Curated Beth Giacummo
September 20 – November 30, 2021
Virtual Artist Talk on FB Live | November 4 from 11:00 AM - 11:45 AM
Live Painting with Amanda Reilly in Memorial Gallery | November 9 from 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
The Farmingdale State College Memorial Gallery is pleased to announce Fall 2021
exhibition The Art of Being: Curious and Curiouser. Featuring the work of two madly
creative artists, both at an important moment of their career, sharing a connection
and bond created right here in our Farmingdale State College community as mentor and
mentee. The exhibition includes a collection of pieces from both artists that give
viewers a deeper look into their artistic journeys as well asrecent works, political
posters, promotional materials, product design, and nostalgic works from their archives.
The exhibition is an exciting moment for the gallery and Visual Communications department,
a unique opportunity to bring together mentor and mentee: Farmingdale State College
full-time Professor Jack Harris and Alumna Amanda Reilly (2013).
Reilly and Harris have recently released bodies of work that coincidentally both delve
into all that means to be human.
Jack Harris curiously treats viewers to digitally painted epochal portraits of well
known and familiar beings overlaid with emotive illustrious gestural lines making
each portrait or surge with the spirit they capture.
Harris’ exquisite collection of iconized portraits are compiled into Harris’ recent
publication, “Being Human”, also on display in the exhibition. The publication was
released during 2020 and is available for purchase through blurb.com.
Viewers will take a trip down the rabbit hole with Amanda Reilly’s collection of uninhibited
illustrations, paintings, and recent animations expressing raw human emotion and the
deepest, darkest unfortunate habits and imperfections that make us more interesting,
beautiful and mad at the same time.
Amanda’s experience at Farmingdale was extremely successful and set her professional
practice in motion. Most are lucky to find one mentor, but Reilly had a few! Reilly’s
signature style was developed while attending the Visual Communications program.
“What is so impressive about Amanda, and has remained true through her academic career
and into her professional practice, is her definitive voice. She developed a personal
visual style and idiom that is, and was, so distinctive. She has consistently and
steadfastly developed her vernacular while building a body of work and a series of
experiences that are the very definition of ‘style’.” - Jack Harris
Reilly worked with two of the department’s most loved professors, Jack Harris and
George Fernandez. When asked to reflect on her experience at Farmingdale State College,
Reilly explained, “Professor Harris’s mentorship, through his extraordinary guidance
he instructed me on how to grow my brand and develop a visual language as both a designer
and illustrator. Professor Harris constantly encouraged me to push my work further
and dig to discover unorthodox solutions to visual creative problems that would allow
my work to stand out. From designing books, creating interactive apps, to glazing
paintings – through his mixed media teaching methods, I’ve learned to embrace both
traditional and digital media which has allowed me to become an interdisciplinary
artist that continues to grow and evolve within the industry today. Through his mentorship
I realized all the incredible ways I can apply my work, teaching me that as artists
we are not just bound to canvases. - Amanda Reilly
“Under Professor Fernandez’s mentorship, through his compassion and dedication he
taught me how to build up self confidence as an artist and take myself more seriously
as a professional. Within his classes embracing traditional media was always emphasized
as well as developing out of the ordinary visual solutions. Every project I worked
on stretched the limits of my comfort zone as a creative. Over time, Professor Fernandez
saw the manifestations of my mad mind doodled throughout my sketchbook pages and decided
to take the time to independently mentor me. Through each and every project, I became
more and more self-critical of my work as well as began to better refine the quality
in which I produced it.” - Amanda Reilly