Selected Exhibition History

Damian Moppett, Studio at Night, 2006. Oil on paper, 27 x 40
inches. Courtesy Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver.
November 17, 2007 - February 16, 2008
Temple Gallery, Old City
Vancouver-based artist Damian Moppett is well known across Canada for his material investigations of historical practices. Through wide-ranging and often deliberately mimetic sculptural fabrications, he explores previous artistic strategies, developing the latent material, pictorial and conceptual possibilities in other artists’ languages, and opening up critical issues in relation to history and shifting notions of the avant-garde. Temple Gallery will present Moppett’s latest project, a series of drawings and cast sculptures instigated by his research on modern sculpture. In it he engages the specific processes of molding and casting, and explores their potential for replication and repetition while using material to insinuate a critique of artistic hierarchies. His works form a loosely constructed personal art history that incorporates contradictions, anachronisms and serendipitous parallels—an allegory of relationships assembled through his serial identification with Alexander Calder, Anthony Caro, Henry Moore, Hollis Frampton and others.
Opening reception for the artist on Friday, November 16, 6 to
8 pm at Temple Gallery, 259 North Third Street, Philadelphia.
Hours:
Wednesday - Saturday, 11 to 6

Temple Gallery, in conjunction with the exhibition "Damian
Moppett, After the Fall," will host "A Conversation with
Damian Moppett and Philip Glahn" on Tuesday February 12, at
5:30pm. The event will take place at Presidents Hall on Tyler
Campus, 7725 Penrose Avenue, Elkins Park, PA.
“Damian Moppett, After the Fall” is the first one-person
exhibition in the U.S. for the Canadian artist. The exhibition
continues through February 16th at Temple Gallery, 259 N.
Third Street in Old City.
September 7-November 3, 2007
Temple Gallery, Old City
Organized in partnership with Philagrafika, a regional consortium that promotes printmaking and the printed image, Re:Print Re:Present Re:View features the works of three internationally renowned artists: Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Rachid Koraïchi and Berni Searle. Each artist’s project will directly engage an aspect of Philadelphia’s diverse and multiple histories, through a contemporary or historical episode or a site or neighborhood. The exhibition was conceived by guest curator Salah M. Hassan, who is Director of Africana Studies and Research Center and Professor of African and African Diaspora art history and visual culture in the Department of History of Art at Cornell University.
"The Fluid Field :
Abstraction and Reference"

"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Delusional Birthday Dinner Party for Big
Daddy"
7x11' 2007, o/c, by Angela Dufresne.
Courtesy Monya Rowe Gallery, NYC
October 3 – 21, 2007
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Monday through Friday - 10AM to 6PM
Saturdays and Sundays - 10AM to 6PM
Curated by Dona Nelson, this exhibition is
comprised of the work of ten women who
graduated from Tyler School of Art,
spanning the period from 1963 to 2007.
Their paintings are distinguished by
seriousness, sophistication and ambition.
Working in an art form that has been
dominated by men, these artists do not
feel obligated to make paintings that
specifically address their gender. This
lack of obligation differentiates these
ten artists from some women painters who
became prominent in the 1980s and 1990s.
The focus of the painters in "The Fluid
Field : Abstraction and Reference," is the
painterly field, which can include images
and figures. The field functions as a
broad contextual space that is no less
important than the images.
Manybody, a group exhibition
Manybody Website
June 1 – July 21, 2007
Temple Gallery, Old City
Manybody is about artist multiples and multiples of artists—that is, artist groups—whose collective resources facilitate distinct social and political goals. Organized by Jesse Goldstein, an artist member of Space 1026, the exhibition comprises projects that offer different working examples of how politically motivated art forms engage people in thinking and acting collectively. The projects will include A/Way, Celebrate People's History: Poster Project, Project Hello, Tit Pin, the West Philadelphia Re-Signage Committee, and You Are Beautiful. Together, these projects construct a complex portrait of the multiplicity of creative positions in our social world. Each focuses on a different dimension of our shared humanity and, importantly, engages some artistic format as a platform for their message. In addition to their individual presentations, some outside the gallery, the groups will also produce collaborations among themselves and with organizations such as the University of the Poor’s School of Arts and Culture.
You Are Beautiful

Celebrate People's History: Poster Project
MFA Thesis Exhibitions
MFA Thesis Exhibition Website
March 14–May 19, 2007
Temple Gallery, Old City
Penrose and Tyler Galleries, Elkins Park
This series of one-person shows gives each graduating MFA student the opportunity to present the work done for their thesis project. The series includes students from all Tyler departments and an array of media: painting, sculpture, glass, printmaking, metals, graphic design, fibers, photography, ceramics, and more.
2007 MFA Exhibition Schedule
March 14–17, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Chris Bowne
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Walsh Hansen
March 21–24, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Clifford Hedin
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Brett John Johnson
Tyler Gallery: Erin Arnold
March 28–31, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Asuka Goto
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Joseph Borelli
April 4–7, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Justin James Reed
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Marlo Pascual
April 11–14, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Dennis R. Ahearn, Jr.
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Jahjehan Bath Ives
April 18–21, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Chad States
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Ryan McCartney
Tyler Gallery: Jonathan Allmaier
April 25–28, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Emily Snedden
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Ivette Spradlin
Tyler Gallery: Sara Jane Muratori
May 2–5, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Rachel A. Chambers
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Joshua R. Cole
Tyler Gallery: Jacquelyn Strycker
Penrose Gallery: Laura M. Haight
May 9–12, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Robert Edwin Geyer
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Corey Antis
Tyler Gallery: Jen Davison and Scotty Reifsnyder
May 16–19, 2007
Temple Gallery, 1st room: Corinne M. Grealish
Temple Gallery 2nd room: Marco Phillips
Empathetic
November 4, 2006–February 17, 2007
Temple Gallery, Old City
Empathetic Exhibition Website
Lecture by Art Historian James Elkins
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
6pm
126 Engineering/Architecture Building
Temple University Main Campus
12th & Norris Streets
Public Exhibition Tour
Saturday, December 2, 2006 2pm
led by Tyler Graduate Students Justin Reed and Jenny Buffington
Gallery Talk by Curator Elizabeth Thomas
Saturday, November 4, 2006
Empathetic, curated by Elizabeth Thomas, brings together work by ten artists to explore themes of communication, empathy and understanding, and features drawings, installations, performances, videos and sound works. ‘Empathy,’ the ability to share the experience of another, to perceive and relate to another’s feelings and intentions, is the underlying subject or operation of each project. In this wide-ranging exhibition, the works do not always directly present or depict empathetic situations, but explore the ways in which personal identification and emotional understanding are provoked, and reveal aesthetics, social constructions and politics to be both the settings for and products of complex human relations.
This exhibition will feature several related events, including performances by Pedro Lasch and Pia Lindman, public lectures on the subject of empathy as well as about the art in the exhibition, and a series of talks in the gallery by local artists and professors.
Empathetic is the inaugural exhibition of a new “Emerging Curators” series, a biennial program which will feature projects by young professionals. Elizabeth Thomas is a curator and writer living in Pittsburgh, PA.
Artists:
• Jennifer Allora (American, b. 1974)
and Guillermo Calzadilla (Puerto Rican, b. 1972)
• CarianaCarianne (American, b. 1971)
• Paul Chan (American, b. Hong Kong 1973)
• Trisha Donnelly (American, b. 1974)
• Jesper Just (Danish, b. 1974)
• Pedro Lasch (Mexican, b. 1975)
• Pia Lindman (Finnish, b. 1965)
• Kalup Linzy (American, b. 1977)
• Rachel Owens (American, b. 1972)

Pedro Lasch The Dance of the Masks, 2004
In_Tension
October 25–November 4, 2006
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
This exhibition explores emerging contemporary performance art practices, and is curated by the student group Produce. The project will include work by five artists from across the country. A two-week exhibition will present ongoing performances by David Howe (GA) and Steven Lam (NY), and there will be three one-night performances by artists Quentin Davis (PA), Benjamin Kinsley (OH) and Nelson Loskamp (NY). In addition, a panel discussion will be led by philosopher, critic and artist Tom Zummer, and a workshop for students will be offered by Benjamin Kinsley from the Poke Orchestra.
Quentin Davis Jump, 2005

Nelson Loskamp Electric Chaircut, 2004
MFA Exhibitions
March 15–May 20, 2006
Tyler, Temple and Penrose Galleries
Lecture by Christian Rattemeyer (Curator, Artists Space, NYC) May 8, 2006
Professional solo exhibitions by 31 artists in the 2006 MFA class.
Daniel Bruce
January 18–February 11, 2006
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Lecture by the artist February 2, 2006
Curated by the student-run group Produce, this exhibition featured a selection of sculptures by this emerging New York-based artist.
Mix
November 18, 2005–February 18, 2006
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Lecture by Cory Arcangel January 23, 2006
Lecture by Phyllis Baldino January 30, 2006
Lecture by Tony Cokes February 6, 2006
The video works in this exhibit exploit the formal rhythms and social codes of various kinds of popular music in a wide range of presentations. Each mixes musical form with visual imagery, exploring the connection of pop music to identity, memory and narrative, and revealing the instabilities of structures that we easily take for granted. Featured artists include: Cory Archangel and Frankie Martin, Phyllis Baldino, Tony Cokes, Seth Price, Anri Sala, Althea Thauberger
First Year Out
October 11–November 5, 2005
Penrose Gallery, Elkins Park
This group exhibition was curated by the student group Produce in order to investigate the transition from student to emerging artist. Produce members put an open call out to artists who graduated in 2003-2004, and then selected works to be included in the show. Artists come from all over the country—from Omaha, Nebraska to New York City—and work in a variety of media including video, painting, photography, embroidery, and sculpture. This is a rare opportunity to see work by emerging artists selected by their peers.
Architecture Thesis Exhibition
October 5–October 8, 2005
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Thesis projects of Christopher Colgan and Andrew Hart (Spring ’05) and digital designs of Melissa Shilling and Mark Faulkner (Fall ’04)
Phil Collins, assume freedom
September 9–November 5, 2005
Temple Gallery, Old City
Lecture by the Artist October 17, 2005
Photo shoot Saturday, October 15, 2005
Gallery Talk by video artist Nadia Hironaka, October 27, 2005
This exhibition comprised a selection of recent video and photographic works by Phil Collins (b. Runcorn, Great Britain, 1970), an artist who creates participatory projects, often in places that have been tested by social or political conflict. This exhibition was organized by Exhibitions and Public Programs at Tyler School of Art and the University Art Museum, California State University, Long Beach. It incorporated phil collins: they shoot horses, the exhibition organized by the Wexner Center for the Arts, The Ohio State University. While in Philadelphia, Collins photographed members of the regional art community to produce new pictures for his series you’ll never work in this town again.
summer friends with new roses: a painting installation by Joy Feasley in collaboration with Paul Swenbeck and Kait Midget
June 3–July 23, 2005
Temple Gallery, Old City
Artist talk with Joy Feasley and artist Clint Takeda, “BYOP (bring your own pie)” Reception, June 21, 2005
Inspired by Indian miniature niche paintings and domestic shrines, this Philadelphia-based artist Joy Feasley incorporated new panel paintings into an intricate architectural framework, and added dioramas by artist Kait Midgett and ceramics by Paul Swenbeck. A new letterpressed zine of the same title featured contributions by various local artists.
Carlos Jimenez
April 12–16, 2005 and June 3–August 15, 2005
Tyler Hall, Elkins Park
Lecture by the architect: March 17, 2005
A selection of photographs and floorplans for arts-related buildings by architect Carlos Jimenez.
“Bell Renaming Bill”
March 31–April 1, 2005
Workshop and Performance by artist Aaron Gatch of the Center for Tactical Magic
Independence Mall.
Organized by the student-run group Produce. Gatch and the students staged a faux protest on Independence Mall to change the name of the Liberty Bell.
Double Monster in Excerpt, David Bunn
November 19, 2004–February 26, 2005
Temple Gallery, Old City
Events: Opening Reception, Lecture by art historian Howard Singerman
David Bunn’s project “Double Monster,” was conceived while Bunn was an artist in residence at the Mütter Museum of the College of Physicians, Philadelphia, in 2000 at the invitation of the late Gretchen Worden. The project is one part of a decade-long series of works based on obsolete library card catalogs, in which the artists pairs a selected sequence of cards with the typed poem formed by the listing of their titles. Bunn engages a number of conceptual issues, such as the Surrealist notions embedded in the process of his “found poetry,” and the constructed nature of his assembly of the numerous body parts that form the Mütter’s collection (which, not coincidently, provokes the idea of Frankenstein’s monster). A lecture “The Body in the Library,” by Dr. Howard Singerman, associate professor in Art History at University of Virginia, will be held at the Arden Theater, February 7, 2005. An essay about the work by Jan Tumlir was reprinted in the exhibition brochure.
Pulp
January 18–February 19, 2005
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Curated by Produce director, Omar Rodriguez-Graham, the exhibition features works that engage the materiality and/or function of paper, with works by artists Noriko Ambe, Ryan Johnson, Vik Muniz, Leslie Mutchler and John Powers.
A Declaration of the Necessity for the Public Good, Buster Simpson
September 1–November 6, 2004
Temple Gallery, Old City
Events: Opening Reception & Performance, Collaborative Workshop series with Students
Buster Simpson organized a workshop project to engage Tyler students in the political symbolism of the fall 2005 presidential campaign. Basing his designs for public sculpture on the Windsor chairs depicted in engravings of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, he and Tyler students constructed chairs and benches from recycled wooden pallets in the gallery itself, transforming it during the first week of the exhibition into a workshop. Following Simpson’s residency, the gallery provided a showroom for the pallet Windsors as well as some materials that reference the design and construction processes. The exhibition also comprised images and documents of some of Simpson’s earlier projects that relate to public sites and seating, public discourse, and agitprop.
The workshop was a collaboration with Tyler School of Art Sculpture department, the Wood Turning Center, and the John Grass Wood Turning Shop. A performance featuring an actor portraying King George III took place in the gallery during the First Friday opening in October.
Mixmaster Universe
June 4–August 6, 2004
Temple Gallery, Old City
Co-sponsored with American Philosophical Society
Part of The Big Nothing, a city-wide initiative by the Institute of Contemporary Art, this exhibition presented works by artists who were commissioned to study the archives of John Wheeler (author of black hole theory) at the American Philosophical Society and produce work. Artists included: David Guinn, M. Ho, Thomas Lessner, Roxana Perez-Mèndez, and Susan Patterson. Temple Gallery co-sponsored lecture at American Philosophical Society by Bruce Partridge, Professor of Astronomy, Haverford College.
Analog Click Click
Temple Gallery, Old City
February 6–March 6, 2004
Analog Click Click was co-curated by Acting Director Nancy Lewis and Sam Fritch, Assistant Professor, Foundations Program, at Tyler, and featured recent computer-generated art that focused critical attention on the tactile—and paradoxically, handmade—qualities of the final object. Artists included: Hannah Barrett, Douglas Boehm, Lia Cook, Carl Fudge, Paul Ramirez Jones, Matt Haffner, E.J. Herczk, Aida Laleian, Mark Leuders. The exhibition was accompanied by an essay by Tamryn McDermott, a student in Tyler’s Art History department.
Bernard Tschumi: Concepts vs. Contexts
November 7–December 13, 2003
Temple Gallery, Old City
Lecture by the Architect
This exhibition was organized in conjunction with Temple’s annual PSFS lecture on Modern Architecture, in a partnership with Loews PSFS Hotel. The exhibition featured two projects by the architect. The first—the University of Miami’s School of Architecture—was presented along with process material that illuminated the design process, from concept sketches to on-site construction decisions. The exhibition also featured Tschumi’s master plan for EXPO 2004, an international exposition that was ultimately never realized. This master plan explores the concept of “the image of the image” through pavilions, screens, bridges, walkways and agoras. An essay by John Hubert, Assistant Professor of Architecture, Temple University, accompanied the exhibition.
Randall Sellars: Drawings
October 21–November 15, 2003
Gallery Talk by the Artist
This exhibition of Philadelphia artist (and Tyler alumnus) Randall Sellars featured intricately detailed graphite drawings on paper, many of them only 2 x 2 inches. Drawings came from two bodies of work—realist figures and imaginary cities. The show was accompanied by an essay by Rachael Arauz, independent curator.
Oculus Photo Folio
October 10–25, 2003
Temple Gallery, Old City
An exhibition of work by students in graduate programs across the country, to accompany the publication of their work in a limited edition portfolio. Organized by the Oculus Photographic Arts Group, an association of students in Tyler’s photography program.
Rain Harris: Poison Bottle
September 9–October 11, 2003
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Gallery Talk by the Artist
Harris covered each wall of the gallery with multiple case and ceramic shapes, each covered with various decorative floral appliqué patterns, pearly and metallic glazes, atop highly ornate wallpaper. Within these wall arrangements she displayed her ceramic “poison bottles” also covered with decorative elements including rhinestones, feathers and pearls. This imaginative immersive environment explores the boundaries between Victorian influences, “good taste” and kitsch. The work was created during the artist’s residency at the Clay Studio in Philadelphia. The show was accompanied by an essay by Rachael Arauz, independent curator.
Wheel of Life
September 5–October 3, 2003
Temple Gallery
Wheel of Life was an installation created by Losang Samten, Spiritual Director at the Tibetan Buddhist Center of Philadelphia and recipient of the NEA’s 2002 National Heritage Award. In the Temple Gallery, Samten constructed a Tibetan Buddhist Sand Mandala; Samten is one of only 30 people in the world who can perform this ancient practice of painting with colored sand. The exhibition ended when the artist destroyed the work by dispersing the sand into the Delaware river. An essay by Kurt Behrendt, Temple professor of Art History, accompanied the exhibition.
Peter Eisenman: Two Projects
November 1–December 14, 2002
Lecture by the Architect, Panel Discussion, Two Scholarly Lectures co-sponsored by Temple’s Jewish Studies Program
Temple Gallery, Old City
Peter Eisenman: Two Projects was the first exhibition to examine the Berlin Holocaust Memorial in the context of contemporary memorials to the victims of the Holocaust. Mining the exhibition’s intersecting themes, a series of public programs brought the international Jewish community and the architectural professional together in discussions of events of tremendous historical import. The Eisenman exhibition was developed and produced in tandem with the Architecture Program and was held in conjunction with Eisenman’s delivery of the 2nd Annual PSFS lecture. As part of this initiative, the Temple Gallery also collaborated with the Jewish Studies program in the production of an interpretive brochure for the exhibition, with an essay by noted scholar of Jewish visual culture, Shelly Hornstein.
Show Up and Show Show
June 7, 2002
Temple Gallery, Old City
The Cane Project by Martin Puryear
November 2–December 15, 2001
Temple Gallery, Old City
Dreams in the Void: Post-Heroic Visions of Space
November 3, 2000–January 13, 2001
Temple Gallery, Old City
Works by Stephen Antonson, Steven Brower, Kara S. Hammond, Yoshio Itagaki, Ellen K. Levy, Alexis Rockman, Karen Yasinsky, curated by Anne Collins Goodyear and Kevin Melchionne. This group exhibition featured works by contemporary artists examining the theme of space travel in the post-Apollo era.
Copper, Stone and Fire: James Metcalf, Ana Pellicer and the Artisans of Santa Clara del Cobre
September 1–October 14, 2000
Temple Gallery, Old City
Gallery Talk with James Metcalf and Ana Pellicer; Sunday, September 17, 2pm – Presentation by Roy Skodnick, Co-curator, in conjunction with The Mexican Cultural Center’s Independence Day Celebration
Focusing on the thirty-three year old dialogue of metal sculptors James Metcalf and Ana Pellicer with the copper smiths of Santa Clara del Cobre of Mexico, this exhibition will include copper work and jewelry. Works will be accompanied by photographic and video documentation of the artisans, their workshops, and classes at the Adolfo Best Maugard School of Arts and Crafts founded by Metcalf and Pellicer in 1976.
Co-curators: Kevin Melchionne and Roy Skodnick
A 48-page catalogue written by the Skodnick and Melchionne accompanies the exhibition.
Place of Memory: An Archaeology of Site-Specificity, 1969 - 1999
November 4, 1999–January 15, 2000
Temple Gallery, Old City
Historical survey of site-specific interventions in the Philadelphia area since the 1960’s presented through photographic documentation of the work.
Robert Raczka: An Ornamental Grammar
August 31–October 2, 1999
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Manipulated digital prints of ornamental patterns derived from chandeliers and other decorative objects.
Amy Orr
December 4, 1998–January 15, 1999
Temple Gallery, Old City
Paula Scher
January 27–February 27, 1999
Temple Gallery, Old City
Papo Colo: Recent Paintings
January 22–February 21, 1997
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Beth B: Out of Sight / Out of Mind
September 6–October 13, 1995
Temple Gallery, Old City
Mike Glier: Garden Court with benches by Jenny Holzer
November 8–December 22, 1995
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Accompanying publication, Garden Court.
Pepon Osorio: En la Barberia No Se Llora (No Crying Allowed in the Barber Shop)
January 31–March 1, 1996
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
The Masks of Mexico
January 18–March 10, 1995
Temple Gallery, Old City
Psychic Borders: Buzz Spector, Gene Gort, L.C. Armstrong
February 23–March 18, 1994
Temple Galley, Old City and Tyler Gallery Elkins Park
Pop Politics
September 14–October 14, 1994
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Charles Burns
October 26–November 23, 1994
Temple Gallery, Old City
Irwin
February 9–March 18, 1990
Temple Gallery, Old City
Kiki Smith
January 26–February 25, 1990
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Robert Storr/Amy Hauft
September 5–October 1, 1989
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Bernhardt/Fudyma Design Group
February 7–March 2, 1989
Penrose Gallery, Elkins Park
Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
January 20–February 19, 1989
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Hamish Fulton
November 18–December 18, 1988
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Supporting Materials: Publication of Straight Smoke, an Artist Book containing extracts form Hamish Fulton’s walk diaries of 1985 in an edition of 200, signed by the artist.
WPA: A Philadelphia Retrospective
October 11–November 19, 1988
Temple Gallery, Old City
Prints and Drawings were exhibited at Temple Gallery, with Posters and Artifacts at the Philadelphia Branch of the National Archives and Records Administration (9th & Market Street)
Robin Winters
September 16–October 9, 1988
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Robert Gober
February 26–March 21, 1988
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Ofrendas: Spirituality and Celebration in Latin American Life
February 5–March 19, 1988
Temple Gallery, Old City
Drawings by Carroll Dunham
January 21–February 19, 1988
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Supporting Materials: ½ page add in ArtForum
Fumio Yoshimura
December 4, 1987–January 23, 1988
Temple Gallery, Old City
Photoworks by Sarah Charlesworth
December 3, 1987–January 9, 1988
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Innovations/Applications: Technological Pioneers in Metalsmithing
November 6–29, 1987
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
The exhibition was curated by Vickie Sedman, Associate Professor at Tyler, and included works by 20 artists such as Arlene Fisch, Gary Griffin, Stanley Lechtzin, and Eleanor Moty. There was also a related symposium on November 14, 1987.
Constitution: Exhibit by New York Artists’ Collective, Group Material
October 2–November 28, 1987
Temple Gallery
Aeropittura Futurista: Works on Paper
October 1–October 25, 1987
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Events: Symposium on Futurist aeropainting and Full Color Catalog.
Ernie Kovacs
September 4–23, 1987
Temple Gallery
Faculty Choice Award Exhibition
May 29–July 4, 1987
Temple Gallery
Robert Keyser: Ten Years (1977-1987)
April 24–May 29, 1987
Temple Gallery
Co-organized with the Freedman Gallery, Albright College, Reading, Pennsylvania.
Annual Student Show
April 5–19, 1987
Tyler Galleries
Influences: Printmaking
April 1–18, 1987
Temple Gallery
Works by printmakers and the people who influenced them: Daniel Dallman/Michael Mazur, John Dowell/John Cage, Richard Hricko/Evan Summer, Hester Stinnett/Cheryl Kolak Dudek, Rochelle Toner/M.D. Fierke.
Glass!
March 6–March 27, 1987
Temple Gallery
Set up in conjunction with the Glass Art Society National Conference in Philadelphia.
Andrei Tarkovsky: A Film Series
March 4–April 22, 1987
President’s Hall, Elkins Park
The Alternative Studio: Three Decades of Work from the Collections of Helen Willams Drutt English
February 27–March 22, 1987
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Exhibition included works by artists on the forefront of the crafts movement: Robert Arneson, Nancy Carman, Richard DeVore, Wayne Higby, Ted Holman, Rudolf Staffel, Liz Stewart, Paula Winokur, Robert Winokur, and Betty Woodman.
Allan Wexler: Small Buildings, Furniture and Proposals for the Typical House
December 19, 1986–January 31, 1987
Temple Gallery
Lecture by the Architect/Artist: January 20, 1987
Joseph Beuys: Prints and Multiples
November 21–December 11, 1986
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Body Electric: Four Currents, Louise Bourgeois, Jody Pinto, Nancy Spero, Mia Westerlund Roosen
November 14–December 13, 1986
Temple Gallery
Events: Performance Directed by Jody Pinto: Practical Spirits: Circulatiry of Desire Ann Lee in Watervliet on December 5, 1986
Komar & Melamid
March 6–April 19, 1986
Temple Gallery, Center City
Exhibition, Lecture/Performance
Sources In American Culture: In Celebration of Black History Month
Works by: Robert Colescott, John Dowell, Bessie Harvey, Quentin Morris
February 7–February 28, 1986
Temple Gallery, Center City
Photographs from the 1985 Archaeological Expedition to Pseira, Crete
February 2–14, 1986
Tyler School of Art
Events: Lecture, “The Expedition to Pseira” by Dr. Philip Betancourt
Small Monuments
Temple Gallery, Center City
December 18, 1985–January 26, 1986
A group show of sculptural works by 14 artists that translate the power of the monumental into small scale commemorations: Louise Bourgeois, Phoebe Adams, Steven Beyer, Jon Clark, Brower Hatcher, Charles Fahlen, Bruno LaVerdiere, Donald Lipski, Carolyn Healy, Jack Wax, Mark Lere, John Parris, Wade Saunders, Barbara Zucker.
Laurie Simmons
October 11–October 28, 1985
Tyler Gallery, Elkins Park
Alex Grey: Recent Work
October 11–October 28, 1985
Penrose Gallery, Elkins Park
Inaugural Exhibit
September 27–November 8, 1985
Temple Gallery at TUCC (1619 Walnut Street), Center City
Gregory Amenoff, Barbara Kruger, Martin Puryear, Nancy Holt, Earl Staley