Interior Space - A Visual Exploration of the International Space Station; Photographs by Paolo Nespoli & Roland Miller

Co-curated with Roland Miller and Justin Walsh

October 12 – November 20, 2020

Chapman University’s Guggenheim Gallery, Orange, CA 

The photos provide unique insight into the cultural landscape generated by astronauts, scientists and visitors on the International Space Station. At the same time the works constitute a first attempt to co-create photography of this environment by an artist on earth and an astronaut inhabiting this most remarkable milestone in the development of human capabilities for living in space. With 20 years of ongoing habitation, the superstructure continues to set the standards in space occupancy from being the largest space craft ever constructed, having hosted around 40% of all space travelers to the costliest space endeavor with some estimates as high as $150 billion. The images are witness to the reality of space life from fixing objects to walls with Velcro to keep them from floating around the station to the awe-inspiring view from the station's cupola, its main observation window, onto earth or into the depths of space. The reception on November 2nd, 2020, coincides with the 20-year anniversary of human habitation of ISS.

Roland Miller, a Chicago native, studied photography at Utah State University earning his B.F.A. and M.F.A. degrees. For 14 years, he taught photography at Brevard Community College (now Eastern Florida State College) in Cocoa, Florida, where he was first exposed to many nearby NASA launch sites. He then taught at the College of Lake County in Grayslake, Illinois for six years before becoming dean of its Communication Arts, Humanities and Fine Arts division in 2008. Miller retired from higher education in 2018 to work full-time on his aerospace photography. 

Paolo Nespoli is an Italian astronaut and engineer of the European Space Agency (ESA). In 2007, he first traveled into space aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery as a mission specialist of STS-120. In December 2010 he again traveled into space aboard the Soyuz TMA-20 spacecraft as an Expedition 26/27 flight engineer. Nespoli's third spaceflight was on board Soyuz MS-05, which launched in July 2017 for Expedition 52/53. He received his bachelor's degree in Aerospace engineering in 1988 and his master's degree in 1989 in Aeronautics and Astronautics from Polytechnic University in New York.


Sample Platter - Contemporary Ceramic

Silvie Auvrey, Mary Beyerle, Joshua Callaghan, Armando G Cortés, Michael Dopp, Kiko Fukazawa, Phyllis Green, Roger Herman, Orr Herz, Dave Kiddie, Jasmine Little, Emily Marchand, Tony Marsh, Simphiwe Mbunyuza, Jude Pauli, Roni Shneior, Emily Sudd, Tam Van Tran, Shoshi Watanabe, Pilar Wiley

February 3 - March 15, 2020

Chapman University’s Guggenheim Gallery, Orange, CA 

Antibodies, 2020; Essay

Sample Platter - Contemporary Ceramic; Catalog

Sample Platter shows the work of 20 artists investigating the medium of ceramics. Experienced ceramicists who have been exploring the matter and material for years and sometimes decades are represented as well as artists who recently began working in clay or consider ceramics an extension of their practice. The appeal of ceramics can be seen in the viscerality of sculpting and in that it appears crisp and direct even when it has been technically refined and perfected; from treating the clay body and firing it to the final glazing, ceramics offers a great extent of chance and surprise, subtle variations of the limited parameters considered during the process generate myriads of phenotypes. Throughout human history this most basic material has been used to produce usable utensils on the one hand and to create sculptures and artistic objects on the other. Situated at the interstices of technical perfection and intuitive improvisation, conceptual rigor and organic shaping, the works show some of the many current facets of one of the oldest artistic media. The Exhibition gathers over 90 objects expressing this multiplicity of form and purpose.