Ode to M. Elizabeth Price

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Medium: Oil on 23k gold Leaf panel
Year: 2022
Details: 24 in w x 12 in w
Joan Brady Studios
Joan Brady has returned to Annapolis after a seven-year adventure living and working on an island twelve nautical miles off the coast of Maine. In 2022, she was selected as the solo artist for the Island Inn summer show, sponsored by the Lupine Gallery and Monhegan Island Inn. In 2023, she joined Maryland Hall for the Creative Arts as Artist-in-Residence and Providence Pottery and Arts Studio in Arnold, MD as studio manager. She is an art educator who enthusiastically shares her love of the creative process with people of all abilities.
T. Harris Art
Tiffany Harris was born and raised in Baltimore, MD. Although she doodled for years, it was ultimately at Salisbury University that she began truly understanding her God given talent of art. After selling her first piece to the University during her graduating exhibition, she hit the ground running searching for pop up shop opportunities to share her gift along the East Coast. It was several years before she was able to focus solely on art again and that came as a blessing in the disguise of being laid off of her at the time career.
Dawn Kiilani Hoffmann
I am an artist, metalsmith, bookbinder, and printmaker.  I have been making things my whole life and enjoy sharing what I learn with other people especially including hands-on components!  

Material Actions

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Material Actions is a performance created with video artist Mark Brown. The piece was originally developed for the Dutch Cabinet at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, Maryland and premiered as part of their 2016 ART/SOUND/NOW series.

In this performance Fucile used a series of contact microphones to "play" common, modern materials such as bricks, coins, and a fan. Brown projects a sound-reactive video behind me. The work work considers the economics of the Dutch Golden Age and the modern museum.
Medium: performance
Year: 2016
Details: 30:00

Occupational Enterprises

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Occupational Enterprises is a performance where Fucile rearranges 200 white bricks into a series of structures for sixty minutes. Each one is toppled before building another. The sound of the moving, stacked, and collapsed bricks is transmitted by a contact microphone attached to the floor and distorted by a series of effects.

In addition to Fucile's Italian immigrant ancestry, the work was informed by several texts. The first, Hito Steyerl’s essay: “Is a Museum a Factory?,” observes that many places where employees worked on factory lines have recently been transformed into sites of artistic labor. Indeed, many cultural institutions and artist studios are in former industrial spaces. The second, Pietro DiDonato’s novel Christ in Concrete, tells the story of an Italian immigrant bricklayer who is killed on the job due to unsafe conditions and whose eldest son is forced to leave school to support his family.
Medium: performance
Year: 2017
Details: 01:00:00

Dada Morte

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Dada Morte uses musical interpretations of an IBM computer punch card found among Fucile’s late father’s possessions. It also features melodica, voice, and electronics. This performance was part of the exhibition Memento Mori at The Parlor in Baltimore, MD and included live video projections by artist Brenton Lim.
Medium: performance
Year: 2022
Details: 16:52
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