University of New Haven
University of New Haven,
300 Boston Post Road,
West Haven, CT 06516
1-800 DIAL-UNH or 1-800-342-5864
University of New Haven Faculty

Todd Jokl

University of New Haven: Faculty

University of New Haven: Faculty University of New Haven: Faculty University of New Haven: Faculty
University of New Haven: FacultyUniversity of New Haven: Todd Jokl University of New Haven: Faculty
University of New Haven: Faculty
University of New Haven: Faculty Todd Jokl
University of New Haven: Faculty University of New Haven: Faculty
Title: Assistant Professor, Chair
University of New Haven: Faculty University of New Haven: Faculty
College: College of Arts and Sciences
Dept: Art and Design
Phone: 203.479.4503
Email: tjokl@newhaven.edu
Office: Dodds Hall 201A

 

There are two overarching themes I see as critical aspects in my artwork: the individuality of perception as it relates to time and the concepts of interaction between people sharing (and consuming) environments.  Photography, digital art, and moving image are the primary mediums I work with to explore time and expose a deeper understanding of the relationships between people and their environments.

Individuals perceive their environment and ideas from their own, unique perspective. To this end, time, the essence of measurement we use to determine everything from our daily work or recreation schedule to the duration of a lifetime, is highly subjective and variable, transitioning from one instant to the next. Time and our interpretation of it are pliable; it evolves as we do. A common thread in my work is the exploration of time and how we can elucidate various meanings from ideas if we experience them by placing different filters on time. I strive to represent subjects through an unexpected shift in the natural state of time each subject possesses in and of itself; in reverse, or altered from a moving image to a still image and vice versa.

Second, I am intrigued by how we can occupy a similar space—a room, a residential area, a town and even a planet—with other individuals and yet, we can remain so isolated and disconnected from each other as well as the environments we occupy or alter. We live in a cultural and technological era of hyper connectivity and consumption, however, we are increasingly isolated from each other and the supply chain of where our “objects of desire” originate.  Much of my motion graphic and installation-based work deals directly with these concerns.

My photographic, motion graphic, and digital artwork has always examined the interaction of time, place, and environment. Increasingly, recent work has turned to the night in order to examine and create scenes that comment on the delicate balance we find between the beauty and danger of the evening hours. I am interested in the visualization of compressing seconds, minutes or hours into a single still image. Many of these photographs rely upon long exposure combinations of film-based images and digital photographic techniques to visualize and mold the passage of time.

 

Education

M.F.A., University of Connecticut, Storrs
B.A., Yale University


Published Books and Articles

Selected Bibliography

Book design: "Caduceus"

Book design: "Long River Review"

"Connecticut Review"  Featured Artist.

Book design: "All Of Your Messages Have Been Erased."

New Haven Register: “Hanging by a Thread.”
 
NY ArtsMagazine: “David Opdyke: Small World (Conversation with Diane Dwyer, Phillip Buntin, Carey McDougal and Todd Jokl)

"Hayden’s Ferry Review"  Featured artist in Issue no. 31

Cover photography for "When There Is No Shore."

Jacket cover photography for "Deep Heart’s Core."

"Panhandler"  Special Issue: Photography/Text.

"Chicago Art Journal."  Selected artist

Selected Exhibitions

  • Conflux Arts Festival, New York, NY.
  • Micro|Macro: Infinite Possibilities. Northern Kentucky University.
  • Society for Photographic Education National Conference.
  • Insights. Center Gallery, New Haven.
  • Stop|Motion: Video Shorts|Video Stills.  Seton Gallery or Contemporary Art.
  • Before It Disappears: Recent Photographs. Royale Gallery.  San Francisco, CA.
  • Featured emerging artist on Zing World, online fine arts journal.
  • The End(s) of Photography: Modeling the Photographic. McDonough Museum of Art.  Youngstown, OH
  • Exit Biennial II: Traffic.  Exit Art, New York, NY.
  • Apples and Oranges. City Wide Open Studios, Untitled ArtSpace. New Haven.
  • Shifting Affinities.  Yale School of Art: Green Hall Gallery. 
  • Suspended Animation.  Grand Projects, New Haven, CT. 
  • TechNow, Newspace Gallery, Manchester Community College,
  • Ximxim. City Wide Open Studios, Untitled ArtSpace. New Haven.
  • Violence Online Festival 2002: Version 3.0, The New Media Project Network.
  • WalArt. City Wide Open Studios, Untitled ArtSpace New Haven. 
  • First Time Out, Center for Visual Art and Culture.  University of Connecticut, Stamford.
  • Redeeming: Method and Meaning: MFA Thesis Exhibition, William Benton Museum of Fine Art.  University of Connecticut. 

Curatorial Projects

  • Thread.  ArtSpace, New Haven, CT

Committees, Boards, Seminars and Lectures

  • CT Commission on Culture and Tourism
  • Art History Society: Midwest Conference.
  • Percent for the Arts, City of New Haven
  • ATINER International Conference of Fine and Performing Arts
  • Visual Arts Committee, Artspace, New Haven
  • Aspen Institute Faculty Seminar
  • Society for Photographic Education National Conference