2/2: whatever-is-not-here-present-to-our-senses-now / new work by Philip Peters & David Rueter

2014 February 6
by theacreproject

whatever-is-not-here-present-to-our-senses-now
PHILIP PETERS & DAVID RUETER
February 2-16, 2014

February 2 (4-8PM) – Opening Reception at ACRE Projects
February 16 (2-6PM) – Walking tour and readings at nearby locations and closing reception at ACRE Projects

Open Hours
Sundays and Mondays, 12-4PM.

ACRE Projects
1913 W 17th Street, Chicago, IL 60608

peters&rueter

In whatever-is-not-here-present-to-our-senses-now, artists Philip Peters and David Rueter present new works and public programming as an extension of their ACRE residencies and subsequent excursion research—from Utah’s Bingham Canyon Mine and nearby Intelligence Community Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative Data Center to the Mississippi Delta and upstate New York. Disparate domestic locales, patterns of migration, technologies of survival, and the infrastructures of telecommunication and mobility provide points of departure for the exhibition. Presented at ACRE Projects in Chicago, whatever-is-not-here-present-to-our-senses-now will open to the public on February 2, with related programming throughout the duration of the exhibition.

Philip Peters is a recent graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago’s MFA program in Sculpture, and the recipient of the Edward L. Ryerson MFA fellowship. His work is a fusion of technology and materiality, combining interests in myth, media, architecture, and installation. Phil grew up in Rochester, NY, and received BA in Psychology from Carleton College in Minnesota. He holds a particular fondness for the cold and the inclement.

David Rueter, a recent graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago’s MFA program in Art and Technology Studies, works at the intersection of public art, software, electronics, and performance. In 2013, he was awarded a Prix Ars Electronica Honorary Mention in the category of Interactive Art, and received a John W Kurtich scholarship for travel to Scandinavia. His work has been exhibited at galleries and festivals across the US, including the International Symposium on Electronic Art and Northern Spark. Born in Ann Arbor, MI, he graduated from Oberlin College with a BA in Politics and a focus in Political Theory.

whatever-is-not-here-present-to-our-senses-now is organized by Philip Peters, David Rueter, Pat Elifritz, and ACRE Projects.

Related Programming
February 2 (4-8PM) – Opening Reception at ACRE Projects
February 16 (2-8PM) – Walking tour and readings at nearby locations, closing reception at ACRE Projects

Image: Bingham Canyon Mine, photographed from the International Space Station, September 2007.