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Cheryl Agulnick Hochberg Bio & Statement
Cheryl Agulnick Hochberg received her BFA from the Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia and her MFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Hochberg was Professor of Art at Kutztown University from 1990-2018. She received Full Professor Status in 2007, and served as Chair of the Department of Art and Art History from 2007-2018. She was awarded Professor Emeritus status in 2018. She was a 2015 recipient of the Kutztown University Chambliss Award for Excellence in Faculty Scholarship. She currently lives in Boonton, NJ.
"This past March I began to explore the Passaic River and its floodplains. Through the summer, my studio work took the form of works on paper, all in square format, 22x22”. The series, while including individual pieces, is performative. It begins with me walking, and continues in the studio as the images and experiences are filtered through my materials and processes. The pieces form a diary of the pandemic which begins in early spring recording the stunning proportional shift between human and nature, continues under a backdrop of protests, through the fall into the re-opening that again rearranged the balance of humans and nature, and goes on through the election. In August, I began to use my studio as an installation site. Beside the drawings, I built a 19’ rendition of the Pulaski Skyway. This can be viewed on my website (www.cherylagulnick.com/keeping-quiet). The pieces included in this grouping of works are from the works on paper I made throughout the summer."
"This past March I began to explore the Passaic River and its floodplains. Through the summer, my studio work took the form of works on paper, all in square format, 22x22”. The series, while including individual pieces, is performative. It begins with me walking, and continues in the studio as the images and experiences are filtered through my materials and processes. The pieces form a diary of the pandemic which begins in early spring recording the stunning proportional shift between human and nature, continues under a backdrop of protests, through the fall into the re-opening that again rearranged the balance of humans and nature, and goes on through the election. In August, I began to use my studio as an installation site. Beside the drawings, I built a 19’ rendition of the Pulaski Skyway. This can be viewed on my website (www.cherylagulnick.com/keeping-quiet). The pieces included in this grouping of works are from the works on paper I made throughout the summer."