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Center for Art Design and Visual Culture - UMBC

CODEX: 2020 IMDA MFA Thesis Exhibition

January 28–March 13, 2021

CODEX features the artwork of Brandon Ables, Jason Charney, Mandy Morrison, and Adan Rodriguez.

Encompassing a wide range of technologies and materials, their works embody the elements of social practice and community involvement as well as critiques on contemporary culture. The artists are 2020 recipients of MFA degrees in Intermedia and Digital Arts and were to be featured in an in-person exhibition originally scheduled for spring 2020; their works are now presented in a virtual environment.

View the CODEX virtual tour below. For an accessible text version of the virtual gallery, please visit this page.

A photograph of guitar pedals arranged in a circle atop a geometric rug.

Brandon Ables

In One Man Trance, Brandon Ables recreates his studio apartment, demonstrating how he primes his subconscious by scoring everyday gestures with visual accompaniment. Different areas of the installation can be activated when viewers stand in front of the bathroom mirror, lie in bed watching TV, stare into the kitchen pantry, exercise, and practice one-man band coordination.

A photograph of a loudspeaker with visual sound waves emitted from it.

Jason Charney

The four works in Jason Charney’s reciprocation reimagine loudspeakers – transforming them from “invisible” aural channels into sculptural objects to interrogate interpersonal relationships, (mis)communications, and the kinetic phenomenon of sound. While recorded audio is used to drive the loudspeakers and implicate the viewer-listener’s body, the heard sound is an artifact of the materials activated by the speakers’ movement.

A photograph of a dual-paneled video installation showing two street views and translucent animations of individuals and strewn sheets of paper.

Mandy Morrison

Spirits of Promise and Loss, is a large multi-channel video installation, populated with animated ghost-like characters against photo images of Baltimore’s Old Town shopping mall.   

The video illuminates the utopian mall’s decline due to shifting demographics, bureaucratic indifference, and the rise of big-box chain stores.  In this way, Spirits provides an aesthetic platform that plays on the historic decorative aspects of the Asian screen, and is also a choreographed media work, mining the residual manifestations of human extremes, while speaking to that which exists in a post-capitalist urban entropy, underscoring current class and cultural partitions.

A photograph of a dark sewage tunnel. A string of yellow lights illuminate the path down the tunnel.

Adan Rodriguez

Adan Rodriguez’s A Necessary Hauntingblurs the line between reality and fiction, highlighting film’s effect on community tourism and the perpetuation of legend. Presented through a narrative short film, documentary, and accompanying physical media, the artist encourages travel to locations where alleged supernatural events took place.

Visitor Information

Our exhibitions and events are free and open to the public for full participation by all individuals regardless of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other protected category under applicable federal law, state law, and the University’s nondiscrimination policy.

If you need specific accommodations at one of our events, whether in person or online, or to experience an exhibition, please contact CADVC at cadvc@umbc.edu or 410-455-3188 as soon as possible.