Vogue.



A Magazine, Especially a Fanzine defined by the .com Boom, Contemporary Artists talking about The Internet.

Charles Schultz presented his final project for his Bachelor’s in Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania in the Learning and Professional Studies and Liberal Arts THE INTERNET: THEN, NOW, AND RIGHT NOW, 2019.


The beginning stages on the artist & craftsmanship

ArtWeek Index (2008) Inside look into the Altered Book Projects, during the course of an Associate’s Degree from Delaware College of Art And Design.

Vogue February 2012, Remade by Chuck Schultz during the certificate program at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 2013.
Charles Schultz Final project, Contemporary Artists Talking About the Internet, 2019.
From Beethoven to Broadway w/ Danielle De Niese

SHANGHART GALLERY M50

Thrown into the Wind

Thrown Into The Wind by Liu Yi played with theatrical qualities that enhanced the space and expanded possibilities for the animation to go beyond the screen. The combination of theater and film characterize the infinite reality of the stage or the cinema. Liu Yi seems to be very cognizant of ink drawings, the fabric hanging up, fans below our feet, and a double sided projector screen to activate the space. The participants at the exhibition played a part in the narrative, and we actively connected the illustrated world of Liu Yi’s “Chaos Theory” to a theatrical exhibition where we were also the subjects. Chinese art and architecture historically show how Chinese traditions put emotion into nature in order to understand their place in the world. Animation in this installation naturally puts the viewer in motion. So, if we were able to take a look at what is hidden behind the screen, to fully understand the environment, then we have become a participant in the exhibition. Above all, self reflection among the group is a shared experience. The differentiation between an objective and a subjective audience was part of the model for Liu Yi’s installation at Shanghart M50. 

In 2018, visual artist, Lui Yi, showed quick moving animations, in a story like-fashion of non-linear symbols, flowing like the fabric being blown in the wind above the staging. The means for the darkness with a veil around the room and a screen in the center felt essentially representational with the polar bear in the environmental exhibit. The real activity was accentuated by drapery and a wind from fans underneath the floor and viewers gravitated to behind the screen. The themes of feminism and nature tie together the circular and repetitive symbols of Liu Yi’s exhibition, Thrown into the Wind.

Large Reproductions from the zines were focused on the projection and material transfer to large scale paintings.