Gormley Gallery Exhibition Proposal #1
Curatorial Theme:
Mystic River explores animism as a living force within contemporary art, drawing on the enduring symbolism of water as a site of transformation, memory, and spiritual passage. Featuring local artists working across sculpture, installation, video, and experimental media, this exhibition foregrounds material as a conduit for metaphysical inquiry—steel rusts into ritual object, pigments bleed like tides, and digital currents ripple with ancestral echoes. Through this lens, the river is not only a subject but a collaborator: a sentient presence that shapes meaning, collapses binaries, and invites viewers to engage with the fluid thresholds between the visible and the unseen. Mystic River seeks to honor the sacred embedded in everyday matter and the artists who summon it into form.
Funding Sources:
1. William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund, Cultural Sector Collaboration
Strategic alliances that support collaboration and cooperation across the cultural community and strengthen organizational abilities to work at the highest levels.​
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2. Maryland State Council for the Arts, Project-Planning Grant
Applications are accepted on a rolling basis from July 1, 2024 through April 30, 2025 with a monthly review process
Research:
1. How Young Artists Take Inspiration From Religion in Uncertain Times
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2. Why Contemporary Artists Are Embracing Spirituality in Their Work
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-contemporary-artists-embracing-spirituality-work
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3. Religious Studies courses at Notre Dame of Maryland University
https://www.ndm.edu/undergraduate/academics/programs/religious-studies
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4. Spirituality in Art History and Practice: A Conversation with Donato Loia at Virginia Commonwealth University
https://blackbird.vcu.edu/interview-with-donato-loia/
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Proposed Artists:
Thiang Uk
Thiang Uk was born in Myanmar in 1993. His family migrated to the United States in 2004 fleeing potential violence and the instability of Myanmar’s government. Uk’s paintings investigate notions of holding manifold identities, inhabiting ever-shifting landscapes, as well as exploring ancestral memory through animism, metamorphosis, distance, mystery and the formality of painting. Uk is currently based in Baltimore, MD. He received his M.F.A. in the LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), his B.F.A. at Hunter College in NYC in 2017, and also completed a residency at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine in 2023.
Jordan Tierney
Bird Reliquaries from Late 21st Century, Jones Falls Settlement
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My work grows organically from time spent wandering in the urban streams and forest buffers of Baltimore. These hidden waterways were designed to channel storm water from all our impervious surfaces like roads, shopping malls, and housing developments. The water transports all the trash and pollution it collects along the way, to the Jones Falls, then the Chesapeake Bay, and out to the Atlantic Ocean. While hiking, I feel a mixture of awe at the lush life that manages to grow in such an abused environment and horror at the way we have treated the earth. I worry about climate collapse and especially my daughter’s future.
For a long time I grieved and raged. Now I use my skills and a little sorcery to change the valence of the trash I collect from negative to positive. I weave the overlooked into a poetic visual presence I hope can remind us all that our earth is beautiful and complicated and magical. This process of observing nature, collecting trash, and making art has become a spiritual practice for me.
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These sculptures are each based on a bird I have traveled through the outdoors with. Many of the wood pieces I use come from trees knocked over in a flood so I can use parts of the roots where a stone got incorporated in the wood. This resiliency during growth is an inspiration to me. People who live close to the land and make everything they need must use what they can find in their immediate environment. I enjoy that kind of resourcefulness. Each piece is a manifestation of many days of labor. This kind of devotion only happens when we love something. I love this planet and am grateful for the places my feet touch the ground here.
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Kingfisher Reliquary
Tree root with natural stone inclusions vintage flatware chest, antique wheel, spark plug, rusty hardware, fishing lures, beads, and hair ties found in stream, kettle spout, arrow tip collage, velvet, paint, 15x22x4"
Bonnie Crawford
or, if there be flooding
or, if there be flooding serves as an imagined response plan to a potential catastrophe. The title of this piece is a fragment from Advice to a Wife and Mother, published in 1878. Flooding, in the context of the book, refers to postpartum hemorrhaging. However, this euphemistic language can be more literally interpreted to reference natural disasters or rising sea levels. Blinking lights aimed at shadowy vignettes of accumulated detritus in the installation signal tenderly to the viewer a warning, a lament.