Product Design Conference in Chişinău, Moldova

In October 2023, I'm glad to announce my participation in the upcoming Product Design conference, to take place in Chisinau, Moldova. This event is being organized by Tekwil at the Technical University of Moldova, with sponsorship from both Sweden and the European Union. During the conference, I'll be speaking on the topic of “Accessibility within User Experience (UX) Designing Better Products.” In a world increasingly driven by digital products, the importance of creating user-friendly, inclusive digital experiences cannot be overstated. I'll be sharing insights, strategies, and best practices on how to enhance the accessibility of digital products, ultimately leading to better user experiences.

Also, I'm honored to be a panelist for the discussion on “Partnership for an Inclusive and Sustainable Digital Society.” This panel explores how collaborations and partnerships can foster an inclusive and sustainable digital landscape, aligning with the vision of a more equitable and interconnected global society.

I look forward to engaging in insightful conversations, sharing knowledge, and fostering connections with fellow participants at the Product Design conference in Chisinau. Read more

E Ashley Fox
Between Technology and Theory: Data and Distance

Image: Giovanni Borgherini and His Tutor, attributed to Giorgione, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. 

Excited to be included as one of the speakers at The Between Technology and Theory: Data and Distance workshop hosted by the Warburg Institute, School of Advanced Study University of London. June 8–9, 2023

Organised by Rheagan Martin (CASVA Center for Advanced Study in Visual Arts Predoctoral Fellow) and Louisa McKenzie (Warburg Institute). 

Digital humanities tools are increasingly deployed as research methodologies. Each digital project brings with it its own set of challenges: the binary nature of digital platforms often forces the researcher to present subjective decisions as objective fact, which otherwise may have been moulded with metaphorical language. This workshop will emphasise on digital projects as tools for investigating interdisciplinary concepts of cultural memory. 

Each panel will include brief presentations from the invited speakers of their respective projects, followed by an extended time for discussion among presenters and participants regarding the challenges and benefits of integrating digital humanities into research, allowing for an exchange of knowledge and experience, as well as facilitating new connections, both professional and intellectual.

Projects under discussion span disciplines including art history, textual history, medieval history, heritage and collections management and more.  Speakers include:

Thursday 8 June

  • Alice Sullivan (Tufts) - Sinai Digital Archive  

  • Matthew Westerby (Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C) - machine learning to process hyperspectral image data

  • Elizabeth Ashley Fox-Jensen (SAS/Malmo University) - perspectives and methods for developing a more sustainable and accessible Catalogue Raisonné 

Friday 9 June 

  • Eric Hupe and Sarah Beck (Lafayette College) - Renaissance optics and virtual reality and photogrammetry

  • Alice Sullivan (Tufts) and Maria Alessia Rossi (Princeton) - North of Byzantium

  • Dario Negueruela and Jose Ballesteros (University of Zurich) - Dialectics of light: a methodological comparison

  • Margaret Smith (Southern Illinois University Edwardsville) – Submission Strategies: The Irish Submissions to Richard II, 1395

More information

E Ashley Fox
Ted Stamm Series, Hatje Cantz

Glad to contribute with an essay in the new Ted Stamm Series book published by Hatje Cantz. Ted Stamm’s paintings, drawings and performative works show the New York artist’s constant engagement with his time and his tireless experimental way of working. He developed a minimalist visual language that often appears strictly geometric and simple, yet conveys a great sense of freedom. His iconic works and cross-media conceptual approaches went on to influence a wide range of artists in the generation that followed. This new monograph on the work of this American artist is the most comprehensive published to date. Examining Ted Stamm’s series and artistic language through essays by renowned scholars that place his work in the context of its time and discuss his contribution to the art historical canon, it provides an in-depth insight into Stamm’s multifaceted oeuvre.

Contributor text(s) by Tiffany Bell, Christine Mehring, Jeffrey Saletnik, Andrew Wasserman, Elizabeth Ashley Fox and Per Haubro Jensen. 248 pp., 150 ills. Hardcover 22.00 x 29.00 cm ISBN 978-3-7757-5507-8

E Ashley Fox
Alan Steele Studio
Unconditionally Constitutional, installation view © Alan Steele, courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC.

Unconditionally Constitutional, installation view © Alan Steele, courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC.

Created a website for Alan Steele Studio. Steele is a conceptual painter who established himself during the early 1970s as a minimalist painter working with mathematical formulae integrated within a grid. This precise process developed into a fragmentary visual language which became the basis for his artwork.

E Ashley Fox
Abbey Hall Interiors

Excited to design a new branding system, social media channels and website for Abbey Hall Interiors in Roswell, Georgia.

Abbey Hall Interiors bringing a vision to life through a harmonious balance of antique and contemporary design. Curating a boutique, unique environment. Offering a bespoke hands-on approach to each project, driven by the desire to change the lives of our clients through the environment in which they live.

https://www.abbeyhallinteriors.com

https://www.instagram.com/abbeyhallinteriors/

E Ashley Fox
Linda Levit Studio
Linda Levit Studio

Enjoyed designing and launching a new website for Linda Levit’s Studio.
https://www.lindalevitstudio.com/

Linda Levit lives and works in NoHo in downtown Manhattan since the late 1970’s and has exhibited work in solo and group exhibitions in New York City and Internationally. Her work has been included in exhibitions at MoMA PS1, A.I.R. Gallery, Exit Art, Flowers, all New York, NY; Reading Museum, Reading, PA; Museum Gegenstandsfreier Kunst, Otterndorf, Germany; Galleri Weinberger, Copenhagen, Denmark; Konstruktiv Tendens, Stockholm, Sweden; Galeria Dels Angels, Barcelona, Spain; Grace Project, Seoul South Korea, among others. Levit’s works are fully abstract, combining soft edge shapes such as triangles, squares, rectangles and circles coupled with vivid colors invoking the work of Mark Rothko and Henry Matisse. Levit’s studio practice focuses on paintings, watercolors, works on papers, printmaking and stained glass. Levit is a recipient of a Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant and a guest editor at New Observations and Zabtuze magazine. Levit’s work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Art Museum, New York, NY; Reading Museum, Reading, PA; Museum of Modern Glass Art, Copenhagen, Denmark; Oppenheimer and Company, New York, NY, among others.

E Ashley Fox
Major monograph on Ted Stamm

On the occasion of the exhibition Ted Stamm: Woosters, on view earlier this year at Lisson Gallery New York, Lisson gallery published the first major monograph on the American artist. A comprehensive survey of the entire “Wooster” series, the hardcover book also includes new scholarship by art historian Alex Bacon and an illustrated chronology of the artist’s career.

The book will be distributed in the United States by Artbook D.A.P. and in the United Kingdom and Europe by Cornerhouse.

Stamm lived and worked on the top floor of 101 Wooster Street in the downtown Manhattan neighbourhood of SoHo from 1972 to his untimely death in 1984. In 1974, Stamm encountered an irregular shape on his street — a rectangle joined on the left by a slightly shorter triangle. Using this form as the inspiration, he began what he titled the “Wooster” series. These geometric forms with hard edges furthered the artist’s earlier experimentations of formalist elements of the line and literal as well as depicted shapes. The exhibition at Lisson Gallery includes a selection of paintings from this series, including a large-scale “Lo Wooster” (a variation of the aforementioned shape, hung close to the ground) as well as works on paper, archival material and photographs. A diligent archivist and record keeper, Stamm kept exhaustive documentation related to the making of his paintings, a selection of which will is installed in a vitrine in the gallery space and reproduced in the catalogue.

While painting and drawing was always his primary focus, Stamm regularly extended his practice into the streets where he made proto-graffiti interventions in the urban environments of New York. Known as “Designators”, these works were executed in locations around the city and on varying objects. Stamm placed “Wooster Designators” primarily on the bumpers and license plates of cars, so that the vehicles would travel beyond the neighbourhood or city, bearing Stamm’s “Wooster” shape, to be seen by numerous more people. Photographs of these projects, documented in 1980, are also in the exhibition and the catalogue.

https://www.lissongallery.com/news/pre-order-the-first-major-monograph-on-ted-stamm

E Ashley Fox
SOLID

Excited to design and launch a new website for SOLID
https://solidnyc.com/

SOLID is an architectural design build firm located in New York, founded in 2010 by French architect Guy Reziciner. SOLID’s multidisciplinary projects spans art, design, and architecture, combining a insider knowledge of the art world and cultural sector with impeccable technical expertise and a thorough understanding of zoning, building code, and historical preservation guidelines.

E Ashley Fox
MoMacha Wayfinding

Happy to see the signage and menu board I designed for the new MoMaCha cafe/gallery next to The Hole Gallery on the Bowery in New York, grand opening March 29th.

Dan Lam “Hands On” on view through July 15th
Dan Lam (b. 1988, Philippines) is known for her drips, blobs and squishes: inventive new sculptures made of foam, resin and acrylic. Adorned with acrylic “spikes” or Swarovski crystals, these works play with notions of body image, imperfection and decadence. In this show “Hands On” she exhibits for the first time iridescent ceiling drips and cushiony floor blobs; all touchable and interactive. Her futuristic color sensibility combined with the tactile quality of her work is so enticing! It’s hard to tell whether the urge is to touch it, take it home or try to eat it. Here, you can touch any works that say “TOUCH ME”, you can take home a work if you want to purchase it and you can also eat a Dan Lam-designed dessert!  Follow her @sopopomo

https://www.instagram.com/momachanyc/
https://momacha.com/

E Ashley FoxMoMaCha
Ted Stamm Woosters at Lisson Gallery

Ted Stamm Woosters

9 March – 14 April 2018

Lisson Gallery presents the first exhibition of Ted Stamm’s work at Lisson Gallery New York, featuring paintings, works on paper, archival material and photographs from the artist’s "Wooster" series. 

Ted Stamm was born and raised in Brooklyn and Long Island, and rarely strayed from the New York metropolitan area. After beginning his career painting colourful lyrical abstraction in his post-graduate days in the late 1960s, Stamm quickly set out to explore painting beyond tradition and to introduce further layers of complex colour, form and line. While many other painters of the period like Alan Charlton, Robert Ryman and Brice Marden were also experimenting in monochrome, following the success of late Modernist post-war artists such as Yves Klein, Ellsworth Kelly and Robert Rauschenberg, among others, Stamm quickly furthered his experimentation of the use of a minimal palette by introducing composition, through the precision of the line and the shaped canvas.

Stamm lived and worked on the top floor of 101 Wooster Street in the downtown Manhattan neighbourhood of SoHo from 1972 to his untimely death in 1984. In 1974, Stamm encountered an irregular shape on his street — a rectangle joined on the left by a slightly shorter triangle. Using this form as the inspiration, he began what he titled the "Wooster" series. These geometric forms with hard edges furthered the artist’s earlier experimentations of formalist elements of the line and literal as well as depicted shapes. The exhibition at Lisson Gallery will include a selection of paintings from this series, including a large-scale "Lo Wooster" (a variation of the aforementioned shape, hung close to the ground) as well as works on paper, archival material and photographs. A diligent archivist and record keeper, Stamm kept exhaustive documentation related to the making of his paintings, a selection of which will be installed in a vitrine in the gallery space. 

While painting and drawing was always his primary focus, Stamm regularly extended his practice into the streets where he made proto-graffiti interventions in the urban environments of New York. Known as “Designators”, these works were executed in locations around the city and on varying objects. Stamm placed “Wooster Designators” primarily on the bumpers and license plates of cars, so that the vehicles would travel beyond the neighbourhood or city, bearing Stamm’s "Wooster" shape, to be seen by numerous more people. Photographs of these projects, documented in 1980, will be included in the exhibition. 

On the occasion of the exhibition, Lisson Gallery will publish the first major monograph on Stamm, a comprehensive survey of the entire "Wooster" series, including an essay by art historian Alex Bacon and an illustrated chronology of the artist’s career. 

http://www.lissongallery.com/exhibitions/ted-stamm

Framing Community: Magnum Photos

Happy to see the signage I designed for Framing Community: Magnum Photos 1947-Present at Leubsdorf Gallery, Hunter College Art Galleries, 132 East 68th Street, through November 26, 2017

Curated by Prof. Maria Antonella Pelizzari with graduate students enrolled in the Advanced Curatorial Certificate

On the occasion of Magnum Photos’ 70th Anniversary, the Hunter College Art Galleries presents Framing Community: Magnum Photos, 1947–Present, an exhibition that revisits the history of the cooperative photo agency, focusing on the idea of “Community”—a subject that has been central to the practice of photographers and continues to be crucial in our time. 

Installation view photographs by Stan Narten

www.leubsdorfgallery.org

 

E Ashley Fox
Alchemy Paintworks
Alchemy Paintworks

Happy to design and launch a new website for Alchemy Paintworks
https://alchemypaintworks.com/

Alchemy Paintworks is dedicated to providing the highest quality spray coatings for artists and the design industry, specializing in paint finishing for metal sculpture as well as repair and restoration. As a trusted source for artists, galleries, auction houses and conservators, we’re committed to executing the perfect finish. Our highly skilled team has helped realize and conserve the visions of some of the world’s most innovative contemporary artists, including Urs Fischer, Carol Bove and Sol LeWitt.

 

E Ashley Fox
Tower 49 Gallery

Excited to launch a new website and branding system for Tower 49 Gallery in NYC. Opening with a beautiful exhibition, Free Fall by Cordy Ryman in May www.tower49gallery.com

After two years of construction, Tower 49 opened its doors to a roster of international and high profile tenants in 1984. Tower 49 is designed by the renown architectural company, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM). The original tenants included, The First Boston Corporation (now Credit Suisse), Saks Fifth Avenue and Bank Generale. Many of the original tenants and successors continue to occupy or lease space more than 25 years after Tower 49 opened.

In 1992, Tower 49 began art programming in the main lobby, establishing Tower 49 Gallery. The expansive wall and ceiling heights are a great space for exhibiting site-specific installations, paintings and sculptures. Over the years, Tower 49 Gallery has exhibited artists including: Frank Stella, Mark Di Suvero Jules Olitski and Shigeno Ichimura. For the past 7 years Tower 49 Gallery has been working with The Arts Student League of New York as well.

E Ashley Fox
Hunter East Harlem
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Launched new website for Hunter East Harlem Gallery

Hunter East Harlem Gallery is a multidisciplinary space for art exhibitions and socially minded projects. Located on the ground floor of Hunter College’s Silberman School of Social Work at 119th Street and Third Avenue, the gallery presents exhibitions and public events that foster academic collaborations at Hunter College while addressing subjects relevant to the East Harlem community and greater New York City. The Gallery seeks to initiate partnerships with publicly oriented organizations and focuses on showcasing artists who are engaging in social practice, public interventions, community projects, and alternative forms of public art. Since its inception in 2011, all exhibitions and programs at Hunter East Harlem Gallery are free and open to the public.

E Ashley Fox