
Opening Reception: March 18 2016, 7 - 11pm
Show Date: March 18 2016 - May 8 2016
For this is the place, Jenny Buffington and Jessica Harvey explore mysterious geographies with sculpture, installation, and photography. Using artifacts and layers of artifice, these landscapes are deconstructed and re-examined, projecting a human element in environments void of people. Both artists implore the viewer to question what is ‘real’ in nature, accentuating the unattainable feat of re-creating these natural monuments and environments. These photographs and sculptures are the tipping point in the search for something greater.
Artist Statements
Jenny Buffington
Within Jenny Buffington’s practice, she is examining humanity’s complex relationship with nature: how we project ourselves onto it, see images in it, search for the best view point, attempt to enhance it, and attempt to conquer it. It questions how we relate our bodies to nature and how our sense of self is altered in or by nature. She is seeking to address time, space, and the human condition; simultaneously using the environment as a metaphor for the self and as a method for escapism. These current sculptures reference geological formations that investigate material, color, texture, scale, and shape. This work questions how these formal aspects can be a relation to the canon of sculpture while still examining the topic of how we see and perceive our environment.
Jenny Buffington is an artist based in Chicago. She received her MFA from Tyler School of Art in 2008, and a BFA from Herron School of Art in 2005. She was a full fellow at Vermont Studio Center in Burlington, VT and an Artist in Residence at CAC Woodside in Troy, NY. Buffington was awarded a public commission for Pogues Run Park in Indianapolis and has exhibited at Crane Arts, PA; Temple Gallery, PA; Flux Space, PA; and the VCU FAB Gallery, VA.
Jessica Harvey
Jessica Harvey is a Chicago-based artist who explores the myths we create for ourselves and nature while trying to preserve a more desired history. Digging through public and private archives, she conducts long-term investigations on historical and personal events based on “facts,” reinterpreting these stories through the use of photography, video, archival resources, and objects constructed from everyday materials. The images and installations act as a catalyst for a fantastical exploration of the psychology that one attaches to memory and place, In this particular body of work Harvey uses the Sangre de Cristo Range of the Rocky Mountains as a backdrop to the UFO Watchtower in Hooper Colorado, turning the lens onto fragments of one woman's search for something greater. This Colorado site was built atop two vortexes in the mystical San Luis Valley, where people look to the mountains and skies above for answers.Jessica Harvey received an MFA in photography from Cranbrook Academy of Art in 2009 and a BA in film and video from Columbia College in 2005. She was awarded a Fulbright Grant to Iceland for the 2011-2012 year. She has attended residencies at ACRE, Anderson Ranch, Byrdcliffe Arts Colony, Hardesty Arts Center, The Luminary, and Vermont Studio Center. She has participated in group shows at the Urban Institute for Contemporary Art (Grand Rapids, MI), Johalla Projects (Chicago, IL), The Center for Contemporary Photography (Detroit, MI), and the Cranbrook Art Museum (Bloomfield Hills, MI). Recent solo and two person exhibitions include shows at Black Hills State University (Spearfish, SD), Hardesty Arts Center (Tulsa, OK), ACRE Projects (Chicago, IL), Good Weather (North Little Rock, AR), and The Luminary (St. Louis, MO).






ACRE has partnered with Heaven Gallery to host MEND THINE EVERY FLAW: works by SHAWN CREEDEN, MARSHALL ELLIOTT, & RACHAEL STARBUCK, the next installment in ACRE's year-long series of exhibitions by 2013 ACRE summer residents. Mend Thine Every Flaw An individual’s experience of the world is filtered through human scale and limited by human perception. In her work, Rachael Starbuck looks to the landscape as a site for understanding oneself and one's place. Our relationship to the natural environment can feel intimate because that relationship is based on our sensory experience, the touch, sounds, sights. However, the magnitude of the natural environment, the size of a mountain, or the vastness of an ocean contradict that perceived intimacy. Starbuck employs manageable, tactile moments in order to understand the world at large. Her work is often subtle and relies on humble, familiar materials. In her installation Starbuck presents two videos projected opposite one another in the gallery. In the first, Starbuck handles a sun made of plaster and paper pulp, rubbing it repeatedly and holding it in place of the actual sun. In the second, she handles a rock made of calcium carbonate, acrylic paint and glue, this time against her floral print skirt over grass. The positioning of these projections, the former high to the ceiling, connoting the sky and latter closer to the floor, connoting the earth, further connects each surrogate to its real life counterpart. Starbuck’s hands on these surrogates are an effort to physically hold or contain these monumental elements of nature in an attempt to close the distance between herself and the place they belong. Ultimately this gesture toward creating an intimacy in order to comprehend what is too large or too distant to comprehend is futile, however, Starbuck’s often repetitive, meditative process, and her presentation, in which subtle details are revealed with time, encourage contemplation from the viewer. A contemplative relationship with the environment, rather than a sensory one, may be a more intimate relationship after all. While Starbuck revels in poignant experiences of our relationship to the landscape, Shawn Creeden’s work is occupied with the tools and techniques that humans employ in effort to control their surroundings and their experience of the world. In Creeden’s work there is an underlying question about how far humanity has gone to shape its surroundings and to what ends we understand the effects of that manipulation. Like Starbuck, Creeden also plays with scale, bringing the overwhelming travesties of pollution and the manipulation of the natural world to an uncomfortably intimate size. Utilizing traditional craft techniques and tropes of domestic spaces, Creeden’s approach opens up for a complex read on humanity’s struggle to define itself against the backdrop of its landscape throughout the ages. In his aquarium installation, Creeden creates objects that appear to be a formal exercise in minimalism or a dazzling color study. Their material components, however, include living algaes, some of which flourish dangerously in the runoff of industrial agriculture, while others are threatened by pollution and human activity or are exploited to our benefit. Similarly, Creeden’s embroideries present as gentle abstractions but take their lines and shapes from the original borders imposed on to the landscape of the American West. These borders, which seem innocuous in Creeden’s delicate abstractions, were a key part of the doctrine of Manifest Destiny and the conquest of the indigenous people, wildlife and land itself. Using the techniques of formalism and abstraction, which historically incorporate ideas of masking the author or master, Creeden highlights the keen manipulation of material by a human and uncovers the hidden histories and unseen destructions that come as the price for mastering the landscape. Marshall Elliott’s use of the classical symbols of Heartland America hints at the ideology of self-identification through a relationship to place. Patriotism is a cultural attachment to one's homeland or devotion to one's country. Human’s have long expressed their devotion to their place through objects and symbols. National flags are probably the most universal symbol of this relationship and the American flag is a recurring motif in Elliott’s work. The traditions associated with the flag and the particularities of its use and handling are indicative of the way these symbols of patriotism are embedded in a sense of national and personal identity. In Retired Flag, Elliott dissects a retired American flag, taking each element and separating it from the whole. It is a gentle, reflective deconstruction, viewed as more of an investigation by the artist than an act of destruction. His process could be seen as very similar to the actual process of decommissioning an American flag in which the flag is disassembled and then incinerated, yet it differs in that he presents the disassembled flag for contemplation, standing in as a placeholder for a much larger concept of the country it stands for. Another recurring motif in Elliott’s work is the windmill. The American windmill played a major role in the ability for Western Expansion in the settling of the United States. Elliott plays with its history and significance by subverting its function in the video animation The American Windmill. Through his manipulation of symbols and objects that are considered truly American, Elliott’s work explores the strong human desire to take ownership of their place and the manufacture of that desire. --- MARSHALL ELLIOTT (born Eglin, Florida, 1976), lives in Oakland, CA and recently completed his MFA at the San Francisco Art Institute, where he won the Anne Bremer Memorial Prize. In addition to Bay-area galleries, he has shown work in Colorado, Oregon, and Nebraska with upcoming shows in San Francisco, Chicago, and New York. More information about Marshall Elliott can be found at
FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE 14 YEAR ANNIVERSARY BENEFIT & ART AUCTION June 27th, 2014 7 PM FREE Heaven Gallery, the non-profit art space, is celebrating it's 14th year anniversary with the Annual Benefit & Art Auction. The gallery, established in 2000, has greatly contributed to the culture of Wicker Park, presenting emerging local artists in Chicago. Heaven hosts eight shows a year, most combining sculpture, painting, and photography as well as other non traditional media. Heaven strives to make exhibitions accessible to artists in the community by widely promoting its open proposal process. All of the art events are free to the public, this made possible by the help and generous support of our art community. Music By Disco DJ Ayana Contreras auction works by: Doug Fogelson Marissa Lee Benedict Sarah Mosk Ann Chen Nicole White Daniel Shea Gwynne Johnson Eric Fleischauer Soo Shin Patrick McGuan Charles Fogarty Laura Mackin Elena Feijoo Mike Kloss Ron Ewert Jessica Taylor Caponigro Sarah & Joseph Belknap Aron Gent Leo Kaplan Theodore Darst Josue Pellot Kristina Paabus Kate Bowen Morgan Sims David Moré Claire Arctander Caitlin Arnold Jesse Butcher Bea Fremderman Jacob Goudreault Lauren Payne Tara M.Hills Scott Cowan Robert Chase Heishman Billy Joyce Sterling Lawrence Christopher Meerdo Joseph Rynkiewicz Stephany Colunga Melissa Leandro Virginia Aberle A special thanks to all artist who donated All funds raised will go towards supporting the art exhibitions and daily operation costs at Heaven Gallery.