Skip Navigation or Skip to Content
651.257.6668 info@franconia.org
When:
July 14, 2020 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
2020-07-14T18:00:00-05:00
2020-07-14T19:30:00-05:00

Franconia Dinner & Discussion, Tuesday, July 14, 2020 at 6pm with 2020 Fellow Don Edler

Attend via Facebook Live ONLY, please!

Franconia’s longstanding “Dinner & Discussion” lecture series invites the community to engage with visiting artists in a fun and informal setting. Artists give a one-hour presentation, followed by dinner and a community dialogue about the work. Suggested donation of $10.

**In an effort to stop the spread of COVID-19, this Dinner & Discussion will be held via Facebook Live. Please join us from the comfort of your own home and send your questions for Don through Facebook Live!

Don Edler is a Los Angeles-based artist who has been developing a body of sculptural works concerned with the evolution of human-made images, and their relationship to information, visual noise, and language. Influenced by Neolithic pictographs found inscribed on altars, Edler’s carved tablets incorporate a combination of handmade marks, urban detritus, casting, and improvised processes to create large narrative tableaux. Informed by various current political conversations such as biopolitics and climate change, Edler sees each of these works as a kind of experimental image residing between a speculative contemporary still-life and a pseudo-archeological memoir from the Anthropocene.

For this “Dinner & Discussion” lecture, 2020 Franconia Fellow Don Edler will discuss the relationship between human waste and culture production by looking at the role trash has played in shaping our understanding of early human culture. His lecture will cover early tool making and the dawn of language and semiotic systems as the technological basis of the human domination of the natural world. Edler will also discuss his past burial projects and urban scavenging practice in relation to the work he will be making while in-residence at Franconia Sculpture Park.

Don Edler holds an MFA from New York University and a BFA from the University of Florida.

Photo: one year in the earth by Don Edler, 2018-2019

We use cookies to offer you a better browsing experience, analyze site traffic and personalize content. Read our privacy policy. If you continue to use this site, you consent to our use of cookies and our privacy policy.