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CLASS:PUBLIC
CREATED:20260613T152009
DESCRIPTION:<img class="alignnone wp-image-34785 aligncenter" src="https://theartcenterhp.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/JuliannWang_01-300x169-1.jpg" alt="Juliann Wang" width="300" height="169" /><img class="alignnone wp-image-34786 aligncenter" src="https://theartcenterhp.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/amrany1.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" />\n\nIs it possible for the world to experience both the hyper-connectivity that comes from social media, the internet, and blurred world boundaries; while at the same time feel disconnected from family, friends, and the world at large?\n\nArt, by its nature, is a conduit, merging artists’ ideas into physical entities, connecting to its audience and bridging community. The role art plays in connecting people takes the manifestation of thought and emotion, acting as a springboard to build greater levels of communication and ultimately, interconnectivity.\n\nInterconnectivity explores the connections that make up our lives, from our relationships to each other, to nature, to community, to the universe, and especially to ourselves.\n\nGuest jurors/ featured Artists, <b>Juliann Wang</b> and <b>Julie Rotblatt Amrany</b> are both established Chicago artists, whose work emcompases the theme of interconnectivity in different but complementary ways. The two women come from different places, Juliann from China, Julie from Highland Park. Yet, their work reveals how the individual is both isolated and connected to something greater. Using paper rather than canvas and creating installations that fill the space, the artists show how fragile (like paper) life is but at the same time, they are leaving their mark. Juliann’s paper cut-out world of trees ground us in nature, while across the room Julie’s installation links us to a cosmic subatomic world.\n\nJuliann Wang is a Chicago-based artist, performer, designer, and culture activator. She writes, “As a bicultural Chinese-American artist, my work reflects how culture, time, and location influence individuals and society as they grow and change. The works evolve based on observations about identity, search for connection, sense of belonging, fragile impermanence, and even isolation. Through an interdisciplinary method that utilizes different approaches and materials specific to each project, my creation embraces moments of fleeting beauty and connectivity of life.”  Her early influence of Eastern thought plays a significant role in her practice, considering humans as part of the natural world tied to the unanswerable mystery of life and existence, thus creating a sense of connection to a greater whole.\n\nJulie Rotblatt Amrany grew up in Highland Park, returning in 1989 where she has worked and collaborated with her husband/ artist, Omri Amrany. The couple founded the Fine Art Studio of Rotblatt-Amrany, and was famously commission for the bronze statue of basketball player Michael Jordan at Chicago’s United Center. After battling breast cancer,  Rotblatt Amrany’s work deepened her interest in consciousness and how it integrates with matter, on how matter and energy transform, and on the evolution of human intelligence. In her statement she writes, “I have the intension to depict the dichotomy between the subatomic and the cosmic universe. On a grander scale, there is an interconnectedness of all living and nonliving things surrounding us. There is no true degree of separation. In the center of one of the hexagons is a fiber optic neon light to represent life, the pulsation of breath.”\n\nAs guest jurors, Juliann and Julie selected 22 artists, mostly from Illinois and the Midwest. The works range from digital media to drawings on paper, from collage to sculpture, exploring how our relationships are intertwined.\n\nIn a post pandemic world, our sense of connection has been tested. This exhibit works to pull us back into community with a realization, that no matter how isolated we may feel, the reality is that we remain part of a greater expanse. The swirling sense of energy that comes out from our walls remind us that we are all interconnected to a universal whole.\n\n<b>Participating Artists: </b><b>Sara Peak Convery, Michael Dinges, T.C. English-DuMont, Jennifer Evans, Jeanne Garrett, Donna Goetzke Bliss, Cynthia Goldring, Lauren Harlowe, Mary King, Elaine Miller, Lynnette Mohill, Kean O’Brien, Jim Parks, Karen Ross, TEMO, Sherwin Waldman, Dina Walker, Linda Weber, Alyssa Weimer, Serene Wise, Valerie Xanos, Sunny Yeung</b>
DTEND:20210723T200000Z
DTSTAMP:20260613T152009
DTSTART:20210723T173000
LAST-MODIFIED:20091109T101015
LOCATION:The Art Center Highland Park, 1957 SHERIDAN RD, , IL, 60035
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:Interconnectivity Artist Reception
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