![]() Stray Cat is dedicated to offering our community film programming that reflects the diversity of voices and visions in cinematic expression and using cinema as a conduit to inspire, educate and explore. Stray Cat Film Center is an artist-run non-profit media arts organization and neighborhood microcinema space. She earned her BFA from Ringling College of Art and Design in 2001.Īndrew Mcilvaine, 2022 Harold Smith Jr., 2022 Johanna Winters, 2022 Cory Imig, 2020 Glyneisha Johnson, 2020 Kathy Liao, 2020 Boi Boy, 2019 Megan Pobywajlo, 2019 Fatimah Tuggar, 2019 Marie Bannerot McInerney, 2018 Jarrett Mellenbruch, 2018 Jillian Youngbird, 2018 Karen McCoy, 2017 Stephen Proski, 2017 Samara Umbral, 2017 Shawn Bitters, 2016 Madeline Gallucci, 2016 Rodolfo Marron III, 2016 Jill Downen, 2015 Rashawn Griffin, 2015 Misha Kligman, 2015 Amy Kligman, 2014 Garry Noland, 2014 Sean Starowitz, 2014 Mike Erickson, 2013 Erika Lynne Hanson, 2013 Paul Anthony Smith, 2013 Marcus Cain, 2012 Anne Austin Pearce, 2012 Luke Rocha, 2012 Ricky Allman, 2011 Andy Brayman, 2011 Peggy Noland, 2011 Ari Fish, 2010 Sonié Ruffin, 2010 Caleb Taylor, 2010 Dylan Mortimer, 2009 Jamie Warren, 2009 Andrzej Zielinski, 2009 Jorge Garcia Almodovar, 2008 Mike Hill, 2008 Beniah Leuschke, 2008 Adolfo Martinez, 2008 Cody Critcheloe, 2007 Jessica Kincaid, 2007 Emily Sall, 2007 James Trotter, 2007 Anthony Baab, 2006 Deanna Dikeman, 2006 Justin Gainan, 2006 Elijah Gowin, 2006 Aaron Wrinkle, 2006 Callyann Casteel, 2005 Max Key, 2005 Miles Neidinger, 2005 Craig Subler, 2005 Sean Ward, 2005 Michael Converse, 2004 Egawa & Zbryk, 2004 Rachel Hayes, 2004 Seth Johnson, 2004 Jay Norton, 2004 Leo Esquivel, 2003 Jennifer Field, 2003 Art Miller, 2003 Dean Mitchell, 2003 Donald Ross (“Scribe”), 2003 Mark Schweiger (“Gear”), 2003 Lori Raye Erickson, 2002 Marcie Miller Gross, 2002 Tammi Kennedy, 2002 May Tveit, 2002 Alonzo Washington, 2002 Davin Watne, 2002 Ken Ferguson, 2001 David Ford, 2001 Lester Goldman, 2001 Leeah Joo, 2001 Eric Sall, 2001 Kati Toivanen, 2001 Tom Gregg, 2000 Adriane Herman, 2000 Peregrine Honig, 2000 Warren Rosser, 2000 Jesse Small, 2000 James Woodfill, 2000 Nate Fors, 1999 Ke-Sook Lee, 1999 Wilbur Niewald, 1999 Michael Rees, 1999 Mike Sinclair, 1999 Bridget Stewart, 1999 Patrick Clancy, 1998 Archie Scott Gobber, 1998 Anne Lindberg, 1998 Judi Ross, 1998 Judith Sanazaro, 1998 Tony Allard & Kristine Diekman, 1997 James Brinsfield, 1997 Russell Ferguson, 1997 Mary Wessel, 1997 A recent transplant from Cleveland now based in Kansas City, Kligman has presented solo exhibitions at Genuine Imitation Gallery in Portland, OR 1300 Gallery in Cleveland, OH and Primary Space Gallery in Detroit, MI and in group exhibitions at spaces including Kansas City Artists Coalition, Kansas City About Glamour Gallery, Brooklyn, NY Kelley Randall Gallery, Tremont, OH and Limbo Fine Arts San Diego, CA. Yet while often maintaining a storybook sense of sweetness and delight, her works reinvigorate this childhood vocabulary to posit a more conflicted and nuanced landscape of behaviors, interactions, and ideas. In 2007, Casey was awarded an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award.Īmy Kligman’s paintings often appear as cautionary tales told to children, with archetypes and characters similar to those of the fairy tales and myths that inform early ideas of good and evil. Represented by Zg Gallery in Chicago, she has completed an artist in residencies at Vermont Studio Center and Zygote Press. Casey earned her BFA from Cleveland Institute of Art in 1999. Within these up-ended spheres, Casey explores ideas of anxiety and vulnerability, community and illusions of safety.Ĭoncerned with the urban landscape, her paintings suggest resilience in the wake of disaster a cobbling together of something new out of what remains. ![]() Inspired by “natural and unnatural disasters, personal fiascos and the never-ending stream of bad news from the media,” the world depicted in her paintings has been (often literally) turned upside-down: the ground has crumbled and the sky is falling. ![]() For a number of years, Cleveland-based painter Amy Casey has been “experiencing a sporadically recurring dream about the end of the world.” Although not attempting to recreate this dream in her work, her paintings reflect a view of a nervous state of world affairs. ![]()
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