, 2009

Sarah is originally from Birmingham, Alabama.  She attended college at Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon.  Since her graduation this spring Sarah has been traveling across the country in a 1982 Volkswagon Vanagon named “Buddy.”  Sarah loves paper mache, house paint, making things, and most recently baking cake.

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Resident, Producer Resident, Producer

Anthony Lowe

Winston Salem, North Carolina

July 2, 2009 - August 14, 2009 as a resident

August 14, 2009 - November 6, 2009 as a producer

blog | swim dunk dot blogspot dot com

Immediately prior to his work as a collaborator (producer? creative assistant?) Anthony was a resident artist at Elsewhere Artist collaborative. He was accepted into the program because of his charming nature but was asked to stay because of his dynamic sense of humor. He was 'hardened by the business' working as a curator in a small art gallery and as an art handler in a much bigger museum, both in Winston. What's more, he has dabbled in marketing and branding as a social practice art steezley, screenprinting, automatic drawing, video artistry, music/sound production, light (as opposed to heavy) construction, the occult, photography and bird poetry. KaKaaaaw!

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Resident Resident

Shane Ward

October 8, 2009 - November 4, 2009

Shane has recently graduated with a BFA degree from the University of Kentucky in the department of New Media. After graduation, Shane cofounded the Artist Group, The Marionette Club, whose work has been shown at the Overgaden Museum of Contemporary Art and the New Life Berlin Festival 2008. Shane’s work explores the modalities of installation and performance as it relates to myth, humor, and art history.

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Resident Resident

Ashley Lamb

October 1, 2009 - October 27, 2009

website | ashley k lamb dot com

Ashley Lamb is a mixed media artist and poet who presently rests her head in Brooklyn, New York.  She graduated from Kenyon college in 2007 with degrees in Studio Art and English literature, and has since been working at the School of Visual Arts in Chelsea, Manhattan.  She recently returned from a three-month stint in Iceland at an artist residency on the Skagi Peninsula. She has a die-hard affection for objects, which brackets words and images alike. Her life has been filled with wonder and enthusiasm, and she looks forward to arriving at Elsewhere with enthusiastic wonder.

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Resident Resident

Adrienne Roberts

San Francisco, California

September 24, 2009 - October 27, 2009

Adrienne is an artist and writer preoccupied with home. Born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area to parents who met and fell in love in the hayday of the Haight-Ashbury, Roberts spends most of her time thinking and writing about place, home and belonging. These thoughts recently manifested themselves in her thesis project entitled "Homesick: The Search for Belonging in New Orleans' Landscape of Loss" which discusses home and belonging through the visuality of race, mobility, and the myth of the American frontier. Her recent curatorial project, "Home is something I carry with me" speaks back to the current housing crisisis  by transforming three private residences in San Francisco's Mission District into exhibition spaces and opening them to the public. Roberts was a contributing writer to Open Space, SFMOMA's blog, Art Practical and Plastic Antinomy. She holds an MA in Visual and Critical Studies from the California College of the Arts and a BA in Feminist Studies and Art from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Roberts' is a social justice activist and tenants rights counselor at the SF Housing Rights Committee. She loves dance parties, vegetarian potlucks, and giving home haircuts.

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Resident, Building Curator Elsewhere Living Museum & Artist Residency Resident, Building Curator Elsewhere Living Museum & Artist Residency

Ian Montgomery

Ian Montgomery (Gravelville, Iowa) is an artist and builder with professional construction, carpentry, and installation experience. He joined Elsewhere in 2009 to oversee the preservation and safety of Elsewhere’s building and collection, and works directly with artists on installation and sculpture to ensure structural integrity and visitor safety. Ian previously worked in a similar capacity for Flux Factory in New York and has a BA from Bard College.

Building Curator, October 1, 2009 – November 2011

Residency September 10, 2009 – October 8, 2009

Project: Glass Forest

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Resident, Collaborator Elsewhere Living Museum & Artist Residency Resident, Collaborator Elsewhere Living Museum & Artist Residency

Agustina Woodgate

Agustina Woodgate (1981, Argentina) is an artist whose practice focuses on the politics of landscapes and infrastructures as a conceptual and public geography. She recombines, activates and repurposes available resources while setting alternative systems in motion. Her work comes about through a logical process of discovery rather than invention, utilizing displacement as a strategy. Woodgates’ approach is speculative, practical, and site and context-responsive, presenting critical alternatives to concepts on social orders, resource management and information distribution bringing clarity, scale, and accessibility.

Agustina is one of the artists commissioned for South Elm Projects. She completed Hopscotch across the South Elm neighborhood during her one-week residency in April 2015.

Residencies:

September 10, 2009 – October 8, 2009

August 7, 2011

April 2015

website | radio espacio estacion dot com

website | agustina woodgate dot com

Project: Glass Forest, Hopscotch, Radio Espacio, Kids Radio FM

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Resident Resident

Kara Dunne

Montpelier, Vermont

September 10, 2009 - October 6, 2009

Kara most recently received her MFA in Printmaking from the Rhode Island School of Design.  Before that she studied Printmaking and Glassblowing at Alfred University and is probably one of the few people to earn a minor in theatre and actually use it for something. She has been released yet again from the dark, damp depths of the academic world and back into the blinding brightness of ‘society’. Although it is always a bit of a odd and awkward transition at first, overall she acclimates herself well wherever she goes, wears sunglasses and plays well with others.  A dabbler of the extreme sport we call ‘art’, Dunne constantly mixes things up just for the sake of doing so, sometimes working with drawing, silkscreen and other printmaking processes, meanwhile pondering the possibility of building large scale sculptural installations and incorporating some element of the ephemeral.  She also spends her time thinking about dance cards, shoe horns, why people have display fruit, what it would be like to have a job where you make up fifteen different names for the same shade of green paint at Sherwin Williams, and above all what she is going to ‘do’ next. More often than not she ends up incorporating herself into whatever she is making, either through live performance or video, the now and then of her overall artistic process.  But easier to chew. The audience is a huge factor in her work, and she tries to consider the viewer as an important variable in the outcome of a piece. Interaction is essential to the life of an artwork. Direct connection is key. Dunne considers herself to be a social commentator on a cable station you never knew you had subscribed to.

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Resident, Producer Resident, Producer

Amber PB

Calgary, Alberta, Canada

September 3, 2008 - October 9, 2008 as a resident

June 4, 2009 - September 22, 2009 as a producer

website | realm of reject dot com

Amber Phelps Bondaroff is a spatial navigator, a semionaut and a situationalist. Crafted environments act as backdrop for the observation of interactions between audience and objects. Enforcing certain elements of aesthetic and spatial control, the audience acts as participant and subject within the work.  Amber arrived Elsewhere in the fall of 2008, and spent more time than anticipated, documenting, recording and viewing from above, as well as constructing the Elsewhere Confessatorium.  In 2009 she returned South Elm Street as a re-visiting SWAP artist, in consideration of Elsewhere’s “Systems and Signs.”Interested in musical interludes, facial accessories, alimentary re-contextualization, the invention of new words and phrases, pata-physics, mapping and archiving, alliterations, polar exploration, and all things sweet, Amber is the co- founder of multidisciplinary enterprise, The Realm of Reject (www.realmofreject.com) She received a BFA from NSCAD University in Halifax in 2006 and currently resides in Montreal, Canada.Born on Treaty 7 lands, (Calgary, Alberta,) Amber lived and travelled to many places around the continent and around the globe, before settling in Saskatchewan in 2012. She was a resident artist at Elsewhere in 2008 and 2009. She is the founder of the NoDS project (Network of Domestic Spaces) a reticulum of artist residency spaces situated in people’s homes and co-artistic director of Swamp Fest - a music and arts festival in Regina. She received an MFA in Intermedia Arts from the University of Regina, in 2014 and a BFA in interdisciplinary fine arts from NSCAD University, Halifax in 2007.

Amber is currently the Programming Director at Neutral Ground Artist-Run Centre.

More of Amber's work here: www.amberpb.com

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Resident Resident

Lindsay Palmer

Boulder, Colorado

September 3, 2009 - September 22, 2009

Lindsay’s work focuses primarily on issues of gender and identity, and their relation to space and structure. She is from Lubbock, TX and received her BFA in sculpture from Texas Tech University, as well as recently receiving her MFA, also in sculpture, from The University of Colorado in Boulder. She has recently shown work at The Lakewood CulturalCenter in Lakewood, CO, Museo De Las Americas in Denver, CO, and The Glass Box Gallery at Colorado StateUniversity in Fort Collins, CO, and will be following up her stay at Elsewhere with residencies at Art Farm in Nebraska and Nes Artist Residency, in Skagastrond, Iceland.

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Resident Resident

Greg Shelnutt

Winston, North Carolina

August 27, 2009 - September 15, 2009

Greg Shelnutt has been a member of the Visual Arts faculty at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts since June of 2000. In 2005, he was appointed Director of the Visual Arts Program at UNCSA. His work has been exhibited in over 350 solo, invitational and group exhibitions, in galleries and museums such as: Art in General, New York, New York; Berlin Kunsproject, Berlin, Germany; C.A.G.E., Cincinnati, Ohio; Color Elephante, Valencia, Spain; COMUS Gallery in Portland, Oregon; Downey Museum of Art, Downey, California; Galeria Mesa, Mesa, Arizona; Greenhill Center for North Carolina Art, Greensboro, North Carolina; Grounds for Sculpture, Hamilton, New Jersey; Hunter Museum of Art, Chattanooga, Tennessee; John Michael Kohler Art Center, Sheboygan, Wisconsin; New York Arts Gallery, New York, New York; Palazzo Casalli, Cortona, Italy; Randolph Street Gallery, Chicago, Illinois; Ringling School of Art, Sarasota, Florida; Redux, Charleston, South Carolina; SODARCO, Montreal, Canada; Taiwan Museum of Art, Taichung, Taiwan;University of Hawaii at Manoa; and the William King Regional Art Center, Abingdon, Virginia, to list but a few.

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Resident Resident

Toni Subrià

Barcelona, Spain

August 6, 2009 - September 15, 2009

Toni's artistic production moves through performance, installation and music creation. He studied arts at the University of Barcelona and has participated in several  seminars about contemporary art criticism at the museum of contemporary art of Barcelona (Macba) and at the Caixaforum Culture Center, among other workshops about technical production and post-production in visual arts. He’s also working in cultural management and as a curator

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Resident Resident

Eliza Fernand

Oakland, California

July 23, 2009 - September 1, 2009

website | wanna make things dot com

website | eliza fernand dot com

blog | eliza draws dot blogspot dot com

Eliza's work revolves around the transformation of materials and ideas.  She is inspired by craft supplies, relationships, forces of nature, small histories, bodily functions, scraps of things, mysteries, and flowers. Born in Arkansas, Fernand grew up in Massachusetts, Colorado, Michigan, Oregon, New York City, and California.  She has also lived and worked at artist's residencies in Layton, New Jersey; Normandy, France; and Oakland, California.  She received the Visual Arts Award in Sculpture upon graduating from Interlochen Arts Academy in 2001, and the Sculpture Departmental Award at her graduation from Pacific Northwest College of Art in 2006.  Fernand feels at home in Brooklyn and the Bay Area, and other places in between.

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Resident Resident

Rachelle Viader Knowles

Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada

July 23, 2009 - August 18, 2009

Originally from the UK, from a British and Mauritian family, I studied at Cardiff College of Art and under Roy Ascot at the University of Wales College Newport before moving to Canada in 1994 to pursue a MFA degree at the University of Windsor, southern Ontario. Since graduating in 1996, my works have been exhibited in solo exhibitions across Canada, including the Mendel Art Gallery, the Art Gallery of Calgary, the Art Gallery of Windsor, the Red Head Gallery, Peak Gallery and YYZ Artists Outlet in Toronto and the MacKenzie Art Gallery and Neutral Ground Gallery in Regina. I'm a past member of the Red Head Gallery in Toronto and I have participated in artists residencies at the Braziers International Artist Workshop in the UK, Trinity Square Video in Toronto, the Atlantic Centre for the Arts in Florida, the Banff Center for the Arts in Alberta, Canada and the Hungarian Multicultural Centre in Budapest. In 2000, the video installation We Are Not Who We Were was exhibited in the North American section of the 3rd Kwangju Biennale, South Korea and in 2003 Chapter Gallery in Wales hosted a large scale exhibition of my work including four video installations and two public art projects. More recently, I collaborated with New York playwright Jenny Levison on a project called Conversations for You and Me for the Experimental Text Festival at the Ontological Hysteric Theatre in New York, participated in a group exhibition at Three Walls Gallery in Chicago and was a finalist for the Sobey Art Awards in 2007. I currently live in Regina, Canada where I am an Associate Professor at the University of Regina, lead the area of Intermedia, and teach within Visual Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies. I am on sabbatical for the academic year 2008 -2009 and will be participating in residencies at Residencia Corazon in Argentina and the Canada Council Paris Studio.

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Resident Resident

David Petersen

Minneapolis, Minnesota

July 30, 2009 - August 11, 2009

David started making things that have been often characterized as art in the year 1997. At 23 years old, his art career was already over the hill, washed up before it got a chance to get dirty. Yet he mysteriously perservered. Nowadays, nearly ten years older, at least 175 pounds heavier, and having spiraled into the kind of debt in which only a Third World Country could possibly empathsize, Mr. Petersen spends his few free hours sequestered in his dreary studio thinking of get-rich-quick schemes and faking his own death. When he is completely demoralized by his lack of imagination in these matters, the final hours of his evening are wasted on a barstool, eyes glazed and fixed on a television screen with the day’s sports highlights. Bless his little heart.  Sincerely, Jean-Michel Basquiat

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Resident Resident

Molly Lowe

Brooklyn, New York

July 2, 2009 - August 8, 2009

Molly is a Brooklyn based artist who works with abandon, using whatever she can find to get her point across. From sculpture, to performance/video, and installation,Lowe conjures up intuitive responses to relevant puzzles in our everyday world by using the materials that our culture has consumed. Lowe brings to the table many different conversations about our society and the natural world by synthesizing the symbiotic power of objects with a hand touched representation of a more natural cycle that takes hold.  Lowe graduated in 2005 from the Rhode Island School of Design, received the Florence Leif Award in Painting, and was a participant at the Skowhegan residency program in 2008.

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