Warped Spaces with artist (and Chapman student) Julie Russo
August 6, 2012
You are invited to a special solo exhibit
, Warped Spaces
, on August 13, in the second level studio room of the Guggenheim Gallery by artist and student Julie Russo.
Russo will discuss how light, space, and time define our perception of reality.
Warped Spaces
will be open to the public for one night at a reception from 5:30 p.m. – 7 p.m.
Russo works with lasers, mirrors, and fog to create the subjects for her series of photographs. The eight 30 by 45 inch prints display a versatile collection of angles, closeups, and movement around a precisely set-up, light sculpture that she photographed in the dark. Her photographs depict light as a physical object in space and how time and perspective can affect the way it is viewed.
Warped Space
questions Euclidean geometry, Newton’s laws of physics, and Einstein’s theory of relativity, but draws inspirations from materials used in LIGO, an instrument that detects ripples in space-time using a laser interferometer.
Russo, an Orange County-based artist, is a current junior at Chapman University, studying to earn her BFA in Art with a minor in advertising. After studying the intersection of art and science as a freshman and later becoming a teacher’s assistant for Professor Lia Halloran in this subject, Russo proposed to continue her investigation. Her written research proposal had her chosen from nearly fifty applicants to participate in Chapman University’s first official Student Undergraduate Research Fellowship program, where she spent ten weeks studying how art and science are intertwined with direction led by mentor Lia Halloran. Russo also received a creative grant from Chapman University to fund her project.
Warped Spaces
is the final product of Russo’s culminated research and is her first solo display of her work.
For more information about the research project, artistic inspirations, and ten week project, check out her blog at
surfwarpedspace.blogspot.com