Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA)

Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA) The founding Board of Directors first met to discuss their mutual vision in October 2007, and officially launched the organization in February 2011.

Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA) is a hybrid, non profit museum committed to education about contemporary art through exhibitions, critical art writing, arts incubation, and various initiatives like Emerging Curators. Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA) is a not-for-profit organization which compliments other regional cultural institutions while differentiating itself throug

h collaboration and community partnerships and by offering new portals of entry for enjoying, understanding, and interpreting contemporary art. phICA was envisioned and is structured to be organic and efficient and is a non-collecting institution with a primary focus on exhibition projects, artist residencies, and arts incubation activities.

If you are participating in Arizona Gives Day please consider supporting phICA and its programing today!www.azgives.org/...
04/02/2024

If you are participating in Arizona Gives Day please consider supporting phICA and its programing today!
www.azgives.org/phica

Now Showing! A new Virtual Exhibition showcasing the work of Chicago/Mexico City-based visual artist Cecilia Beaven! Cur...
03/11/2024

Now Showing! A new Virtual Exhibition showcasing the work of Chicago/Mexico City-based visual artist Cecilia Beaven! Curated for phICA by Taylor Marshall.

09/15/2023

Pedro Oliveira Gallery
Inauguration Saturday 16.09.2023 - 16h

Wanderson Alves,
On the skin, the silence

"Wanderson Alves : Light and Memory"
There is a hand that touches lightly on one of the blinds through which light penetrates letting us see the outlines of the silhouette of someone peeking through a wedge of clarity, as if we were suddenly called into the enigma that the act of seeing power. To understand this riddle we have to reveal it in the way he hides itself, as in photography, which possesses an intense visual force that is not only imitating reality or representing the truth, but seeks above all to interact with the beauty of nature and with the concrete things of life that the photographer reveals in the most specific features, through his careful look. The well-known German art psychologist Rudolf Arnheim in a particularly interesting text titled On the Nature of Photography (Critical Inquiry, 1974) weaved a set of important considerations about the relationship of photography with technique, studio and the various models and codes that constitute the aesthetic mode of production from the photograph. According to Arnheim, there is a relationship of photography's non-spontaneous at its beginnings with its technical conditions. This must be, in his opinion, the fact that the equipment was too heavy to capture someone by surprise, since the exposure time was too long and therefore guess, according to him, that enviable timelessness of the first photographs.

This comes about the way the young Brazilian photographer Wanderson Alves masterfully explores in his latest work the sense of natural magnetism of the photographic image made of small events caught on camera, seeking to recreate an autofiction focused on landscape, memories of places and in the perceptions of ephemeral situations that suggest occasional experiences transformed later by photography into images that evoke both forgetfulness and death as well as the feeling of emptiness and sadness.
It is how Wanderson Alves captures the ceaseless action of a multitude of experiences that have been assimilated through consciousness, as if the photographer projected into the captured image the thread of a contemplative melancholy in order to reconstruct the marks left by time on what he felt. He has seen and testified.

In the photographs now exhibited at the Pedro Oliveira Gallery, Wanderson Alves explores, through a subtle game of twinkling and contrasts, the simultaneously ontological and aesthetic nature of the image that arises in both a twilight and romantic record as well as in a realistic and impressionist record linking, in both cases, to an atmosphere of astonishment that opens photography to a field of possibilities in which narratives of imagination and dream take a place of relief.

Carlos France
September 2023

08/10/2023

The recent actions of the City of Mesa bureaucrat and politicians in canceling the entire Fall season of Mesa Contemporary Arts Museum are egregious, complex, and multifaceted. There are responses by a growing number of people locally and nationally about possible violations of freedom of speech rights and abuse of power.

phICA is an advocate for the artists involved in this situation and for exhibiting their art as envisioned and planned by the MCAM curatorial staff. Today, we are checking with the artists to see if they have interest in exhibiting their work. All credit goes to MCAM Staff. We are advocating and facilitating.

05/16/2023

Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA) is a hybrid, non profit museum committed to education about contemporary art through exhibitions, critical art writing, arts incubation, and various initiatives like Emerging Curators.

04/12/2023

Be sure to view our current virtual exhibition showcasing work from the last 20 years by Chandler, Arizona-based visual artist Shachidreams Shachi Kale. Appreciate the exceptional professional trajectory of this artist, graphic designer, children’s book illustrator, and public artist especially during recent years.

https://www.phica.org/shachi-kale

Phoenix Institute of Contemporary Art (phICA) is a hybrid, non profit museum committed to education about contemporary art through exhibitions, critical art writing, arts incubation, and various initiatives like Emerging Curators.

Please support phICA and our work in our community and beyond TODAY on Arizona Gives Day. And visit our site: www.phICA....
04/04/2023

Please support phICA and our work in our community and beyond TODAY on Arizona Gives Day. And visit our site: www.phICA.org Thank you.

Movimiento Artístico de Rio Salado (MARS) Chicano Prints at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport now! For more infor...
02/02/2023

Movimiento Artístico de Rio Salado (MARS) Chicano Prints at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport now! For more information, visit:

https://www.phica.org/mars-legacy

Photo credit: Ellyce Shea 2-2-23

We are thrilled to know that the MARS Chicano Prints are being exhibited at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Museum in Super Bowl season! Learn more about the MARS print project spanning almost a quarter century at the link to our site below.
Photo credit: Ellyce Shea 2-2-23

https://www.phica.org/mars-legacy

Address

P. O. Box 45224
Phoenix, AZ
85064

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