The Thaddeus Mosley exhibition has been open for about a week and one of the most popular elements of the show for many visitors is the GigaPan of Thad's home we're projecting in the third-floor gallery. Opposite some of Thad's smaller-scale sculptures, visitors can approach an interactive computer terminal and operate, manipulate and investigate an extremely detailed image of Thad's remarkable home located just a few blocks away from the museum here on Pittsburgh's North Side.
For those new to the technology, Gigapan is a collaborative project between Google, Carnegie Mellon University and NASA Ames Intelligent Systems Division's Robotics Group. In essence, a robotic platform is attached to a digital camera. The robotic mechanism allows a user to take a photograph, then it will re-aim the camera with great precision, to take another photograph. After taking many photos, GigaPan software stitches all the pictures into a gigapixel image that can then be explored by zooming into the image's great detail.
The GigaPan of Thad's home we have projected in the galleries is embedded below. Feel free to explore and tag this image. To launch in a full-screen viewer, CLICK HERE.
Showing posts with label THADDEUS MOSLEY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THADDEUS MOSLEY. Show all posts
Monday, April 13, 2009
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Greening the MF - Episode 1 : QR Codes in the Galleries
Throughout the month of April, I'm visiting with other MF staffers to talk about their everyday efforts to green the Mattress Factory. In this first episode, I chat with Jeffrey Inscho about the roll-out of QR codes in the galleries, an initiative intended to reduce the amount of printed gallery cards the museum produces and distributes. Up next in the Greening of the Mattress Factory series, I sit down with Barbara Luderowski to talk about the retro-fitting of museum properties and environmental aspects of new MF construction.
If you can't see the embedded video above, CLICK HERE to open a new window.
UPDATE (4/3/2009) - QR Codes: A Visitor Resource Guide
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If you can't see the embedded video above, CLICK HERE to open a new window.
UPDATE (4/3/2009) - QR Codes: A Visitor Resource Guide
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POSTED BY LINDSAY Read All Posts by Lindsay |
Categories:
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Wednesday, April 1, 2009
RHYTHM & TEXTURE: The Sculptures of Thaddeus Mosley
Robin Rombach/Post-Gazette
MATTRESS FACTORY DISPLAYS THE FLUID SHAPES OF THADDEUS MOSLEY
Wednesday, April 01, 2009
By Mary Thomas, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Several years ago, upscale fashion designer Bill Blass dropped by the Carnegie Museum of Art while on a business trip to Pittsburgh. Looking at the collection, he said "Georgia Gate" by Thaddeus Mosley was "the finest thing in your museum," then-museum director Leon Arkus told Mosley later on the phone.
"You should have told Mr. Blass I have one of his jackets," the North Side artist recalled with a characteristic warm smile and laid-back humor.
Mosley, who enters his 83rd year in July, is accustomed to accolades, accepting them graciously, almost bemusedly.
The most recent is a two-floor solo exhibition, "Thaddeus Mosley: Sculpture (Studio/Home)," that opens Friday night at the Mattress Factory.
A New Castle native, Mosley entered the Navy after high school and served in the South Pacific during World War II.
"It was segregated. We called it the Black Navy. This is the way America was then," he says.
After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh, where he majored in English and journalism, Mosley supported his family by working for the U.S. Postal Service. But the muse visited him during his free time.
A jazz aficionado, Mosley was reading Marshall Stearn's book, "The Story of Jazz," in the early 1950s when he came across a photograph of grave markers in a Georgia cemetery where slaves had been buried.
Click image above to view a video interview produced by Nate Guidry.
"The moment I saw that picture I thought of [celebrated Romanian sculptor Constantin] Brancusi's 'Bird in Space' sculptures," Mosley said during an interview for "Thaddeus Mosley: African-American Sculptor," a 1997 book about his work written by David Lewis and co-published by the Carnegie and University of Pittsburgh Press.
"Straight away I thought how the slaves who made those staves and Brancusi had never known each other existed, had never seen what each other did. Yet in each of them I saw a similar spirit, a similar approach to clean, fluid shapes coming from people working close to the earth and trying to fuse the earth and human spirituality into a single form."
Those forms "heavily influenced" the Carnegie sculpture, and four other "Gate" works, two of which are in the show.
They don't all look alike, Mosley says. The connection is "a feeling, rhythm and textures, that sort of thing. Repetition. Concentric effects. Mostly it's a weight and space concept. You should get a sense of levitation, a feeling of movement as you walk around them, because of their weight and space."
As he talks, Mosley moves through a forest of sculpture, some of it nearly twice his height, each piece unique. He typically creates abstract wood sculpture (but employs other materials), given texture by varying patterns gouged into the surfaces.
But a sinewy elongated form of a woman twines among vines gathered along the nearby Allegheny River in one sculpture, and a suggested truncated figure rises from a component inspired by a Dogon stepladder in another.
Three are anti-war pieces made in response to Iraq, including the thorny "Weapons for Mass Protection," and bone-accentuated "Tooth for Tooth" that was exhibited by the CUE Art Foundation in Chelsea, New York City, in 2004.
Of the approximately 80 sculptures displayed, about 30 have never been exhibited and 40 have not been shown in Pittsburgh. Most were made between the late 1990s and last month, and "represent 70 percent of what I've done in the last 10 years," Mosley says.
Museum co-directors Barbara Luderowski and Michael Olijnyk were inspired to do the exhibition by a visit to Mosley's art- and memento-filled Mexican War Streets home, a few blocks away. | CONTINUE READING |
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POSTED BY JEFFREY Read All Posts by Jeffrey |
Categories:
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JEFFREY,
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MF UPDATES,
THADDEUS MOSLEY,
VIDEO
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
THADDEUS MOSLEY: Embeddable E-Flyers
The opening reception for THADDEUS MOSLEY: SCULPTURE (STUDIO | HOME) is just around the corner. With a little over a week to go, the show is coming together; Thad has been here working here in the galleries for the past few weeks, and our installation team is putting the finishing touches on a spectacular participatory multi-media element to the exhibition.
Here at the MF, we rely heavily on the good word of our supporters to help get the news out to the people. If you'd like to help support the cause, you can RSVP to the FaceBook event for the opening. Also, below are two different sizes of embeddable THADDEUS MOSLEY e-flyers. Feel free to copy and paste the corresponding HTML code onto your blog or other social networking site. Or download one of the images and email it to your contact list. Anything you do is greatly appreciated. Happy e-flyering and I hope to see you at the opening!
EMBED THIS 518 x 800 E-FLYER:
Copy and paste this HTML code:
<a href="http://www.mattress.org/index.cfm?event=Exhibitions&c=Upcoming"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3425/3382595027_cbf723aeaa_o.jpg" BORDER="0"></a>
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EMBED THIS 324 x 500 E-FLYER:
Copy and paste this HTML code:
<a href="http://www.mattress.org/index.cfm?event=Exhibitions&c=Upcoming"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3425/3382595027_89560cbba4.jpg" BORDER="0"></a>
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POSTED BY JEFFREY Read All Posts by Jeffrey |
Categories:
EVENTS,
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JEFFREY,
THADDEUS MOSLEY
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Thaddeus Mosley Photographs.
In preparation for the upcoming THADDEUS MOSLEY: SCULPTURE (STUDIO | HOME) exhibition – opening reception on April 3 – we wanted to give people a behind the scenes view of the complete installation process. For the show, we'll be packing-up and transporting Thad's entire artist studio to the museum's main building. We will also be documenting and reconstructing a portion of Thad's North Side home within the gallery. The big move will be taking place next week and we plan to share the process as much as we can.
To give you an idea of the elegance, beauty, uniqueness and volume of Thad's work, we've created a Flickr set for the exhibition. Some selections from the set are below. You can click on the image to see a larger version. All photos were taken by Tom Little.
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Posted by JEFFREY
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Thursday, February 12, 2009
THADDEUS MOSLEY: SCULPTURE (STUDIO | HOME)
THADEUS MOSLEY: SCULPTURE (STUDIO | HOME)
April 4, 2009 - July 19, 2009
Opening Reception: Friday, April 3, 2009 [ ADD TO FACEBOOK ]
In a city like Pittsburgh that is steeped with tradition, oral histories become a unique view into the past. Stories told over generations are met with curiosity about places and people forever changed by time. One such storyteller is artist Thaddeus Mosley.
Beginning on April 4, 2009, the Mattress Factory will present THADDEUS MOSLEY: SCULPTURE (STUDIO | HOME), a solo exhibition highlighting both the professional and private life of sculptor Thaddeus Mosley. For the exhibition, Mosley’s complete artist studio and portions of his North Side home will be documented, transported and reconstructed within the Mattress Factory’s galleries. The exhibition will be on view through July 19, 2009.
Thaddeus Mosley is a native of New Castle, Pennsylvania, and has spent his adult life in Pittsburgh. After an enlistment in the Navy, he attended the University of Pittsburgh where he graduated with majors in English and Journalism. To support his family, he took a job with the postal service, a position he retained until his retirement in 1992. During the 1950s, Thad also worked as a journalist for the Pittsburgh Courier and various national magazines. This is the period during which his interest in carving and sculpture began.
“Thad’s sculpture obviously speaks for itself, but what really interested me during a site visit to his home were his personal collections and the stories he told about his life here in Pittsburgh,” says Michael Olijnyk, Co-Director of the Mattress Factory. “With this exhibition, we’re showcasing his sculpture, of course, but also Pittsburgh’s rich history told through Thad’s incredible voice.”An opening reception for THADDEUS MOSLEY: SCULPTURE (STUDIO | HOME) will take place on Friday, April 3, 2009, from 6:00PM to 9:00PM. Admission is $10. Mattress Factory members, Pitt & CMU students (w/ I.D.) are always FREE.
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Posted by JEFFREY
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Categories:
EVENTS,
EXHIBITIONS,
JEFFREY,
MF UPDATES,
THADDEUS MOSLEY
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