Magnus Thierfelder

In his work Magnus Thierfelder uses various methods such as drawing, installation, sculpture, photo and lets components primarily taken from the cityscape become metaphors in a narrative rebus where lamp posts, pipes, cables, paving-stones etc., constitute elements in a symbolic realm that talks about enigmatic regularities, order and disorder, resistance, and creativity.

“Drainpipes, bricks, cables and lamp posts. With these simple construction elements from without, Magnus Thierfelder creates his personal order within. The starting point seems to be the limited intentions, the details, and the interplay of every day occurrences, and the paradoxical realisation that these have the power to overcome us, by confronting us with the results of actions that carry their own underlying structure. Thierfelder’s restrained, formal language and subtle sense of humour, become what is often barely distinguishable disruptions on social norms and everyday experiences. By simply displacing these tangible objects, he obstructs “normality”, and reveals things that could have gone wrong.” Extract from Underneath Everyday Normality; The Work of Magnus Thierfelder by Marianna Garin.

Magnus Thierfelder lives and works in Malmö, Sweden. He received his MFA from Malmö Art Academy. He has exhibited nationally and internationally both separately and in group exhibitions at Centro Cultural Montehermoso, Araba, Spain; Moderna Museet, Malmö, Sweden; Ar/Ge KUNST, Bolzano, Italy; Index – The Swedish Contemporary Art Foundation, Stockholm, Sweden; Transmission Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland; Malmö Art Museum, Sweden; Coleman Projects, London, UK; Rooseum – Center for Contemporary Art, Malmö; The Breeder, Athens, Greece; Mucsarnok/Kunsthalle, Budapest, Hungary; Galleri Christina Wilson, Copenhagen, Denmark; 1a Space, Hong Kong, China; Galleria Alberto Peola, Turin, Italy and Kumo Art Museum, Tallinn, Estonia, among others. He is one of the founding members of the non-profit art space Signal in Malmö and was on the Board member between 1998 and 2002. He is represented by the galleries Elastic in Malmö and von Bartha Garage in Basel, Switzerland.

Past Resident
2011: Artadia

Michael Jones McKean

Michael Jones McKean’s work plays with the poetic potential in objects, materials and their arrangement while pointing toward the possibility of a larger narrative or allegorical structures. His sculptures skid across time, organizing disparate objects into unifying constellations that make appeals to the imagination while also seeking a re-articulation of our ancient involvement with forms, meaning, representation, and poetics.

A recipient of numerous awards, McKean was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2010 and recently a Nancy Graves Foundation Award and an Artadia Foundation Award. McKean has participated in numerous residencies including The Core Program at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX; The Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, RI; The Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, NE; Central Michigan University as the Stephen L. Barstow Fellow, MI; The Archie Bray Foundation in Montana and ThreeWalls in Chicago, IL. His work has been shown extensively nationally and internationally including the Quebec City Biennial, Grand Arts in Kansas City, MO, DiverseWorks in Houston, TX; The Bemis Center in Omaha, NE; Horton Gallery in New York City, Project Gentili in Italy and Berlin and ThreeWalls in Chicago, IL. McKean is currently an Assistant Professor in the Sculpture and Extended Media Department at Virginia Commonwealth University.

 

Birthe Blauth

Munich-based conceptual and video artist Birthe Blauth’s video works examine human individuality in the tension between cultural, biographical and neurological parameters. Her image sequences playfully combine fiction with reality and their subtle variations prompt the observer to question his or her own perceptions.

Blauth graduated in Chinese studies, Ethnology and European Art History from Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich, Germany, specialising in iconography, mythology and religious ethnology. Herart has won her the HausderKunst award in Munich as well as the support of the Prinzregent Luitpold Stiftung, the Region of Upper Bavaria and the City of Munich. In January 2011, the BundesGEDOK will award her the Dr. Theobald Simon Preis in Bonn, Germany, where she will also mount a solo exhibition at the Artists’ Forum.