the Telephone Room : Small is Big : artist-driven exhibits and programming
Friday, August 21, 2009
14 Days of LEGO: Day 2
After starting out with our amps cranked to "11," you may be wondering what's next in The Telephone Room's 14 Days of LEGO.
Since we began Day 1 with a classic LEGO single, it only makes sense to showcase some album art on Day 2.
Once again, in LEGO.
The Telephone Room is proud to present to you this link, which will take you to a whole page full of classic album covers, recreated in our favorite medium.
The Telephone Room is the world's second-smallest art gallery at 12 ½ square feet. It is located in a Dutch Colonial home in Tacoma and since 1930, its sole purpose has been to house a black rotary dial telephone. Until now...
Small is Big. The Telephone Room is small, but its mission is big: to house artist-driven exhibits and programming. Big ideas in an intimate space.
Pass it on.
What is the world's smallest art gallery?!?
The Tollbooth Gallery, coincidentally also in Tacoma, is the world's smallest gallery, dedicated to Wheat Paste and Video Fine Arts. It was formerly a TV-Tacoma information kiosk and houses a video monitor without having any actual floor space. It runs all day and night, every day, and you can find it at South 11th Street and Broadway in downtown Tacoma. www.tacomaweekly.com/citylife/view/tollbooth_gallery_endures
Past Exhibitions
May 24, 5-8 pm: The Bran Flakes and Free Admission at HIDE/SEEK and Tacoma Art Museum On May 24, the Telephone Room Gallery sponsored a free evening to Tacoma Art Museum and the HIDE/SEEK exhibition, as well as a feature performance by The Bran Flakes.
The I AM photo project, designed by the Telephone Room Gallery, is happening every Thursday evening from 5-8 pm at TAM during the HIDE/SEEK show (March 17 - June 10, 2012) See the photos on Tacoma Art Museum's flickr and facebook pages.
March - April 2012: Zigzags, Stripes, and Shadows by Julie Alpert Stream of consciousness drawings become blueprints for how Julie Alpert responds to the Telephone Room Gallery's charming, cramped, and curious architecture. www.juliealpert.com www.juliealpert.blogspot.com
September 2011: Out of the Embers by Allison Hyde By splitting video sequences into still photos and recreating the images via printmaking, Allison Hyde examines the subtleties of fleeting moments and the nostalgia associated with recollections of the past.
August 2011: Three Images by Matt Johnson Matt Johnson uses the theft of his iPhone by one of his college students and the final batch of downloaded photos as his inspiration.
July 2011: Trails by Chris Thompson Paintings that delve into the slow, slimy and strange world of slugs and snails.
June 2011: Assignment: Crafty Inspired by vintage craft how-to books, Assignment: Crafty revisits and enlivens crafts from the 60s, 70s and 80s through the filter of today's local artists.
April - May 2011: Dead Loss... by Jessica Bender An installation inspired by solitary confinement, padded cells, and blanket forts.
March 2011: Emulate by Lauren Faulkner A visual interpretation of Schiele's nudes.
November 2010: Montana (erased) by Buddy Bunting An erroneously left answering message detailing a stranger's travels through Montana form the basis for Montana (erased) and continues Buddy's exploration of the western landscape and its mythology of transcendence, openness, and expansion. October 2010: Clicks and Pffts by Jessica Robinson, curated by Graham Bell Using found sound and recordings of bodily noises, Clicks and Pffts crafts an aural scape that is technological but human; familiar yet alien.
August 2010: "I don't hate anyone" by Chris Sharp Painting and a whole mess of letterpress.
June 2010: In The Garden by Nicholas Nyland Playful sculptural works that respons to their setting and call upon a long tradition of ornamental garden sculpture. and Eternal Flicker Flame by Ben Hirschkoff
May 2010:Eternal Flicker Flame by Ben Hirschkoff Using the all too common brass chandelier as a medium, Eternal Flicker Flame celebrates the artificial and symbolizes renewal, creation and destruction.
April 2010: Trace Evidence by Jennifer Peters and Ellen Ito Photos of refuse left behind by visitors in museum spaces examine ideas about territory, propiety, trespassing and adaptation.
February - March 2010:Drunk Dialing by Kristen Ramirez An installation of inscribed liquor bottles, each retelling a sordid tale of alcohol-fueled communication gleaned from friends and strangers via an internet call for drunk dialing anecdotes.
January 2010: For the Birds by Elise Richman Intimate portraits of birds that act as surrogates and guardians, amiable yet awkward, emotional personifications that simultaneously expose and protect.
November 2009: "Is You Is?" New Drawings by Blake Haygood The title comes from the Louis Jordan song "Is You Is or Is You Ain't (My Baby)." The question for Blake is not about his love life but about his career as an artist and gallery owner. It became clear to him that he would have to make a choice and commit to only one. Is You Is integrates drawings of disintegrating/reforming mechanical/organic objects into the space of the Telephone Room.
October 2009: Undead A group show inspired by braineaters and bloodsuckers.
September 2009:LEGO by local artists August 2009:The Bluebird by Jessica Bender Inspired by Charles Bukowski and his poem "My Telephone," for his birthday month, the installation is an homage involving bottles, bones, a pillow, and more. "The Bluebird" is another Bukowski poem that Jessica enjoys.
June 17 - July 31, 2009:The Badman by Jeremy Mangan A life-size 3D painting/sculpture of a shot-dead old-west gunfighter in a pine box, entombed within the Telephone Room, continues Jeremy's exploration of portraiture and the landscape of the notorious American west.
May 15 - June 16, 2009: Home Sweet Home featuring Laura Komada, Paul Komada and Noal Nyland An examination of handiwork and decor by three artists creating in the living room: a portrait of Sasquatch; a knitted Mondrian; two garments infused into a quilt.
February 18 - May 13, 2009:Hello! the inaugural group show
As seen in:
The Telephone Room Gallery was featured as the "Most artistic use of outdated architecture."
Seattle Weekly thinks we're the "Best Teeny Tacoma Art Space" of 2010.
Valentine's Artist Craft Fair!
-
I know I have been bad about posting, and I apologize. And here I am,
posting!
I am pleased to announce our next Artist Craft Fair! It will be on Sunday,
...
a feast of AUDIO & VIDEO!
-
Now you can experience Bridge Talks Back with images. The talented and
effervescent Lisa Whitmer has created this beautiful video to personify the
sound in...
No comments:
Post a Comment