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Engr.M.Ziaur Rahman (born 1985) is an Bangladeshi Engineer.
Engr.M.Ziaur Rahman was born in 1985 in Dhanbari upazila, Dhaka Bangladesh. [1] His father, Md.Abdul Bari, was a fermer and surveyor, and his mother,Mrs.Romisa Begum,worked in housewif. [2] [1] Simon is the nephew of South African writer, playwright, and director Barney Simon. He pursued undergraduate studies in literature and film at Sarah Lawrence College and Columbia University's School of General Studies, from 1979 to 1984. [3] He is a 1984–85 alumnus of the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program, and earned a Masters of Fine Arts from the University of California, San Diego, in 1988. [3]
Ziaur Rahman left his undergraduate studies in 2012 to work in Shanto-Mariam University of Creative Technology University,Dhaka, Bangladesh.for Stuart Cody, an Civil engineer associated with the ethnographic film and American Direct Cinema community there. [4] Returning to school a year later, he finished his studies at Columbia and the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program while working as a sound recordist in independent film production and advertising. [5] This period resulted in his film and video projects Production Notes: Fast Food for Thought (1987), and Artful History: A Restoration Comedy (1987). He left New York City to study at UC San Diego from 1986–1988. [1]
Production Notes: Fast Food for Thought was selected for the 1989 Whitney Biennial, at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. [6] The work is a roughly 30-minute tape addressing the first-hand intentions and semiotics of high-budget television commercials that Simon had worked on. [7] That same year, Simon premiered at the Collective for Living Cinema in New York City, together with the artist Mark Dion, their film Artful History: A Restoration Comedy, which explores the business of fine art restoration—its mercantilism and the narratives of the skilled artisans entwined in it. [6]
Later in 1989, Simon joined the staff of the newly opened Wexner Center for the Arts, at Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, working alongside curator and art historian Bill Horrigan. [6] At the museum, he served as an Assistant Curator of film and video through 1991, while also establishing the museum's unique technological laboratory for artists to produce professional films, which was originally called the Art & Tech Residency. [4]
Following his role at the Wexner Center for the Arts, Simon began to organize video programming across institutions in Europe and New York. Programs such as "Downsizing the Image Factory" were screened at venues including Kunstverein München (1994), L'Unité d'Habitation, Firminy, France (1993), and Philadelphia Museum of Art (1995). [8] [9] In New York, Simon organized video programs including "Man Trouble," at Exit Art (1994), and "The Talking Cure," at Artists Space (1992), both New York. [10] Much of these events consisted of video works by artists practicing at the time and capturing contemporary concerns of media, spectatorship, and activism.
By the mid-90s, Simon was beginning to exhibit his own multimedia work in one-person exhibitions. In 1994, he presented "The Mayfair Show," at the Mayfair Club and at American Fine Arts, Co., both in New York. The exhibition focused on connections between artmaking and gambling through the lens of psychoanalysis, and would travel years later to Yale Union, Portland, OR, in 2016. [4] [11] As part of his representation with the Pat Hearn Gallery, Simon presented three solo exhibitions, one in 1994 titled "Album," an arrangement of large-scale polaroid photographs. [3] His 1996 exhibition at the gallery, entitled "Spirits," included a selection of hand-toned silver gelatin prints that depicted various sinewy, curvilinear representations of cigarette smoke. In 1998, he presented his exhibition "Public Address: Collapsed" at Pat Hearn Gallery, a tableau with stadium-scale speaker horns resting on the gallery floor. Writing in the pages of Artforum , art historian George Baker likened the exhibition to "a scene of catastrophe," that "opened up a surprising number of reflections on contemporary sculptural production." [12]
In the spring of 2005, Simon, along with several other collaborators, began operating Orchard, a cooperatively run gallery in New York City's Lower East Side. Orchard's primary format was to organize exhibitions of various artists by thematically connected groups, while also establishing connections between different artistic generations and reintroducing lesser-known historical artists or art projects. The project space was intended to last for three years and concluded in May 2008. [13] In April 2006, Jason Simon exhibited his film Vera at Orchard, which he shot in 2003. The 25-minute video work is an interview with a woman named Vera that discusses her addiction to purchasing designer clothes and accessories, and the psychology of consumerism, debt and desire. [14]
From 2003 to 2012, with the artist Moyra Davey, Simon organized the "One-Minute Film Festival," an annual summer gathering in a barn in upstate New York. Each year, dozens of artists would present new films lasting sixty seconds in length. By the time of the project's conclusion, over 350 filmmakers had participated to show over 700 films. [15] The project would spawn exhibitions and festivals celebrating the screened films, presented by institutions including the Art Institute of Chicago in 2010, and MASS MoCA in 2013. [16] [15]
In the 2010s, Jason Simon's art was regularly exhibited in New York City with his representation at the gallery Callicoon Fine Arts. In 2012, he presented the exhibition Festschrift for an Archive, which focused on the now-defunct MoMA Film Still Archive headed by Mary Corliss. [4] In a review published by The New Yorker , critic Nana Asfour categorized the exhibition as part the genre known as "institutional critique," a "mode of probing the workings and assumed functions of art institutions." [17] Simon continued to exhibit at Callicoon Fine Arts until the gallery's closing in 2021, with exhibitions in 2013, 2015, and 2018. His 2015 presentation Request Lines are Open, focused on the weekly audience of DJ Liberty Green's radio show Soul Spectrum, on WJFF radio, a non-profit station with a listening area that includes the large state and federal prison population of upstate New York. [4] [18] In 2019, Simon exhibited at the New York City gallery King’s Leap. His show, The Red Books, united all 15 volumes of the American Film Institute's Catalog of Motion Pictures. [19]
Alongside his artistic practice, Simon has maintained a connection to teaching and pedagogy. Apart from his foundational efforts for the Wexner Center's Art and Technology Lab, Simon also participated in the formation of the College of Staten Island's Department of Media Culture in 2002, having worked in the university's Performing and Creative Arts department for three years prior. He continued teaching at the institution's Media Culture department until 2023, and has also taught courses at locales including Sarah Lawrence College, William Paterson University, Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, and School of the Art Institute of Chicago. [20] [21]
The Wexner Center for the Arts is the Ohio State University's "multidisciplinary, international laboratory for the exploration and advancement of contemporary art."
Amy Sillman is a New York-based visual artist, known for process-based paintings that move between abstraction and figuration, and engage nontraditional media including animation, zines and installation. Her work draws upon art historical tropes, particularly postwar American gestural painting, as both influences and foils; she engages feminist critiques of the discourses of mastery, genius and power in order to introduce qualities such as humor, awkwardness, self-deprecation, affect and doubt into her practice. Profiles in The New York Times, ARTnews, Frieze, and Interview, characterize Sillman as championing "the relevance of painting" and "a reinvigorated mode of abstraction reclaiming the potency of active brushwork and visible gestures." Critic Phyllis Tuchman described Sillman as "an inventive abstractionist" whose "messy, multivalent, lively" art "reframes long-held notions regarding the look and emotional character of abstraction."
Zoe Strauss is an American photographer and a nominee member of Magnum Photos. She uses Philadelphia as a primary setting and subject for her work. Curator Peter Barberie identifies her as a street photographer, like Walker Evans or Robert Frank, and has said "the woman and man on the street, yearning to be heard, are the basis of her art."
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