Interviews

Madeleine Aguilar’s Ox-Bow EP

Photo Caption: (left) Madeleine Aguilar on stage while playing the guitar. (right) Madeleine Aguilar, mobile music maker II, Found instruments, wood, rope, clamps, and chair legs. Images courtesy of the artist.

Madeleine Aguilar is an artist of many talents. Rather than limiting herself to a lane – visual art, writing, or music – Aguilar embraces variety and hybridity within her work. It is in the exchange between these forms where her practice comes to life in enchanting ways. 

Aguilar described her years in undergraduate school as a time where she kept her various practices separate, a time of “skillbuilding and trying to become a master of all trades.” Now, she recognizes the liminal spaces between these practices as essential learning environments. While formalizing her visual practice, music served as a creative outlet and escape where she could “play around and not worry about making perfect things.” Aguilar has realized over time that this improvisational attitude is a creative asset and strives to integrate it into her other creative practices. This approach, combined with her interest in collaborative work, dictates many of her current projects. 

From library carts to mobile music makers, Aguilar’s work invites folks to gather around and enter in. The same can be said for her Ox-Bow EP. Composed of four songs, each one strikes as both personal and collective, especially for listeners that have stepped foot on Ox-Bow’s campus. Her lyrics paint pictures of sunrises on the lagoon and the sand and grit that fixes itself to all who visit Ox-Bow

Now serving as the Print and New Media Studio Manager, Aguilar spent the summer of 2022 at Ox-Bow as a staff member, rather than a student. “The first week felt like a month, now ten days is nothing at all,” Aguilar sings in “Ox-Bow (summer 2022),” the EP’s closing song. “Time changes as someone who lives there,” she reflected in her interview, “Ox-Bow becomes your home.” The album overall feels deeply intimate in its relatability. Perhaps this is due to the nature by which Aguilar is drawn to songwriting. She describes music as a journaling practice of sorts. “I don’t keep a diary,” she said, but her songs function as a mode of processing. Her first visit to Ox-Bow during the winter of 2019 she described as “the most magical experience,” resulting in what Aguilar referred to as “Ox-Bow withdrawal” when she returned to Chicago. As a way of digesting her experience, she wrote the song that eventually became the opener to the EP.

As Aguilar prepares to return to Ox-Bow this spring, she anticipates more additions to the collection of songs. Those keen on listening to its current standings can tune in on Soundcloud. And definitely keep your ears perked for new music in the future. Aguilar revealed that a recent trip to Rose Raft included time in the recording studio, capturing what will eventually be Aguilar’s first full album.

If you have news or stories you’d like to share about your time at Ox-Bow or beyond, you can contact Engagement Liaison & Storyteller, Shanley Poole, at spoole@ox-bow.org.



In the Studio with Brandon Sward

Photo Caption: Below: Artist Brandown Sward and his exhibition How the West Was Lost. 

Artist Brandon Sward did not follow the “traditional” path of artists today. He does not have a BFA or MFA. In fact, he’s currently a Sociology Doctoral Candidate at the University of Chicago. And it's this space, between academia and art, where Sward’s latest work swims. During Sward’s time as a Longform Resident this past September, the artist invited me into the Lutz Studio for a conversation as well as a look at his work.

When I stepped into the studio it felt much more gallery-like under the curation of Sward. A barrel of hay sat in the far corner of the room and above that hung a saddle and stirrups as well as a variety of photos that Sward had taken at a rodeo. Not too far away, a belt buckle and horseshoe hung on the wall. A mannequin, posed on a distressed table, was dressed in an equally disheveled denim shirt under a canvas, quilted jacket. 

In his latest installation How the West Was Lost, Sward wrestles with images of western masculinity in a fashion equal parts playful and serious. His great-uncle Stanton (namesake of Sward’s middle name) was the owner of the artifacts posted around the room. A number of plaques accompanied the objects. They were printed on plastic in the hard-lined sans serif font of a museum. At first glance they were equal in voice to those at museums: crisp, academic, borderline clinical. But Sward let the writing carry itself and transform into something new, morphing the prosaic into poetic: “The word ‘chaps’ is a shortened version of the Spanish chaparreras,” one plaque begins and by the end of the paragraph the text has galloped into a fantastical scene of “Lana Del Rey, flying down an open highway, loose dark curls billowing gently in the wind.”

If you’re interested in exploring the exhibition for yourself, you can check out How the West Was Lost as well as its accompanying performance piece.

If you have news or stories you’d like to share about your time at Ox-Bow or beyond, you can contact Engagement Liaison & Storyteller, Shanley Poole, at spoole@ox-bow.org.

When Fashion and Inflatables Collide

We caught up with Claire Ashley and Vincent Tiley to see where their inspiration and excitement lies in this new course. Inflatables: Paint Skins comes to Ox-Bow this Summer for the first time!

OX: What are you most looking forward to in coming to Ox-Bow to teach next summer? 

Vincent Tiley: I’m very excited about the kind of artistic explorations that can happen at Ox-Bow. I think it’s very different than what is generated in a more typical classroom. At Ox-Bow you can really step outside of your focus and enrich yourself in a more self-directed way.

Claire Ashley: I'm always excited to be at Oxbow in person and bask in the landscape, pace, and camaraderie of the community!! There's nothing quite like it!  And I'm excited about this new class with Vincent as I've oddly enough never taught an inflatables-specific class before! 

OX: What was the inspiration behind joining forces for this new course, especially given that you both taught two popular courses separately? Vincent, will you be bringing any fashion elements to the table from your previous course?
VT: I was Claire’s TA in grad school and had a blast working with her. Claire is also a creative force. Her work is really incredible and fun. I’m very technical. I thought that this class would be possible at Ox-bow because of the success of the fashion class. Clothing and balloons are really similar. They both are essentially skins that are filled with something to give them volume. In the case of balloons that something is air instead of parts of the body.

CA: Vince is an incredibly inventive artist who works with a similar set of concerns as I do, namely inflatables as garments, performance, and the expanded field of painting, so I'm excited that we both will be working together again!! I'm also excited that I get to use the expanded field of painting content from my previous exploding paint class within the context of the inflatable membrane or skin, I'm hoping it will be a model that we can repeat :)


OX: Are there any exciting highlights you would like to share about your course that we can share? What can students look forward to in your course?
VT: I think that the most exciting thing is the possibility for installing outdoors. There’s forest, beach, lake, lagoon, and the campus of Ox-Bow to be explored for installation. The thing about inflatables is something that’s as tall as a house can roll up and fit inside a suitcase or back pack. You can really be playful in just where you install. 

CA: I think there will be an abundant amount of energy, play, and curiosity in this class. Both of us strive to build a supportive environment where everyone can take risks, test, play, cavort, and generally explore a more irreverent relationship to an artistic practice. 

 

Born in West Virginia, New York based artist Vincent Tiley (he/they) received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. Tiley's garment-based durational performances queer clothings’ myriad uses--often combining multiple performers into one sculptural and painted form; the garments no longer function as outward signifiers adorned by an interior self but fully disguise, restrain, and extend their wearers, irreverent of the corporeal boundaries of individual selves. His work has been featured and reviewed in Art in America, the Chicago Tribune, Performa, and the New York Times. The artist has been widely exhibited internationally including the Museum of Art and Design, the Leslie-Lohman Museum, AxeNeo7, CFHILL, and the International Museum of Surgical Science. His works have been collected by the Whitney Library, the Leather Archives and Museum, Yale University Library, and the Watson Library at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Claire Ashley (she/her) uses her work to investigate inflatables as painting, sculpture, installation, and performance costume. These works have been exhibited nationally and internationally in galleries, museums,site-specific installations, performances, festivals, and collaborations. Her work has been featured on blogs such as VICE, Hyperallergic, and Artforum, and in magazines such as Sculpture Magazine, Art Papers, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Time Out Chicago, Yorkshire Post, and Condé Nast Traveller. Ashley received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and her BFA from Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen, Scotland. Originally from Edinburgh, Scotland, Ashley is now Chicago based. Currently, she teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the Department of Contemporary Practices, and the Department of Painting and Drawing. 

Interview with Cover Artist Ling Chun

Ling Chun is the cover artists for the 2022 Summer Course Catalog and is teaching the Clay Makerspace during CAMP: our 3-week Intensive.

What are you most looking forward to in coming to Ox-Bow to teach next summer? 
I am most looking forward is the face-to-face connection with students after teaching an online class for more than two years now. 

What was the inspiration behind the piece you have featured for our catalog cover?
Green Jar, 2018— my inspiration for this work is finding the most recognizable language of ceramics ( in this case, the vase ) that connects with the most audience. With the use of hair as the extension of glaze— I intend to break the old structure and shape and walk my audience to look at ceramics from a refreshing perspective — simple way to say: I am giving ceramics a make-over. 

Your course says you are taking inspiration from historical movements, can you elaborate a bit more on which movements you will be highlighting?
The course would emphasize the most recent contemporary movement in the ceramics discourse — how cross-discipline this medium has become. Also, what does it means when dominantly crafts-based ceramics become more used as an art medium. 

What about ceramics do you love and why did you want to lead this makerspace?
Nothing like clay capture movement intuitively— spoil alert: SO MUCH disappointment from the ceramics process makes you appreciate every little moment— that’s what I love about ceramics. It makes you look at the world differently. Part of the reason to lead this maker space is the excitement I have for a student interested in what sort of projects and wild ideas they will bring in. For most, I love giving a demo and showing the possibility you can do with ceramics.

Are there any exciting highlights you would like to share about your course that we can share? What can students look forward to in your course?

Do you like sparkle? I bring lots of sparkle and glitter to the course. I am not joking. I will teach you how to make your work likes it from outer space. 

About the artist…

Ling Chun (she/her) is a multimedia artist from Hong Kong. Her work represents the coexistence of multicultural identities within a single society. Chun’s practice focuses on creating artifacts which speak about history with a contemporary sensibility. In her execution and conceptualization of creative projects, Chun brings together her knowledge of Chinese culture and her contemporary artistic vision. Chun aspires to create public artifacts to bring relevance to historical storytelling in her future artistic pursuits. Chun is the recipient of numerous awards including the ArtBridge Fellowship 2020 sponsored by Chihuly Garden and Glass and The National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts emerging artist award in 2020. In 2019, Chun was shortlisted for the Young Master Art Prize in London and recently she has been shortlisted for 2021 Korea International Ceramics Biennale. Chun is currently based in Seattle. She works as a ceramic educator at North Seattle College and also as an educational guide for the Wing Luke Museum.