Benefit Shannon Rankin Benefit Shannon Rankin

Benefit | FAR x WIDE

FAR x WIDE, Project for Ukraine, Subduction No. 5, map weaving, March 15, 2022, https://farbywide.com

 
 

FAR x WIDE | Project for Ukraine
March 15, 2022

I have donated one of my map weavings for FAR x WIDE: Project for Ukraine. Over 65 artists have donated their art to help raise funds for the people of Ukraine. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the artwork will go to Razom’s Emergency Fund for Ukraine.

For more information visit: www.farbywide.com

With artwork by: Aaron Wexler, Adriana Farmiga, Alex Diamond, Alison Kudlow, Allison Honeycutt, Amy Sacksteder, Ariel Shea, Beatrice Wolert, Becky Brown, Beka Goedde, Brett Day Windham, Crystalle Lacouture, Elisa Soliven, Emily Noelle Lambert, Emily Weiner, Georgia Elrod, Gretchen Scherer, Hilary Doyle, Holden O'Brien, Jamie Romanet, Jane Kang Lawrence, Jason Rohlf, Jean Nagai, Jenna Ransom, Jenny Kemp, Jess Willa Wheaton, Jessica Simorte, Joey Weiss, Jordan Buschur, Julia Westerbeke, Justin Richel, Karen Dana Cohen, Karen Lederer, Katie Merz, Katy Krantz, Kerri Ammirata, Ky Anderson, Lauren Dana Smith, Lauren Portada, Liz Ainslie, Leonora Loeb, Malik John-Marc Purvis, Matthew F Fisher, Matthew López-Jensen, Max Manning, Meredith Iszlai, Michael Gac Levin, Mira Schor, Monica Carrier, Naomi Kawanishi Reis, Nina Kintsurashvili, Rachel Klinghoffer, Rachel Ostrow, Rob Matthews, Rob Nadeau, Sarah Morejohn, Shannon Rae Fincke, Shannon Rankin, Sharon Servilio, Shoshannah White, Stephanie Sherwood, Stuart Diamond, Sunny Chapman, Susan Carr, Taylor Loftin, Theresa Hackett, Thomas Spoerndle, Will Hutnick, Zach Seeger

Image: Subduction No. 5, 2021, Ink on hand-woven geologic maps, 9 x 6 inches
PRIVATE COLLECTION


ABOUT: Far x Wide is an artist-run project that organizes thematic group exhibitions and art benefits presented online and in available spaces. Far x Wide seeks to explore a range of ideas by bringing artists together and providing an opportunity for the public to support their work while also supporting social and environmental justice organizations. Far x Wide is based in Brooklyn, NY and was founded by Jessica Cannon in October 2017.

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Feature Shannon Rankin Feature Shannon Rankin

Feature | 12 NM Artists to Know

Press | Featured in Southwest Contemporary Magazine as 12 New Mexico Artists to Know Now, 2021

 
 

Southwest Contemporary | The New Mexico Field Guide, 2021
Shannon Christine Rankin: 12 New Mexico Artists to Know Now
MAY 25, 2021

Artist Shannon Christine Rankin works with maps to depict new, reimagined, and ever-changing geographies.

Roswell, NM | shannonchristinerankin.com | @shannonchristinerankin

The Earth often feels entirely quantified; as if everything is laid out neatly and named. But of course, maps are surprisingly inaccurate. The relative size of things, even the fact that most of South America is east of Florida, are often eschewed in our own mental maps. And then, of course, there are the borders that shift, the rivers and glaciers slowly moving, and in our own neighborhoods, the “desire trails” created across a patch of grass trod by too many pedestrians, the nameless but familiar alleys that never shore up in any atlas.

Shannon Christine Rankin works with maps and their vernacular to orient us anew to the world and its most enduring quality: change. In series like Earth Embroideries, she transcribes melting ice sheets in Antarctica via satellite imaging into minimal depictions with thread on paper, literally confronting our attempt to hold on to (and hold in our hands) what we can, even as the environment around us shifts, both challenging and sentimentalizing the act of map-making.

With change inevitably comes fragility. Nothing lasts, old things fade away. Rubbings created from uneven topographies in charcoal create gulfs on paper; nautical charts lose their bearings in collages created as laments for polar ice sheets. By splicing, scaling up and down, and reimagining the structure we put to place, we are called to look closer and closer. To ask: what is that most familiar terrain beneath your feet and in your mind? The sandstone and shale on this swath of land are here because this was once a shallow sea, but there’s a new geography now. Throughout Rankin’s work, these new geographies are multiplied, layered, and complicated by perception, experience, and the sense of aliveness inherent in change. — Maggie Grimason

Maggie Grimason is a writer and editor living in Albuquerque, NM. She edited a collection of essays on public art, Visually Speaking, was previously the Arts & Lit editor of the Weekly Alibi, and contributes to many other independent publications. When she's not writing, she's walking the bosque, planning her next trip, or writing poetry in bed.


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Exhibition Shannon Rankin Exhibition Shannon Rankin

Exhibition | Tactile Sublime

Exhibition: Water is Everything at Drive-by Projects in Watertown, MA, November 18, 2017 - January 16, 2018

DODOMU
Tactile Sublime
June 3 - 29, 2021

VIEW THE EXHIBITION

dodomu is a contemporary online gallery with a team based in Brooklyn, NY. We focus on showcasing emerging artists through online group exhibitions and represent a variety of media such as painting, photography, sculpture, digital and mixed media with emphasis on abstraction. While currently all of our operations are virtual, our longterm goal is to open a physical space in the future as we continue to grow.


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Review Shannon Rankin Review Shannon Rankin

Review | Press Herald

Mayo Street Arts Pop-Up Gallery, January 1 - 29, 2021, Review by Jorge S. Arango for the Portland Press Herald

Mayo Street Arts Pop-Up Gallery
January 1 - 29, 2021

Review by Jorge S. Arango for the Portland Press Herald

Shannon Rankin uses maps to express the constancy of change. Maps are fundamentally about charting and defining, fixing with exactitude some sense of place. Yet there are metaphorical maps as well: maps of the mind (where memory and experience are the sextants and compasses of a personal cartography), career maps (which navigate the path of our livelihoods), emotional maps (which bind us to expectations about relationships that don’t allow for growth and development), and so on. Yet boundaries keep shifting – glaciers melt, one country annexes another, we have revelations that shatter our identities, we get downsized, we grow apart and divorce. Rankin obscures and changes the neat grids, longitudes and latitudes of her maps using ink, salt and wax. By doing so, she captures the ephemeral reality and usefulness of any map.


– Jorge S. Arango

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Exhibition Shannon Rankin Exhibition Shannon Rankin

Exhibition | Postcards of Positivity

Exhibition: Postcards of Positivity, Artrinity, Dallas, TX, June 15 - July 31, 2020

 
Artrinity_RankinShannon_Untitled_01_02_03_Border 2.jpg
 

Postcards of Positivity
Artrinity
Dallas, TX

June 15 - July 31, 2020

I donated three pieces to Postcards of Positivity, during the Pandemic, benefiting artists and Artist Relief organized by Artrinity and The Goss-Michael Foundation

For more information visit Artrinity

Images: Untitled l, ll, lll, ink, pigmented graphite, rust, wax on topographic maps, mounted to paper, 6" x 4", 2020.


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Collaboration | Joshua Hagler

Exhibition: Postcards of Positivity, Collaboration with Joshua Hagler, Artrinity, Dallas, TX, June 15 - July 31, 2020

 
 

Postcards of Positivity
Artrinity
Dallas, TX

June 15 - July 31, 2020

I collaborated on this piece with Joshua Hagler and we donated it to Postcards of Positivity, during the Pandemic, benefiting artists and Artist Relief organized by Artrinity and The Goss-Michael Foundation

For more information visit Artrinity


Image: Untitled, 2020, ink oil and wax on collaged topographic map, 6 x 4 inches

A collaboration between Shannon Rankin & Joshua Hagler
Copyright The Artists

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Exhibition | Simulacrush

Exhibition | [ON]now | Simulacrush, CMCA's first virtual exhibition, curated by SISTERED, Dec 14, 2019 - Apr 5, 2020, https://cmcanow.org/event/on-now-simulacrush/

[ON]now | Simulacrush
CMCA's first virtual exhibition
curated by SISTERED
Dec 14, 2019 - Apr 5, 2020

Simulacrush features eighteen artists meditating on states of reality across media. This timely group of work wrestles with systems of difference, communicating and distorting truth in a hyperreal fashion—simulacra. In a moment where information is manifested, digested, and regurgitated with extreme speed, presenting this work in a virtual environment becomes necessary to understanding the states in which we find ourselves and the ways we manipulate it. Here there is an incredible amount of fact, so much that it becomes fiction, or does it? This group of work offers a glimpse at the creation of truth from a distorted copy of reality. This is liquid, urgent, thrashing, seductive.

Artists included:
Ben DeHaan, Zoe Fox, Elizabeth Hoy, Nate Luce, Heather Lyon, Mugwort (Jeonguk Choi + Soomin Kim), Oliver, Shannon Rankin, Joshua Reiman, Bob Richardson, Justin Richel, Tollef Runquist, Will Sears, Matt Shaw, Anoushe Shojae-Chaghorvand, Irina Skornyakova, Riley Watts, Robert Younger

VIEW EXHIBITION

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Curatorial Project Shannon Rankin Curatorial Project Shannon Rankin

Guest Curator | Curious Nature

Guest Curator: Curious Nature, 2018 Alumni Triennial Exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art in Portland, ME, August 3 - September 15, 2018, ICA at MECA

Curious Nature
2018 Alumni Triennial Exhibition 
The Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art 
Portland, ME

August 3 - September 15, 2018

ICA at MECA

Curious Nature brings together a diverse group of artists who draw inspiration from the natural world. Employing various mediums, from painting to sculpture, photography, and installation, their works are rooted in the act of looking closer.

The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness. - John Muir

These artists explore our relationship with the natural world through investigating the structure of reality, daily rhythms, beauty, texture, and emergent patterns. Focusing their attention on places and processes that are often overlooked, they illuminate the various forces affecting ecosystems and the environment that surrounds us. Their perspectives range from the micro and macro, revealing new views of familiar terrain. In an attempt to capture that which is in a state of constant transformation, they record their surroundings, yielding works that inspire our own sense of awe, inviting us to both celebrate nature and protect it. - Guest Curator, Shannon Rankin ’97.

Rankin’s selections include fifteen artists exhibiting diverse works that range from painting, printmaking and photography, to sculpture, ceramics, metalwork and installation. Artists include: Annika Early MFA ’16 (Portland, ME), Kristin Fitzpatrick (West Kennebunk, ME), Danielle Gerber ’12 (Portland, ME), Alisha Gould MFA ’10 (Kennebunk, ME), Kayla Goulden ’13 (Portland, ME), Lenka Konopasek MFA ’01 (Salt Lake City, UT), Mark Marchesi ’99 (Portland, ME), Tessa Green O'Brien MFA ’16 (South Portland, ME), Isabelle O'Donnell ’17 (Portland, ME), Catherine Quattrociocchi ’17 (Portland, ME), Sam Richardson ’15 (Portland, ME), Celeste Roberge ’79 (South Portland, ME), Bryan Stryeski MFA ’01 (Brooklyn, NY and Avon, CT), Sarah Camille Wilson ’07 (Burlington, VT) and Charley Young MFA ’14 (Halifax, NS).

Images courtesy of the Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art. Photography by Kyle Dubay

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Review | The Rib

Water is Everything at Drive-By Projects, November 18, 2017-January 16, 2018, Review by Mallory A. Ruymann for The Rib

Water is Everything
Drive-By Projects
November 18, 2017-January 16, 2018

Review by Mallory A. Ruymann for The Rib

Water is Everything unpacks the physical, historical, and socio-political shape of water with paintings by Judith Belzer and Cheryl Molnar, and works on paper by Joseph Smolinski and Shannon Rankin.

Molnar's contribution, Cliffside, depicts a house balancing on the edge of a cliff, a structure which Molnar delicately incised into the painting’s wood support. Though not explicitly rendered, erosion and other landscape elements (represented by dense clusters of painted paper) associated with our rapidly changing coastlines hint at the presence of water. Belzer’s small untitled oil-on-canvases (from the Half Empty Half Full series) portray the Hoover and Glen Canyon dams. The breakdown of the renewable water cycle means that these dams will soon become obsolete, though their physical forms will persist. Belzer paints the dams in an abstract style that de-emphasizes their present function in favor of their form, presaging their unproductive--but stylized--future role as monuments. The future also concerns Smolinski, whose phosphorescent-like Open Water drawings capture the uncertainty of what climate change may do to bodies of water. Rankin’s Earth Embroideries preserve satellite images of arctic landscapes in the medium of thread on paper, counteracting the ongoing transformation wrought on those landscapes by slowly melting glaciers. A cluster of branded water bottles stands on a plinth at the front window of the exhibition. Not credited to any particular artist, the cooperative sourcing of these vessels offers a potential salve to water’s precarious state. By working collectively around shared goals, we can perhaps determine the destiny of water.

- Mallory A. Ruymann

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Exhibition | Water is Everything

Exhibition: Water is Everything at Drive-by Projects in Watertown, MA, November 18, 2017 - January 16, 2018

Water is Everything
Drive-by Projects
Watertown, MA

November 18, 2017 - January 16, 2018  
Opening reception: Saturday, November 18, 3-5pm  
Hours: Thursday 12 - 4 pm or by appointment 617.835.8255

Drive-by Projects

Water is Everything, an exhibition of paintings by Judith Belzer and Cheryl Molnar, and works on paper by Joseph Smolinski and Shannon Rankin.

Review by Mallory A. Ruymann for The Rib.


WATER IS EVERYTHING

DRIVE-BY PROJECTS

NOVEMBER 18, 2017 - JANUARY 16, 2018


JUDITH BELZER
CHERYL MOLNAR
SHANNON RANKIN
JOSEPH SMOLINSKI

BY MALLORY A. RUYMANN
REACTION > WATERTOWN, MASSACHUSETTS
JANUARY 25, 2018


Water is Everything unpacks the physical, historical, and socio-political shape of water with paintings by Judith Belzer and Cheryl Molnar, and works on paper by Joseph Smolinski and Shannon Rankin.

Molnar's contribution, Cliffside, depicts a house balancing on the edge of a cliff, a structure which Molnar delicately incised into the painting’s wood support. Though not explicitly rendered, erosion and other landscape elements (represented by dense clusters of painted paper) associated with our rapidly changing coastlines hint at the presence of water. Belzer’s small untitled oil-on-canvases (from the Half Empty Half Full series) portray the Hoover and Glen Canyon dams. The breakdown of the renewable water cycle means that these dams will soon become obsolete, though their physical forms will persist. Belzer paints the dams in an abstract style that de-emphasizes their present function in favor of their form, presaging their unproductive--but stylized--future role as monuments. The future also concerns Smolinski, whose phosphorescent-like Open Water drawings capture the uncertainty of what climate change may do to bodies of water. Rankin’s Earth Embroideriespreserve satellite images of arctic landscapes in the medium of thread on paper, counteracting the ongoing transformation wrought on those landscapes by slowly melting glaciers.

A cluster of branded water bottles stands on a plinth at the front window of the exhibition. Not credited to any particular artist, the cooperative sourcing of these vessels offers a potential salve to water’s precarious state. By working collectively around shared goals, we can perhaps determine the destiny of water.  

Drive-By Projects
Located at 81 Spring Street in Watertown, MA, Drive-By is a small, innovative space committed to exhibiting provocative work in its storefront windows and small gallery.

Founded by Beth Kantrowitz (Allston Skirt Gallery) and Kathleen O'Hara (OHT Gallery), Drive-By is open Thursdays 12-4 and by appointment, though you can always drive by our windows to view the current exhibition.
drive-byprojects.com

Mallory A. Ruymann is an educator, curator, and art historian based in Boston.

Background image:
Shannon Rankin, Earth Emroidery (Glacial Furrows), 2016, hand stitched thread on paper, 7 x 7"

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Exhibition | Materiality

Exhibition: Materiality: The Matter of Matter at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art, November 11, 2017 - February 11, 2018

Materiality: The Matter of Matter
Center for Maine Contemporary Art
November 11, 2017 - February 11, 2018

You begin with the possibilities of the material. –Robert Rauschenberg

The question of how and why an artist uses materials has long been a topic of consideration in art history. Today, many artists are looking to this question and seeking to find a balance between what they use to make work and the concepts behind them. Providing agency to the materials themselves, artists are looking at materials as a means of communication, whether they are expanding on traditional media and narratives or utilizing everyday objects to construct new forms. Exploring these concerns in their work, the artists included in the exhibition, all with ties to Maine, are also considering why they choose to work with certain matter in our current material culture and social climate, and the role that these materials play within it.

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