...Biographical Narrative continued

Robert Gschwantner
Born in 1968, in Steyr, Austria. Worked as stage and interior designer as well in the fashion industry in Europe before he started his artistic career in 1994.
Recent solo exhibitions: 2003 Galerie Ulrich Mueller – Cologne; 2002 Galleria Maria Cilena – Milan; GRANTPIRRIE Gallery – Sidney; Il Ponte Contemporanea – Rome; Città della Scienza – Naples; 2001 mimmo scognamiglio artecontemporanea – Naples.
Main recent group exhibitions: 2003 Artmark Galerie -- Spital am Pyhrn (Austria) 2001; CCAS -- Canberra (Australia); Museo en plein air -- Lamezia Terme (Italy); 1998 The Japan Foundation – Rome; Galerie Ulrich Mueller -- Cologne, 1995; SdB Foundation – Rotterdam.

Ted Grudowski and Adrienne Taggart
Adrienne's works feature a combination of media. She uses blacksmithing, metal casting and fabrication, woodworking from fine to construction, sculpting, lighting, glass and found objects. Primarily self-taught, she strives to create a harmonious environment and feel for her work. She works as a commission and non-commission artist. Ted graduated in 1992 with a BFA in Photography from Southern Illinois University, where he first began developing his photo-collage style. Since moving to Seattle, he has contributed work to group shows seen at CoCA's Northwest Annual, Benham Studio Gallery, and Seattle Art Museum Rental/Sales Gallery before introducing his stereographic collages at Vital 5 Productions in 2001 in Seattle. Ted and Adrienne worked together on The Sky Is Falling: New Perspectives in Stereo in 2002, also shown at Vital 5 Productions.

Pam Keeley (1950, Springfield, Illinois)
Education: 1972 RN, St. John’s Hospital, Springfield, Illinois; 1988, BFA, Cornish College of the Arts, Seattle, WA; 1992, MFA, with Distinction, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Keeley exhibits frequently in Seattle and on the West Coast and was a featured artist in New American Paintings, January 2003. Over the past 12 years she has taught drawing and studio art classes at Cornish College of the Arts and the University of Washington, Tacoma.

Margie Livingston
The artist received her Masters of Fine Art from the University of Washington in 1999. She was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship in 2001 and spent a year living and working in Germany in affiliation with Berlin’s Free University. Prior to that, she was the recipient of a residency grant at the Vermont Studio Center. Livingston’s work (Structure (pink, green, gray)) has been selected for the Northwest Biennial 2004 at the Tacoma Art Museum and the Pacific Northwest Biennial 1997 at the Bellevue Art Museum. She has been invited to give solo shows at Soil Artists’ Cooperative and Seattle Pacific University’s Art Center Gallery. She is an adjunct faculty member at the University of Washington and teaches at the Seattle Academy of Fine Art.

More Biographical Narrative...

Back to top