Solo Exhibition opens at Southern Vermont Arts Center

I'm excited to announce my solo show, "Landforms and Bodyscapes," is opening at Southern Vermont Arts Center (SVAC) in Manchester VT this Saturday, March 30; it has a long run until July 15, so take a fun drive to Vermont for the afternoon. From Albany 75 mins; from Hudson 1 hr 50 mins; from Bennington 30 mins; from Springfield 2 hrs.

*Made possible with partial support from the Nordisk Kunstnarsenter Dale Residence Award and the Celia & Wally Gilbert Art and Science ResidencecAward at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.

"Viral Integration" includes three drawings by Julie Harrison at University of California Irvine

University of California, Irvine, “Viral Integration,” February 1 – December 15, 2024 — Inaugural group exhibition curated by elin o'Hara slavick, artist-in-residence, for the new Susan & Henry Samueli College of Health Sciences Hall and Sue & Bill Gross Nursing and Health Sciences Hall. "The exhibit includes more than 100 works by 40 artists from across the United States and Canada – with a central theme of addressing health issues, from the individual human body and disease, treatment and survival to environmental factors and medical systems. Artists address childbirth, AIDS, mental health, cancer, medicine, healthcare workers, surgery, community responses to collective experiences, the practice of care, endometriosis, migraines, coal ash ponds, and much more." (UCI Public Health). Contact eoslavic@gmail.com for more information.

top: three drawings in "Viral Integration" from left to right: Bodies 6215 (2019), Bodies 8049 (2021), Bodies 4256 (2019), graphite and paper on paper, all 18 inches x 24 inches; bottom, flyer designed by Suzanne Slavick.

Nordisk Kunstnarsenter Dale awards Julie Harrison a 2-month Artist-in-Residence

I'm thrilled to have 2-months (January/February) at Nordisk Kunstnarsenter Dale, located in a small Norwegian village on the western coast, Dale i Sunnfjord. It's an honor to have been invited with four other artists, each with our own studio and house high on a hill.

photos above: left, studio for AIRs at Nordisk Kunstnarsenter Dale, from website; right, Dale i Sunnfjord Noway, view from studio, photo by JH.

Six New Drawings Exhibited at Level Gallery in Ridgewood Queens NY

Level Gallery, “The Table,” May 21 – June 4, 2023

photos above: left, Brains 2742, 2022. Graphite, India ink, printer ink, and paper on paper, 9 x 12 inches; right, Brains 2723, 2022. Graphite, India ink, printer ink, and paper on paper, 9 x 12 inches.

I'm excited to show six drawings in the inaugural exhibition at Level Gallery, curated by director Sfera Lewis. Opening May 21 from 5-7pm at 1639 Centre St, Ridgewood, Queens, NY (Halsey stop on the L train), followed by a launch party with live music. Part of the @rockella.space Art Crawl 2023 weekend with open studios, music, dance, and art. Dance performance by Morgan Amirah + Savannah Gaillard.” Contact Level Gallery for more information.

"The Elastic Mind" at Broward College Exhibits Lasting Impressions and Boundary (Radiated Face)

Broward College, “The Elastic Mind,” April 20, 2023 – Sept. 28, 2023 — curated by Kohl King, The South Gallery, Pembroke Pines, Florida.

Two of my early videos are exhibited, both made in collaboration with others.

Lasting Impressions, made with Robert Kleyn, was created in 1981. “Here the simple figure of the house comes alive, as symbol, mask and prop that enables the performers to be ciphers for the camera — to do anything except ‘act.’ ” (RK).

Boundary was made with Neil Zusman in 1980. The curator selected an excerpt, Radiated Face, "a mix of tapes produced during residencies where [we] collaborated in a free form improvisation of performance and media. Staccato images of violence and marching fascists are ‘thrown in’ to Julie’s face, sliced into sections with a special-effects generator, the Jones colorizer and Paik-Abe video synthesizer.” (NZ).

photos above: left, still from video, Boundary, 1980; right, still from video, Lasting Impressions, 1981.

Celia & Wally Gilbert Art and Science Residencey Awarded

I'm thrilled to announce that I have been awarded an artist-in-residence at the preeminent biochemical research laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor Lab, in Long Island. I will spend 16 days there in Februday where I will create a new kind of self-portrait — one that utilizes and is inspired by images of my own body tissue, cells, and neuronal connections sampled from the resources at the lab.

microscopic photograph

"Organic Intelligence: Recent Drawings by Julie Harrison" by Johanna Drucker

Here's what Johanna Drucker says about my work in "Organic Intelligence: Recent Drawings by Julie Harrison," a newly published article from her Substack series JD: ABCs. Drucker is the author of dozens of books including her most recent, Inventing the Alphabet: The Origins of Letters From Antiquity to the Present.

“Julie Harrison’s recent Brain Series drawings are ... more alive than we might imagine any static image could be. You don’t so much look at these drawings as watch them.”

Neuronal Brain Images and Art

Memoir #16: Dances of the Past (Part One), an interview by Alan W. Moore

Alan W. Moore interviewed me for his blog called Art Gangs. He recently authored a fantastic memoir called Art Worker: Doing Time in the NY Artworld (Journal of Aesthetics & Protest, 2022) about his experiences as an art worker during the 1970s and 1980s in downtown Manhattan, then the locus of the avant-garde art world. He recently posted an interview with me, “Memoir #16: Dances of the Past (Part One)” about my involvement with dance, Collaborative Projects and ... um, a few transgressions. Stay tuned for “(Part Two).”

Photograph by Julie Harrison, 1977, from a video made at Live Injection Point (LIP) by Julie Harrison and Cara Brownell, 1977.

"Julie Harrison's 'Bodies' " in Interalia Magazine written by Kimberly Lyons.

I’m thrilled to have an article entitled "Julie Harrison's Bodies" in Interalia Magazine, written by critic, poet and publisher extraordinaire Kimberly Lyons. Interalia Magazine is dedicated to the interactions between the arts, sciences and consciousness. Issue #68, Meeting Points, is edited by Richard Bright, a prolific artist and writer in his own right.

"It seems that Harrison is attuned to some essential, fluidly dynamic core aspect of organic life that she perceives in all species and that she very much is contributing to our awareness of not just the forms but their qualities with her art." —Kimberly Lyons, Julie Harrison’s ‘Bodies’

Bodies 9587, 2021, India ink, photocopy ink and paper on paper, 34″ x 24″

Site-Responsive Outdoor Work in Pasadena, California

I’m thrilled to have been invited to create a site-specific outdoor work at The Residency Project, located in Pasadena, California. Bodies #8332: Pasadena, composed of images of microorganisms found in soil and plants indigenous to the Los Angeles-Southern California area, will be up from May 1 – June 30, 2021.

"Digging deeply into these invisible but vibrant lifeforms in an attempt to bring them to the surface, Bodies #8332: Pasadena presents an imaginary microbiome that blurs the boundary between science and fiction." —artist Sarah Umles, founder and director of The Residency Project.

Installation of Bodies #2332: Pasadena; photo courtesy The Residency Project, 2021.

Installation of Bodies #2332: Pasadena; photo courtesy The Residency Project, 2021.

Bodies #2332: Pasadena, graphite and paper on paper, 16.75" x 22.75", 2021.

Bodies #2332: Pasadena, graphite and paper on paper, 16.75" x 22.75", 2021.

I printed examples of Achromobacter, Bacillus, Bradyrhizobium, Cupriavidus, Enterococcus, Pseudomonas, Stenotrophomonas, and Streptomyces in varied sizes, combined them with paper scraps on paper, and drew into it. The drawing is 16.75” x 22.75” and has been digitally printed on aluminum to sustain the outdoor elements and installed outside on location at The Residency Project. Thank you Sarah!

Installation of Bodies #2332: Pasadena; photo courtesy The Residency Project, 2021.

Installation of Bodies #2332: Pasadena; photo courtesy The Residency Project, 2021.

Two Photographs Selected For Exhibition, Shame Radiant

I’m happy to have had two photographs included in artist / curator / gallerist / activist Todd Edward Herman's exhibition, Shame Radiant, at Redline Contemporary Art Center in Denver, Colorado. Redline is a non-profit that "fosters education and engagement between artists and communities to create positive social change." Shame Radiant was part of a larger concept, Three Acts: A Survey of Shame, Emotion, and Oblivion curated by photographer Mark Sink. It ran from March 6 – April 25.

Weather Series (Boy3), photograph digitally printed on archival paper, 2013.

Weather Series (Boy3), photograph digitally printed on archival paper, 2013.

Global Portraits Series (Gaza), photograph digitally printed on archival paper, 2012.

Global Portraits Series (Gaza), photograph digitally printed on archival paper, 2012.

My conceptually-based photographs of repurposed media were sparked by the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, a war which in turn has propagated wars that are never-ending, for which I feel deep sadness (and shame). My photographs continued (for years) to be inspired by violence (actual and psychological) around the world. To read more about them, please go here, and to see more like this go here.

There were many other powerful works in this show that looked at “deeply intimate, broadly political, emotional, physical, social, sexual, interpersonal, intergenerational and institutional aspects of shame.” The installation of these photographs was remarkable (see below).

Screen shot of Instagram post by @eastwindow1, "Shame Radiant opening night was a success." 2021.

Screen shot of Instagram post by @eastwindow1, "Shame Radiant opening night was a success." 2021.

Todd Herman also produced a book which includes 84 selections (including mine) from Shame Radiant, published by his own gallery, located in Boulder, called east window, which “opened its doors (its window actually) in May 2020." I'm looking forward to seeing the book, presumably with the same title! Thank you Todd!

Screen shot of Instagram post by @Shame_Radiant, 2021.

Screen shot of Instagram post by @Shame_Radiant, 2021.

And there's more — a show that keeps on giving! Some of the works from Shame Radiant (including mine) were selected and virtually exhibited at Femme Salée's salon, an online intersectional platform which focuses "on feminist, queer, BIPOC, & disability body & mind experiences in the arts." Femme Salée, based in New Orleans, Los Angeles and Denver, is run by a collective of artists, writers, & curators for the "purpose of publishing an online art journal that resists mainstream culture." Check them out at femmesalee.com.

Screen shot of Instagram post by @eastwindow1, 2021.

Screen shot of Instagram post by @eastwindow1, 2021.

Colab No More Store! at James Fuentes Gallery

Through December, James Fuentes Gallery is hosting the “Colab No More Store!,” a project originating with Collaborative Projects in the early 1980s. I have "Playing Cards" there for sale alongside the work of other Colab members and friends.

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playing cards julie harrison collaborative projects

Playing Cards” (above) is a series of drawings made by myself and Robert Kleyn in Rome in 1983. The original drawings are oil pastel and acrylic on paper, 22" x 30" and five of them are here printed as a series of postcards. We combined international signs and symbols and altered them to create ironic and sometimes humorous meanings.

Artist Residency at Tides Institute and Museum of Art

In August/September, I had a very productive month as artist-in-residence at Tides Institute and Museum of Art in Eastport Maine. There I met with a marine biologist from the Maine Department of Marine Resources to learn about local phytoplankton and connected with the Cobscook Bay Resource Center which allowed me to utilize microscopic photographs from their website.

Working in the Tides studio, Eastport Maine. Photo: Hugh French.

Working in the Tides studio, Eastport Maine. Photo: Hugh French.

Two works created at the residency, each 23" x 34".

Two works created at the residency, each 23" x 34".

At the end of the month I gave a zoom talk about the work I made in Maine, which you can access here. Please let me know what you think.

Can't we all get along?

Happy spring (northern hemisphere), sad quarantine (unfortunately)! But here we are — may we all stay steady and strong!

You’ve no doubt been inundated with the iconic covid-19 image, the gray and red 3-D representation that to me seems far less threatening than the virus (of course, as it was intended) — beautiful even, sexy and colorful, like a dog ball — except for those deadly tubercles sticking out!

Viruses are what I’ve been working with for the past three years — images of bacterial and viral particles, organs, brain activity and other biomorphic abstractions, overlapping in space.

"Bodies (series) 6440," graphite and paper on paper, 18" x 24," 2019.

"Bodies (series) 6440," graphite and paper on paper, 18" x 24," 2019.

"Bodies (series) 6322," graphite and paper on paper, 18" x 24," 2019.

"Bodies (series) 6322," graphite and paper on paper, 18" x 24," 2019.

What if we could combine the good (virus / people) with the bad (virus / people) and coexist together? "Can we all get along? Can we stop making it horrible for the older people and the kids?." (Rodney King 1992).

What if SARS-CoV-2 could form relationships with our immune system, with white blood cells, and get along? Love each other and even thrive together? Surreal. (Hey, what if the GOP could get along with the Dems?) This is the concept for the cohabitations I create on paper. Sort of.