The New York Times Art Review

“Drawing Revealed” Exhibition at the Garrison Art Center, which includes the film “Artists in Conversation” – White Hall Productions

“Opening a Window on the Creative Mind”—Benjamin Genocchio

“Ula Einstein draws with thread, fire, and fine wire, weaving delicate, minimal patterns of her own devising onto sheets of drawing paper.”

…Closer inspection reveals a greater formal diversity, with the practice of drawing explored from many points of view…

The modern enthusiasm for drawing is not entirely new, for in the 16th century there was a lively trade in drawings, not only among artists, who collected drawings by other artists, but also among wealthy patrons. Drawings by Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo sold for tremendous sums — those of the Sistine Chapel were especially prized…

We tend to value drawings for their immediacy and freshness, perceiving them to be a more authentic, unadulterated impression of the artist’s original creative vision. In them, we believe we can discern the purest manifestation of the mysteries of artistic inspiration and apprehend a creative idea in its essential traits.

Read the full article: click here


Culture: Labiennale TV Featured Artist

*…and a
FEATURE / INTERVIEW about my process and work — 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEGJsMWnS3o
The video offers a partial glimpse and talk about my expanded art practice…

Ula Einstein, Sept. 2011

I met the vibrant Italian women ( producer, and photographer) in NYC, from labiennale tv in 2010 where they first saw my work at an exhibition in NYC.
Returning to NYC in 2011, they connected to feature my work in their documentation about culture in NYC. (Below I’ve included a few of the full images where often only details were shown).

Inter-disciplinary work – more work: ArtistSpace_UlaEinstein

Replenish, mixed media ©Ula Einstein

No Rest ©Ula Einstein

Passage ©Ula Einstein

Almost (T)here ©Ula Einstein

Codify ©Ula Einstein

Wearing Her Tracks ©Ula Einstein

Cosmic-Scape ©Ula Einstein

Renewal, rice paper, fire, branch, wire ©Ula Einstein

Is There a Difference between Art & Craft?

Is There a Difference between Art and Craft?

Article by Virginia Fabbri Butera, Ph.D., Director of the Maloney Art Gallery, referencing the work of Judy Chicago, Lynne Allen, Kiki Smith, and Ula Einstein

Recent artistic encounters have once again raised issues of whether or not non-traditional materials make certain objects craft rather than art, and is there, or should there be, a difference? Do intellectual ideas suggested by an object, despite its material, make it an object of art? Or is it enough for an object to provoke an aesthetic, not necessarily an intellectual, response in a person for that object to be considered art?
For the Maloney Art Gallery show, Traditional Traces in Contemporary Native American Art (through May 24, 2010), Lynne Allen has lent several bags, moccasins and a knife sheath she has made. The bags and knife sheath are created out of 19th century land grant documents on vellum with porcupine quills, buttons, clasps and/or other materials. They reference earlier animal skin bags and knife sheaths that are part of Native American traditional arts. And the use of porcupine quills as a material for art and decoration has a long history as part of traditional native arts.
The moccasins in the exhibition allude to the functional shoes of animal skin that Native Americans made and wore. However, moccasins were often highly decorated with bead work, considered as art work and could be worn ceremonially. Allen’s moccasins are sculpture and not meant for wear. Writing and images of nature cover one 2005 pair, Moccasin #3 made from handmade paper, etching, linen thread and handwork. A second pair, Excuse me while I disappear (red moccasins), with the image of a Native American man on the top of the moccasins, is more metaphorically poignant, alluding to the decimation of Native American tribes, homelands, and culture when they were forced by the U.S. government to move, often by walking hundreds of miles, to reservations far from their original homelands. Here, the intersection of function, decoration, history, sewing, etching and sculpture amplifies the meaning of this art. For Native Americans, art and craft were/are completely intertwined and there was no hierarchy of art forms as had been established by Italian, French and English art academies beginning in the 16th century.
But those are exactly the hierarchies that have been at work for centuries suppressing the label of art for any objects made out of materials other than paint or ink on paper or canvas, or bronze, wood, or stone for sculpture. Traditionally and historically, in western culture, objects that were functional and/or made out of other materials, fell into the realm of craft and decorative, and therefore non-intellectual, arts. In other cultures around the world, this division did/does not exist. In the 1850s in England, William Morris began to challenge this hierarchy with his Arts and Crafts movement which tried to merge so-called fine and decorative arts onto the same object. Many movements and artistic groups have taken up this challenge. Beginning in the 1970s, with a push from the Feminist movement, women and men have been successfully trying to dispel these prejudices. Widespread knowledge and acceptance of world-wide aesthetic practices has also helped.

Materials such as balloons and thread, hair, tulle, used by Ula Einstein 
http://dvisible.com/2010/05/03/ula-einstein-builder-alchemist-artist/ ) in her mixed media sculptural installation, Pulse, and featured in the Maloney Art Gallery exhibition, Line, Gesture, Space, reveal that materials no longer define/confine art and creativity.  

During a recent trip to the Brooklyn Museum with the students in my American Art course, I was again able to study in detail Judy Chicago’s, The Dinner Party, a monumental sculpture from 1974-79, which celebrates the contribution of western women to the history of the world (www.judychicago.com). The triangular shaped sculpture, conceptualized and designed by Chicago, was created by hundreds of women volunteers in ceramic sculpture and woven, hand embroidered and sewn fabrics, all traditional “craft” materials. The work is a permanent installation in the Brooklyn Museum’s Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art. Also temporarily on view there is Kiki Smith’s (www.pbs.org/art21) multi room mixed media installation, Sojourn. Here large scale drawings of women are surrounded by fancifully decorated light bulbs, aluminum sculptures, wooden coffins with blown glass daisies, among other objects, which create a powerful meditation on Smith’s themes of birth, creativity and death in the life of a woman (http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/exhibitions/3212/Kiki_Smith:_Sojourn).
In all of the above instances, these artists chose to use materials, some of which have references to the materials of women’s traditional craft work, to comment in a profound way about the human condition. These pieces are beautiful, stirring, disturbing and enlightening.

Virginia Fabbri Butera, Ph.D asks: What have your aesthetic experiences been with objects in various materials? How do you view “craft” materials used in art that asks us to consider many areas of aesthetic and intellectual thought?–

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Featured in d|visible magazine

Murrye Bernard on d|visible.com:

“In every creative endeavor, she is unique and experimental: two qualities that are evident in her art today.”

Ula Einstein’s work is, in a word, ephemeral. While it looks impressive in photos, they are also somewhat deceptive by failing to capture its intricacies: filmy layers, delicate threading, fine surface slices or topography-like depth. If you have the pleasure to view her work in person, it beckons you to move closer, to reach out and touch…

{click here to read more}

 http://dvisible.com/2010/05/03/ula-einstein-builder-alchemist-artist/

 

Italian Style magazine

Italian Life STYLE magazine

President of Tiffany & Co. interviewed, gives testimonial of Ula Einstein's Work

and its translation –  is here…The President of Tiffany & Co had an extensive interview in Italian Life Style Magazine, where he names NYC based artist Ula Einstein as one of his two favorite artists appreciated by he and his wife, and whose works he has purchased.  He was interviewed by Alessandra Farkas, US Correspondent for Corriere della Serra in 2008.

interview with President of Tiffany & Co., includes a testimonial for Einstein

One-Journal of Art, Ideas & Literature

Oct. 2010 – March 2011 ONLINE FEATURE ABOUT MY WORK from The Unwinding Destiny Project which is an installation/photography project

/One/
By Lisa
Ula Einstein is a Swiss-born interdisciplinary artist based in New York City. Her process-oriented ritualistic work with self-invented techniques includes stretching and reinventing materials,  drawing with fire, blades, and thread on paper, objects, http://onethejournal.com/2010/10/884/
http://onethejournal.com

Free Will?

Temporary installations are photographed here in work from The Unwinding Destiny Project – installation/photography project

 

 

 

 

Featured on IndieSpotting.com

Oct. 2011 Thank you INDIESPOTTING for featuring my small hand threaded text message series -  on your popular blog!!  In December 2009 in response to the economic downturn, I began what became my least expensive and accessble small works . In response to our culture  of speed, I began slowing down by stitching threaded text messages by hand- slowing down in order to get the message.  Stop Holding Your Breath began as a text-a-day project…but other work and exhibitions came up detouring from the project…15 remain and I will continue now   The originals are for sale and some prints.   Feel free to pass on it to friends.   www.etsy.com/UlaEinstein

http://www.indiespotting.com/shop-showcase/meet-ula-einstein/

works from the Stop Holding Your Breath-threaded text messages 2010

On The Issues magazine – 2 articles feature work

THE PROGRESSIVE “ON THE ISSUES” MAGAZINE  – features some of my hand threaded text messages work to support 2 articles
http://www.ontheissuesmagazine.com/2010spring/2010spring_Hanisch.php
http://www.ontheissuesmagazine.com/2010spring/2010spring_Goldbard.php


Artists Space

Still Waiting? threaded text message, mixed media ©Ula Einstein 2010