Sentences with phrase «spaces for black artists»

Perhaps this five - month experiment's most interesting contribution is that it responds to the dilemma Cembalest articulates by having it both ways: creating separate spaces for black artists and, by virtue of their close proximity to Arning's and Daderko's shows, allowing their work to be considered on a larger stage — in this instance, a multiplatform stage.
Arriving at the Studio Museum in Harlem, a space for black artists, was her salvation after that.

Not exact matches

Janelle Monáe, an artist and actress with so much presence and style that we've always thought of her as a otherworldly space queen, has joined the new anthology series Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams as the villain for an episode titled «Autofac» opposite Black Mass «Juno Temple.
Collection, Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdaie, FL; travelled to Oklahoma Museum of Art, Oklahoma City, OK; Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; Grand Rapids Art Museum, Grand Rapids, MI; Madison Art Center, Madison, WI; Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, Montgomery, AL 1981 Drawing Invitational, Harm Bouckaert Gallery, New York, NY 1981 New Work, Roy Boyd Gallery, Chicago, IL 1981 Artists Books, Metrònom, Barcelona, Spain 1980 Little Books, Franklin Furnace, New York, NY 1980 New York 1980, Banco - Massimo Minini, Brescia, ltaly 1980 Pool Project Documentation, Artists Space, New York, NY 1980 New York Painters, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 1980 Works of Art, Patricia Sneed Gallery, Rockford, IL 1980 Group Show, Roy Boyd Gallery, Chicago, IL 1980 Collection of Dr. Milton Brutten and Dr. Helen Herrick, Ben Shahn Gallery, William Patterson College, Wayne, NJ 1980 Group Exhibition, Susan Caldwell, Inc., New York, NY 1980 Pool Projects, Wake Forest University, Winston - Salem, NC 1980 Faculty Exhibition, Hillwood Commons Gallery, C.W. Post College, Greenvale, NY 1979 Prospectus, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT 1979 New Wave Painting, The Clocktower, MoMA P.S. 1, New York, NY 1979 Artist's Postcards, Ananas Gallery, Abrau, Switzerland 1979 Poets and Painters, The Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO; traveled to Atkins Museum of Fine Art, Kansas City, MO; La Jolla Art Museum, La Jolla, CA 1979 14 Painters, Lehman Gallery, CUNY, Bronx, NY 1979 Drawings, Hal Bromm, New York, NY 1979 Summer Show, Hal Bromm, New York, NY 1979 Drawings, Pyramid Gallery, Providence, MA 1978 Detective Show, Gorman Park, Jackson Heights, NY 1978 Works on Paper, Studio La Citta, Verona, Italy 1978 Group Exhibition, Arte Fiera, Bologna, Italy 1978 Group Exhibition, Art - 9, Basel, Switzerland 1978 Black and White on Paper, Nobe Gallery, New York, NY 1978 Paperworks, Galerie Wirz, Milan, Italy 1978 Selections from the Collection, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT 1978 Artists Books: USA, New Gallery, Cleveland, OH 1977 Fine / Fleishman / Stamm, Franklin Furnace, New York, NY 1977 Painting 75,76,77, Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY; traveled to American Foundation for the Arts, Miami, FL; Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH 1977 Book Objects, Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY 1977 A Painting Show, MoMA P.S. 1, Long Island City, NY 1977 New York Group Show, Galerie Denise Rene, New York, NY 1977 Group Exhibition, Art Fiera, Bologna, ltaly 1977 Group Exhibition, Documenta - 6, Kassel, Germany 1977 Collection in Progress, Moore College of Art, Philadelphia, PA 1977 Ideas — Images, Eugenia Cucalon Gallery, New York, NY 1977 Postcards and Other Mail, Jock Truman, New York, NY 1977 Wrapping Paper Invitational, Nobe Gallery, New York, NY 1977 Faculty Show, Brooklyn Museum Art School, Brooklyn, NY 1976 Group Exhibition, Art Fiera, Bologna, Italy 1976 Summer Group, Max Protetch Gallery, Washington D.C. 1976 SoHo and Downtown Manhattan, Akademie Der Kunste, Berlin, Germany 1976 Selections SoHo - Berlin, Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark 1976 Works on Paper, Hal Bromm, New York, NY 1976 Faculty Show, Brooklyn Museum Art School, Brooklyn, NY 1975 Contemporary Reflections 1971 — 1974, AFA; travelling exhibition Spare, Central Hall Gallery, Port Washington, NY 1975 Group Indiscriminate, 112 Greene Street, New York, NY 1975 A Collection in Progress (Herrick - Brutten Collection), The Clocktower, MoMA P.S. 1, New York, NY 1975 Group Exhibition, International Art Fair, Cologne, Germany 1975 Five from SoHo, Rose Art Museum, Waltham, MA 1975 Spare, Central Hall Gallery, Port Washington, NY 1975 Abstraction Alive and Well, SUNY, Potsdam, NY 1975 Faculty Show, Brooklyn Museum Art School, Brooklyn, NY 1974 Tight and Loose, State University, Albany, NY; travelled to State University, Potsdam, NY 1974 Black as Color, Reed College, Portland, OR 1974 Drawings, Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY 1974 Paperworks, Rosa Esman Gallery, New York, NY 1974 10th Anniversary Exhibition 1964 — 1974, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT 1974 Faculty Show, Brooklyn Museum Art School, Brooklyn, NY 1973 Painting in America, Decorative Arts Center, New York, NY 1973 Black Paintings, Nancy Hoffman Gallery, New York, NY 1973 DiDonna / Stamm, O.K. Harris Gallery, New York, NY 1973 Nine New York Artists, Hartwick College, Oneonta, NY 1973 Recent Acquisitions, Phoenix Museum, Phoenix, AZ 1972 Contemporary Reflections 1971 — 1972, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT 1971 What's Happening in SoHo, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 1971 Faculty Show, Brooklyn Museum Art School, Brooklyn, NY 1971 Alumni Show, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 1970 Young Artists: New York 1970, Greenwich, CT
The Black Artists Retreat is «guided by the tenets of fellowship, rejuvenation, and intellectual rigor and strives to create time and space for an intergenerational community of black visual artists to engage outside of the institutional environment.&rBlack Artists Retreat is «guided by the tenets of fellowship, rejuvenation, and intellectual rigor and strives to create time and space for an intergenerational community of black visual artists to engage outside of the institutional environment.Artists Retreat is «guided by the tenets of fellowship, rejuvenation, and intellectual rigor and strives to create time and space for an intergenerational community of black visual artists to engage outside of the institutional environment.&rblack visual artists to engage outside of the institutional environment.artists to engage outside of the institutional environment.»
Abstraction, New Observations, June 1984, No. 24 1984 Is Abstract Painting Regaining its Popularity by Victoria Donohoe, Philadelphia Inquirer, September 14, 1984 1983 Ted Stamm by Sanford Kwinter, Art In America, January 1983, pp. 121-122 1983 Ted Stamm by Stephen Westfall, Arts Magazine, January 1983, p. 3 1983 Ted Stamm at the Far Turn by William Zimmer, Re-Dact 1 by Peter Frank, Published by Willis Locker and Owens, ISBN 093027900X 1982 Ted Stamm, Art Economist, Volume II, No. 14, December 31, 1982, p. 5 1982 Drawing Invitational 1981 by Geynne Vernet, Arts Magazine, February 1982 1982 Two Unprovincial Shows at the Jersey City Museum by Vivien Raynor, The New York Times, New Jersey supplement, October 10, 1982, p. 28 1981 Ted Stamm by Valentine Tatransky, Arts Magazine, February 1981, pp. 35 - 36 1981 Surely Temple Black by William Zimmer, SoHo Weekly News, February 18, 1981, p. 49 1981 Abstraction with a Relaxed Air by David L. Shirey, The New York Times, March 1, 1981, p. 19 1981 Ted Stamm by Tiffany Bell, Arts Magazine, May 1981, p. 8 1981 From the General to the Particular: Some Thoughts on Abstract Painting by Tiffany Bell, Arts Magazine, June 1981, pp. 120-124 1980 Tre Amerikaner i Skaane by by Sune Nordgren, Dagens Nyheter (Stockholm), May 5, 1980 1980 Pool Documentation by Kay Larson, Village Voice, June 2, 1980, p. 85 1980 Jane Highstein and Sensibility Minimalism: A Tissue of Happenstance by Robert Pincus - Witten, Arts Magazine, October 1980 p. 140 1980 La Nouvelle Vogue New Yorkaise est Portee Para La Musie Rock by Daniel Cornu, Tribune De Geneve, December 1980 School's Out by William Zimmer, The SoHo Weekly News, June 11, 1980, p. 61 1980 Old Wine, New Bottles, Bad Year by John Perreault, The SoHo Weekly News, June 18, 1980 1979 Ted Stamm by December Kur, Handelsblatt (Dusseldorf), March 3,1979, p. 21 1979 Entries: Styles of Artists and Critics by Robert Pincus - Witten, Arts Magazine, November 1979, pp. 127 - 28 1979 Where is New York by Peter Frank, ARTnews, November 1979, pp. 59 - 65 1978 Ted Stamm by Tiffany Bell, Arts Magazine, February 1978, pp. 33 - 34 1978 Ted Stamm by Edit De Ak, Artforum, February 1978, pp. 63 - 64 1978 Artful Dodger by Gerald Marzorati, SoHo Weekly News, May 18, 1978, 10 1978 Pittori di New York by Riccardo Guarneri, Visual, April - May 1978, No. 2 - 3, pp. 40 - 43 1978 Ted Stamm at Hal Bromm Gallery by Peter Frank, Village Voice, December 19, 1977, pp. 93, 98 1977 Arts and Leisure Guide by Ann Barry, New York Times, November 27, 1977 1977 Voice Choices by Ali Anderson, Village Voice, December 12, 1977, p. 59 1977 New Museum at the New School by Peter Frank, Village Voice, December 19, 1977, p. 98 1976 Ted Stamm by Barbara Catoir, Das Kunstwerk, January 1976, p. 64 1976 Alternative Arts Spaces: One to one politics for the avant - garde by Stephen Reichard, New York Downtown Manhattan, Akademie Der Kunste - Berliner Festwochen, September 1976, p. 249 1975 Reviews by Susan Heineman, Artforum, March 1975, pp. 62 - 63 1975 Artists Space by Trudie Grace, Art Journal, Summer 1975, XXXIV / 4, pp. 323 - 326.
San Francisco, Calif., February 14, 2017 — On view at CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts from March 16 through May 14, 2017, the exhibition Black Light converts the gallery space into a forum for conversation with a series of free public events that address the relationship between cultural institutions and black artBlack Light converts the gallery space into a forum for conversation with a series of free public events that address the relationship between cultural institutions and black artblack artists.
Selected Group Exhibitions 2017 Ted Stamm / Gerrit Rietveld, OV Project, Brussels, Belgium 2017 Painting on the Edge: A Historical Survey, Stephen Friedman Gallery, London 2012 Times Square Show Revisited, Hunter College Art Galleries, New York, NY 2010 Black & White, Galleri Weinberger, Copenghagen, Denmark 1987 Recent Acquisitions, Guggenheim Museum, Brooklyn, NY 1987 Recent Acquisitions, Brooklyn Museum, New York, NY 1985 Art Heritage at Hofstra, Emily Lowe Gallery, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 1985 Constructures: New Perimetries in Abstract Painting, Nohra Haime Gallery, New York, NY 1984 Fourth Annual Anniversary Show, John Davis Gallery, Akron, OH 1984 Fifteen Abstract New York Painters, Susan Montezinos Gallery, Philadeiphia, PA 1984 Small Works, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA 1984 Mail Art, Franklin Furnace, New York, NY 1984 Artists Call, Judson Memorial Church, New York, NY 1984 Process Black, LIU South Hampton, New York, NY 1984 A Decade of Art, Artists Space 105 Hudson, New York, NY 1984 Offset: A Survey of Artists Books, New England Foundation for the Arts, Wakefield, RI 1983 David Reed, Sean Scully, Ted Stamm; Zenith Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA 1983 Donald Alberti, Russell Maltz, Olivier Mosset, Ted Stamm; 1708 East Main Street, Richmond, VA 1983 Abstraction Two Views: Davis and Stamm, The Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH 1983 Second Anniversary Exhibition, Harm Bouckaert Gallery, New York, NY 1983 Hundreds of Drawings, Artists Space, New York, NY 1983 A More Store, Jack Tilton Gallery, New York, NY 1983 Donald Alberti, Russell Maltz, Olivier Mosset, Ted Stamm; Condeso / Lawler Gallery, New York, NY 1983 Artists for Nuclear Disarmament, Colburn Gallery, Burlington, VT 1982 A Look Back: A Look Forward, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT 1982 Pair Group, Art Galaxy, New York, NY; travelled to Jersey City Art Museum, Jersey City, NJ 1982 Destroyed Prints, Pratt Manhattan Center, New York, NY 1982 Annual Holiday Invitational, A.I.A. Gallery, New York, NY 1982 Group Exhibition, Roy Boyd Gallery Chicago, Merwin Gallery, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL 1982 Pair Group II, Jersey City Museum, Jersey City, NJ 1982 Black and White, Freeport Mc Mo Ran, New York, NY 1982 Faculty Exhibition, Hillwood Commons Gallery, C.W. Post, Greenvale, NY 1981 Drawings, Roy Boyd Gallery, Chicago, IL 1981 Abstract Painting: New York, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 1981 Arabia Felix, Art Galaxy, New York, NY 1981 Words and Images: Contemporary Artist's Books, Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art, Loreto, PA 1981 Love: Hate: Fear and Suicide, University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium 1981 New Directions, Commodities Corp..
In partnership with Lost & Found, artist collective Black Dogs have transformed MK Gallery into a space for speculation on and discussion about Milton Keynes» past, present and future.
A group of friends and collaborators that came together to address the lack of spaces explicitly for black and brown artists, Sweety's developed and continues to provide a platform for queer artists of color.
This free artist's talk is part of our Spring Exhibition Opening Celebration for Gray Matters, a multifaceted survey of 37 contemporary women artists working in the surprisingly vibrant space between — and including — black and white.
As an independent curator, some of DuBois» curatorial projects include: Black Abstraction at Harmony Hall Regional Art Gallery in Fort Washington, MD for the group Black Artists of DC (2011); A / Way Home at the District of Columbia Arts Center (2012 - 13); Of a Place and Time: Photographic Memories and Imaginings at the Hillyer Art Space (2013); (in) Visible and (dis) Embodied: Repositioning the Marginalized as part of the Curatorial Initiative program at the District of Columbia Arts Center (2014).
But it is distinguished by a new level of wealth and access that black artists, gallerists, and collectors can marshal to create commercial and institutional opportunities for their peers, both within mostly black spaces and throughout the larger art world.
White Cube, which has an outpost in Hong Kong, sold one of Damien Hirst's Black Scalpel Blade cityscapes of Shanghai for about $ 1.2 million, while White Space of Beijing reported that 70 percent of its works sold within the first two days, including several works by the young Chinese conceptual artist He Xiangyu.
MIDTOWN & UPTOWN & HARLEM Freak Flag curated by Kim Uchiyama / Morris / 29 E 32 (new, second location) / thru 12/13 Marina Abramovic; Jose Davila / Kelly / 475 Tenth Avenue @ 36 / thru 12/6 Emily Noelle Lambert; Lael Marshall / Dieu Donne / 315 W 36 / thru 1/10 Opening 11/20 Spencer Finch thru 1/11; CyTwombly thru 1/25; Etc. / Morgan Library / 225 Madison @ 36 Margaret Lanzetta / Heskin / 443 W 37 / thru 12/13 A Wicked Problem / EFA Project Space / 323 W 39 / thru 12/20 Inseparable Borders: Elisa Lendvay; Valentina Loseva curated by Nechama Winston / The 125 / 125 E 47 / thru 11/29 Opening 11/18 (6 - 9 PM) Anna Schuleit Haber / German Consulate / 871 United Nations Plaza @ 49 / thru 1/2 Opening 12/2 (6:30 - 8:30) Big Picture Show organized by the International Print Center / 1285 6th Avenue @ 52 / thru 12/5 R.Gober thru 1/18, H.Matisse thru 2/8, Sturtevant thru 2/22; J.Dubuffet thru 4/5; Etc. / MoMA / 11 W 53 Nina Tryggvadottir / Findlay / 724 Fifth Ave. @ 57 — floor 8 / thru 12/6 Sarah McEneaney; Hannah Wilke / de Nagy / 724 Fifth Ave. @ 57 — floor 12 / thru 11/22 Andy Warhol / Hirschl & Adler / 730 Fifth Ave. @ 57 / thru 12/6 Pablo Picasso / Pace / 32 E 57 / thru 1/10 Black & White: Vince Contarino; David Rhodes; Joan Witek; Adolph Gottlieb / McCoy / 41 E 57 / thru 12/12 Will Barnet / Alexandre / 41 E 57 / thru 1/10 Opening 11/20 (5 - 7 PM) Joseph Montgomery / Blum / 20 W 57 — floor 2 / thru 12/6 Nicolas Carone / Washburn / 20 W 57 — floor 8 / thru 1/17 John Baldessari / Goodman / 24 W 57 — floor 4 / thru 11/22 Dorata Jurczak / Jancou / 24 W 57 — floor 6 / thru 12/6 Ruud van Empel / Stux + Haller / 24 W 57 — floor 6 (new location) / thru 12/20 Bernardo Torrens; Anthony Brunelli; Antonio Caroria / Bernarducci - Meisel / 37 W 57 / thru 11/26 Richard Estes; Tom Otterness / Marlborough / 40 W 57 / thru 11/25 Kiln: A.Angell; R.Kneebone; W.O» Brien; A.Shechet; J.Smith; J.Wine curated by T.Zabludowicz / Heller / 43 W 57 (new, second location) / thru 12/20 An Albers Legacy: Artists at Yale in the 1950's curated by Francis Frost / 57W57ARTS / 57 W 57 -1206 / thru 12/20 Marcel Eichner / McKee / 745 Fifth / thru 12/20 Alexander Kaletski / Boone / 745 Fifth / thru 12/20 Assenting Voices: Agitprop Art from North Korea / John Jay CUNY / 860 Eleventh Ave. @ 58 / thru 1/23 New Territories thru 4/6, Etc. / Museum of Art and Design / 2 Columbus Circle @ 59 Joel Carreiro / St. Paul / Columbus @ 60 / 9/30 thru 11/29 Leo Villareal / Gering / 14 E 63 (new location) / thru 1/10 ZERO in vibration — vibration in ZERO / Moeller / 35 E 64 / thru 1/9 Please Enter curated by Beth Rudin Dewoody / Franklin Parrasch / 53 E 64 / thru 12/20 Something Beautiful curated by Khary Simon & Nicolas Wagner / Boesky / 118 E 64 / thru 12/20 Five From Fourteen: James Case - Leal, Anna Glantz, Ali Harrington, Heidi Howard, and Alyssa Piro / Bernstein / 21 E 65 / thru 12/12 Ha Chonghyun / Blum & Poe / 19 E 66 / thru 12/20 Jasper Johns / Dickinson / 19 E 66 / thru 12/12 Miyoko Ito / Baumgold / 60 E 66 / thru 12/20 Douglas Gordon / Park Avenue Armory / 643 Park @ 66 / $ / thru 1/4 Opening 12/10 Terence Gower / Faria / 35 E 67 / thru 1/10 Opening 11/20 Gego; Gerd Leufert / Hunter / West Building, 68 & Lexington (SW corner) / thru 11/22 Freezer Burn organized by Rita Ackermann / Hauser & Wirth / 32 E 69 / thru 12/20 Ray Johnson / Feigen / 34 E 69 / thru 1/16 Ishiuchi Miyako / Roth / 160A E 70 / thru 11/21 Nam June Paik / Asia Society / 725 Park @ 70 / thru 1/4 Food for Thought curated by H.Cohen & M.Falcaro / Marymount / 221 E 71 / thru 12/4 Maurizio Cattelan curated by Adam Lindemann / S - 2 / 1334 York @ 71 / thru 11/26 Local History: Castellani; Judd; Stella curated by Linda Norden / Levy / 909 Madison @ 73 / thru 1/3 Claude Rutault / Perrotin / 909 Madison @ 73 / thru 1/3 Opening 11/20 Jasper Johns / Starr / 5 E 73 / thru 1/23 Richard Diebenkorn / Van Doren Waxter / 23 E 73 / thru 1/16 Art in the Making / Freedman / 25 E 73 / thru 1/31 Duane Hanson / Gagosian / Park & 75 / thru 12/3 Jan Maarten Voskuil / Geranmayeh / 956 Madision @ 76 — floor 3 / thru 12/10 Berend Strik; Henk Peeters / Tilton / 8 E 76 / thru 12/19 Robert Raushenberg / Castelli / 18 E 77 / thru 12/20 Mario Schifano / Luxembourg & Dayan / 64 E 77 / thru 1/10 Carlo Mollino / Gagosian / 976 Madison @ 77th (new location) / thru 12/20 Blair Thurman; Walter De Maria / Gagosian / 980 Madison @ 77th / thru 12/20 Letha Wilson / Higher Pictures / 980 Madison @ 77 / thru 12/20 Opening 11/20 Sigmar Polke / Nahmad / 980 Madison — floor 3 / thru 1/15 Maurizio Cattelan curated by Adam Lindemann / Venus Over Manhattan / 980 Madison @ 77 / thru 1/10 Enrico David / Werner / 4 E 77 / thru 1/24 Chris Martin / Half / 43 East 78 / thru 12/13 El Anatsui / Mnuchin / 45 E 78 / thru 12/13 Roy Lichtenstein / Mitchell - Innes & Nash / 1018 Madison @ 78 / thru 12/19 Wayne Thiebaud / Acquavella / 18 E 79 / thru 11/21
Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power creates a space for an array of African American artists who were deeply engaged in the aesthetic and social justice issues that emerged from the civil rights and Black Power movements.
At Cuchifritos, the collective will host Edición Especial, a special iteration of Sweety's Radio that focuses on Spanish - speaking cultural producers, as a means to bridge the conversations taking place amongst black and brown (Spanish - speaking) communities in and outside of the U.S.. From June 27th through July 30th Sweety's programming will consist of weekly interviews featuring four invited artists whose work will take over the Cuchifritos space for each week, culminating in a collaborative installation by the four members of Sweety's.
Within the connecting spaces between the galleries are multiple iterations of Swedish composer, writer, performer and conceptual artist Leif Elggren's ongoing project, for which he reappropriates the colour combination of yellow and black, traditionally used to express danger or to demarcate a border.
Venues from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and the Studio Museum in Harlem to Artist Space Books & Talks in Tribeca and the new National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., provide bases for engagement and resources for a fuller telling of the American story.
The nominees for the 2017 PULSE PRIZE included artists JoAnne Carson (Black & White Gallery / Project Space), Cristobal (WHITECONCEPTS), Andy Dixon (BEERS LONDON), Alejandro Hernandez (CEDE GALERIA), Amy Hill (Front Room Gallery), Sky Kim (Carrie Able Gallery), Todd Lanam (Mark Wolfe Contemporary), Diane Landry (VIVIANEART), Raquel Maulwurf (Livingstone Gallery), Mariu Palacios (Ginsberg Galeria), Lissa Rivera (ClampArt), Donna Ruff (Rick Wester Fine Art), Devan Shimoyama (Samuel Freeman Gallery), Deborah Tarr (LPH), and Lisa Wright (COATES & SCARRY).
This talk, organized in conjunction with Cameron Rowland's 91020000 exhibition at Artists Space's exhibition space, will explore how racial hierarchy is enforced by the markets: «For example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event Space's exhibition space, will explore how racial hierarchy is enforced by the markets: «For example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event space, will explore how racial hierarchy is enforced by the markets: «For example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event paFor example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event pafor (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event page.
Black Tower Projects, a new privately owned not - for - profit set of studios and project space in Sydenham in south London, launched with an evening of performances in September (their inaugural exhibition, a solo by Keef Winter, opens 11 November); and studio providers V22 recently launched their Workspace Crèche studios in Dalston, offering desk spaces to 13 artists, for a fee that includes eight hours of childcare a week and access to more.
at Artists Space's exhibition space, will explore how racial hierarchy is enforced by the markets: «For example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event Space's exhibition space, will explore how racial hierarchy is enforced by the markets: «For example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event space, will explore how racial hierarchy is enforced by the markets: «For example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event paFor example, «black» spaces are forever unstable, subprime and «waste», making them always available for (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event pafor (re) appropriation through various technologies such as debt, (de) regulation and development,» writes Harris on the talk's event page.
The Whitney will exhibit California light and space artist Robert Irwin's Scrim veil — Black rectangle — Natural light for the first time since 1977.
Black & White Project Space is a 501c (3) not - for - profit art space dedicated to providing artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and mediums without commercial pressSpace is a 501c (3) not - for - profit art space dedicated to providing artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and mediums without commercial pressspace dedicated to providing artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and mediums without commercial pressures.
Black & White Project Space is a 501c (3) not - for - profit exhibition space dedicated to providing artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and mediums without commercial pressSpace is a 501c (3) not - for - profit exhibition space dedicated to providing artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and mediums without commercial pressspace dedicated to providing artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and mediums without commercial pressures.
2010 3 minute wonder series, Broadcast commission, Channel 4 (27,28,29,30 Sept; 18, 19, 20, 21 Oct) 06.2010 Persistence of Vision, FACT, Liverpool, UK 05.2010 Steps into the arcane, Kunstmuseum Thurgau, Switzerland 05.2010 It has to be this way ², National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen [commissioned solo show] 03.2010 Hands on, (curated by John Hilliard) Galerie Raum Mit Licht, Vienna, Austria 02.2010 Depatterrn, Galleri Erik Steen, Oslo, Norway 10.2009 Performance, Film Weekend: The Jarman Award at KunstHalle, Zurich, Switzerland 09.2009 Performance, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK06.2009 Mostravideo, Itau Cultural Institute, Sao Paulo, Brazil 02.2009 Altermodern, Fourth Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, UK 01.2009 It has to be this way, Matt's Gallery, London [commissiond solo show] 12.2008 Performance, Event Horizon, Royal Academy of Art [commissioned solo show] 06.2008 Performance, Happy Hand, British Film Institute, London, UK 10.2007 Cinemart, The Auditorium, Rome, Italy 09.2007 Foreign Bodies, White Box, New York, USA 07.2007 Swallowing Black Maria, Smart Project Space, Amsterdam [commissioned solo show] 02.2007 The Believers, Touring show to five cities in Norway, with performances in Stavanger, Forde and Bergen 09.2006 The truth was always there, The Collection, Lincoln [commissioned solo show] 07.2006 UBS Opening, Tate Modern (with Laurie Simmons, Guerilla Girls etc), UK 05.2006 Performance, Human Camera, Mali Salon, Rijeka, Croatia (solo show) 05.2006 I can't tell you, Grundy Gallery, Blackpool [commissioned solo show] 04.2006 Metropolis Rise, CQL Design Centre, Shanghai; DIAF 2006 @ 798 Space, Beijing, China 04.2006 Performance, Inside, Great Eastern Hotel, Masonic Temple, London, UK 03.2006 Performance, Don't Look Through Me, Y Theatre, Leicester, UK 03.2006 Don't look through me, City Gallery Leicester [commissioned solo show] 03.2006 Performance, Screening at Witte de With / Tent, Rotterdam, Holland 03.2006 John Skies or Sally Swims, UKS Gallery, Oslo, Norway 02.2006 Wandering Rocks, Gimpel Fils Gallery, London 11.2005 Image in Me, Market Gallery, Glasgow (solo show) 10.2005 Eyes of Others, Gallery of Photography, Dublin [commissioned solo show] 10.2005 Wunderkammer, The Collection (curated by Edward Allington), Lincoln, UK 09.2005 I saw the light, Gasworks Gallery, London [commissioned solo show] 09.2004 Adam, Smart Projects, Amsterdam, Holland 11.2004 Mind the Gap, La Friche, Triangle, Marseille, France 08.2004 Shattered Love, Keith Talent Gallery, London 04.2004 Eating at Another's Table, Metropole Galleries, Folkestone (performance / exhibition) 04.2004 Tonight, Studio Voltaire, London (curated by Paul O'Neill) 03.2004 Performance, A Variety Night of Ventriloquism, FACT, Liverpool (with Ken Campbell, Aura Satz, Andrew Hubbard) 03.2004 Mesmer, Temporarycontemporary, London 02.2004 Haunted Media, Site Gallery, Sheffield (with Susan Hiller, Susan Collins, Scanner, Thompson / Craighead, S Mark Gubb) 09.2003 The Physical World, APT, London, (with Ian Dawson, Katie Pratt) 09.2003 Sphere, Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, Canada (with Paul McCarthy, Bruce Nauman, Laurie Simmons and Allan McCollum) 09.2003 You said that without moving your lips, Limerick City Gallery, Ireland (solo show) 08.2003 Calidoscopio, Museo del Barro, Asuncion, Paraguay (solo show) 04.2003 A Taste for Sham, Studio 1.1, London (with Jo Bruton, Kirsten Glass) 01.2003 The Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, The Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle (curated by Brian Griffiths) 09.2002 History Revision, Plymouth Arts Centre (including Terry Atkinson) 06.2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, London Print Studio 04.2002 Dramatic Events, Kent Institute of Art and Design 03.2002 Photoscoptocus, Camden Lock / Henley - on - Thames (Public commission) 03.2002 Nausea, Djangoly Art Centre (with Dave Burrows, Beagles and Ramsay, Margarita Gluzberg, Mark Hutchinson) 08.2001 Trinity College, Zwemmer Gallery, London 05.2001 Black Bag, Old Operating Theatre Museum (+ monograph BBC programme, «Lindsay Seers, Artist's Eye», Rory Logsdail) 03.2001 For the dead travel fast, Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery [commissioned solo show] 02.2001 Molotov, Dilston Grove Gallery, London (with Kirsten Glass, Diann Bauer, Annie Whiles, Helen Paterson, Lisa Fielding Smith) 09.2000 Tow, Camden Lock, Millennium Commission Project (with Tim Head, Diana Edmunds, Janice Howard, Zoe Brown) 10.2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London 07.2000 A Shot In The Head, Lisson Gallery, London 07.2000 Unfound, Chisenhale Gallery, London 06.2000 City Projects, Artomatic, London (with Jemima Brown, Marcel Price) 05.2000 The Double, The Lowry Centre, Salford (with Thomas Ruff, James Reilly and Alice Maher) 05.2000 On the rock, APT Gallery, London (with Annie Whiles, Diann Bauer, Kirsten Glass, Helen Paterson) 09.1999 Nerve, ICA, London (with Jeremy Deller, Martin Creed, Dave Beech, John Isaacs, John Beagles, Dave Burrows, Clive Sall) 07.1999 Quotidian, Paper Bag Factory (curated by Julia Lancaster) 06.1999 Autocannibal, Laure Genillard Gallery, London (solo show) 04.1999 Cabin Fever, Gallery Herold Bremen, Germany, (with Caroline Macarthy and Mairead Maclean) 10.1998 Multiples, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 09.1998 Cannibal, Old Museum Art Centre, Belfast (solo show) 08.1997 Knock, Knock, Artists Work Programme, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin 11.1996 Stick Your Hands Up, Acorn Storage, Hammersmith, London 10.1996 Ghost, ACAVA Open Studios, Denmark St, London 09.1996 Ad Hoc, London Artforfor Sham, Studio 1.1, London (with Jo Bruton, Kirsten Glass) 01.2003 The Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, The Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle (curated by Brian Griffiths) 09.2002 History Revision, Plymouth Arts Centre (including Terry Atkinson) 06.2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, London Print Studio 04.2002 Dramatic Events, Kent Institute of Art and Design 03.2002 Photoscoptocus, Camden Lock / Henley - on - Thames (Public commission) 03.2002 Nausea, Djangoly Art Centre (with Dave Burrows, Beagles and Ramsay, Margarita Gluzberg, Mark Hutchinson) 08.2001 Trinity College, Zwemmer Gallery, London 05.2001 Black Bag, Old Operating Theatre Museum (+ monograph BBC programme, «Lindsay Seers, Artist's Eye», Rory Logsdail) 03.2001 For the dead travel fast, Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery [commissioned solo show] 02.2001 Molotov, Dilston Grove Gallery, London (with Kirsten Glass, Diann Bauer, Annie Whiles, Helen Paterson, Lisa Fielding Smith) 09.2000 Tow, Camden Lock, Millennium Commission Project (with Tim Head, Diana Edmunds, Janice Howard, Zoe Brown) 10.2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London 07.2000 A Shot In The Head, Lisson Gallery, London 07.2000 Unfound, Chisenhale Gallery, London 06.2000 City Projects, Artomatic, London (with Jemima Brown, Marcel Price) 05.2000 The Double, The Lowry Centre, Salford (with Thomas Ruff, James Reilly and Alice Maher) 05.2000 On the rock, APT Gallery, London (with Annie Whiles, Diann Bauer, Kirsten Glass, Helen Paterson) 09.1999 Nerve, ICA, London (with Jeremy Deller, Martin Creed, Dave Beech, John Isaacs, John Beagles, Dave Burrows, Clive Sall) 07.1999 Quotidian, Paper Bag Factory (curated by Julia Lancaster) 06.1999 Autocannibal, Laure Genillard Gallery, London (solo show) 04.1999 Cabin Fever, Gallery Herold Bremen, Germany, (with Caroline Macarthy and Mairead Maclean) 10.1998 Multiples, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 09.1998 Cannibal, Old Museum Art Centre, Belfast (solo show) 08.1997 Knock, Knock, Artists Work Programme, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin 11.1996 Stick Your Hands Up, Acorn Storage, Hammersmith, London 10.1996 Ghost, ACAVA Open Studios, Denmark St, London 09.1996 Ad Hoc, London ArtforFor the dead travel fast, Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery [commissioned solo show] 02.2001 Molotov, Dilston Grove Gallery, London (with Kirsten Glass, Diann Bauer, Annie Whiles, Helen Paterson, Lisa Fielding Smith) 09.2000 Tow, Camden Lock, Millennium Commission Project (with Tim Head, Diana Edmunds, Janice Howard, Zoe Brown) 10.2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London 07.2000 A Shot In The Head, Lisson Gallery, London 07.2000 Unfound, Chisenhale Gallery, London 06.2000 City Projects, Artomatic, London (with Jemima Brown, Marcel Price) 05.2000 The Double, The Lowry Centre, Salford (with Thomas Ruff, James Reilly and Alice Maher) 05.2000 On the rock, APT Gallery, London (with Annie Whiles, Diann Bauer, Kirsten Glass, Helen Paterson) 09.1999 Nerve, ICA, London (with Jeremy Deller, Martin Creed, Dave Beech, John Isaacs, John Beagles, Dave Burrows, Clive Sall) 07.1999 Quotidian, Paper Bag Factory (curated by Julia Lancaster) 06.1999 Autocannibal, Laure Genillard Gallery, London (solo show) 04.1999 Cabin Fever, Gallery Herold Bremen, Germany, (with Caroline Macarthy and Mairead Maclean) 10.1998 Multiples, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 09.1998 Cannibal, Old Museum Art Centre, Belfast (solo show) 08.1997 Knock, Knock, Artists Work Programme, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin 11.1996 Stick Your Hands Up, Acorn Storage, Hammersmith, London 10.1996 Ghost, ACAVA Open Studios, Denmark St, London 09.1996 Ad Hoc, London Artforms.
David Walsh, Elizabeth Pearce, Jane Clark 2013 ISBN 9780980805888 Lindsay Seers, George Barber, Frieze, January 2013 One of Many, Adrian Dannatt, Artist Comes First, Jean - Marc Bustamante (ed), Toulouse International Art Festival (exhibition catalogue), June 2013 All the World's a Camera: Notes on non-human photography, Joanna Zylinska, Drone ISBN 978 -2-9808020-5-8 (pg 168 - 172) 2013 Lindsay Seers, Artangel at the Tin Tabernacle - Jo Applin, ArtForum, December 2012 Lindsay Seers, Martin Herbert, Art Monthly, October 2012 Exhibition, Ben Luke, Evening Standard, (pg 60 - 61) 20 September 2012 Lindsay Seers @ The Tin Tabernacle, Sophie Risner, Whitehot Magazine, September 2012 Artist Profile: Lindsay Seers, Beverly Knowles, this is tomorrow, 12 September 2012 Dream Voyage on a Ghost Ship, Richard Cork, Financial Times, (pg 15) 11 September 2012 Nowhere Less Now, Amy Dawson, Metro (pg 56) 7 September 2012 Voyage of Discovery, Helen Sumpter, Time Out, (pg 42) 6 - 12 September 2012 Nowhere Less Now, Rachel Cooke, The Observer, (pg 33) 2 September 2012 Divine Interventions, Georgia Dehn, Telegraph Magazine, 25 August 2012 Eine Buhne fur das Ich, Annette Hoffmann, Der Sonntag, 25 March 2012 Das Identitätsvakuum - Dietrich Roeschmann, Badische Zeitung, 27 March 2012 Ich ist ein anderer - Kunstverein Freiburg - Badische Zeitung, 21 March 2012 Action Painting - Jacob Lundström, FLM NR.16, March 2012 Dröm - fabriken - Peter Cornell, Kultur, 21 February 2012 Vita duken lockar Konstnärer - Fredrik Söderling, Dagens Nyheter (pg 4 - 5) 15 February 2012 Personligen Präglad - Clemens Poellinger, SvD söndag, (pg 4 - 5) 12 February 2012 Uppshippna hyllningar till - Helena Lindblad, Dagens Nyheter (pg 8 - 9) 9 February 2012 Bonniers Konsthall - Sara Schedin, Scan Magazine, (pg 48 - 9) Febuary 2012 Ausstellungen - Monopol, (pg 120) February 2012 Modeprovokatörer plockas up par museerna - Susanna Strömquist, Dagens Nyheter (pg 8 - 9) January 2012 Promosing in Kabelvåg - Seers» «Cyclops [Monocular] at LIAF, Kjetil Røed, Aftenposten, 10 September 2011 Reconstructing the Past - Lindsay Seers» Photographic Narrative, Lee Halpin, Novel ², May / June 2011 Lindsay Seers, Oliver Basciano, Art Review, May 2011 Lindsay Seers, Jen Hutton, ArtForum Picks (online), April 2011 Lindsay Seers: an impossibly oddball autobiography, Murray Whyte, The Toronto Star, 13 April 2011 The Projectionist, David Balzer, Eye Weekly, 6 April 2011 dis - covery, exhibition catalogue, 2011 Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way ², Paul Usherwood, Art Monthly, April 2011 Lindsay Seers: Gateshead, Robert Clark, Guardian: The Guide, February 2011 It has to be this way ², 2011, novella published by Matt's Gallery, London Neo-Narration: stories of art, Mike Brennan, modernedition.com, 2010 Steps into the Arcane, ISBN 978 -3-869841-105-2, published 2010 It has to be this way1.5, novella 2010, published by Matt's Gallery, London Jarman Award, Laura McLean - Ferris, The Guardian, September 2009 Top Ten, ArtForum, Summer 2009 Reel to Real - On the material pleasure of film, Colin Perry, Art Monthly, July / August 2009 Remember Me, Tom Morton, Frieze, June / July / August 2009 It has to be this way, 2009, published by Matt's Gallery, London Lindsay Seers at Matt's Gallery, Gilda Williams, ArtForum, May 2009 Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way — Matt's Gallery, Chris Fite - Wassilak, Frieze, April 2009 Lindsay Seers: it has to be this way, Rebecca Geldard, Art Review, April 2009 Review of Altermodern - Tate Triennial 2009, Jorg Heiser, Frieze, April 2009 Tate Triennial: «Altermodern» — Tate Britain Feb 3 — April 26, 2009, Colin Perry, Art Monthly, March 2009 Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way (Matt's Gallery, London), Jennifer Thatcher, Art Monthly, March 2009 No sharks here, but plenty to bite on, Tom Lubbock, The Independent, 6 February 2009 Lindsay Seers: Tate Triennial 2009: Altermodern, Nicolas Bourriaud, Tate Channel, 2009 «Altermodern» review: «The richest and most generous Tate Triennial yet», Adrian Searle, The Guardian, Feb 2009 Critics» Choice for exhibition at Matt's Gallery, Time Out London, January 29 — February 4 2009 In the studio, Time Out London, January 22 — 28 2009 Lindsay Seers Swallowing Black Maria at SMART Project Space Amsterdam, Michael Gibbs, Art Monthly, Oct 2007 Human Camera, June 2007, Monograph book Published by Article Press Lindsay Seers, Gasworks, London, Pil and Galia Kollectiv, Art Papers (USA), February 2006 Review of Wandering Rocks, Time Out London, February 1 — 8, 2006 Aften Posten, Norway, Front cover and pages 6 + 7 for show at UKS Artistic sleight of hand — «Eyes of Others» at the Gallery of Photography, Cristin Leach, Irish Times, 25 Nov 2005 There is Always an Alternative, Catalogue (Dave Beech / Mark Hutchinson) 2005 Wunderkammer, Catalogue, The Collection, October 2005 Lindsay Seers» «We Saw You Coming»;» 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea»; «Apollo 13»; «2001», Lisa Panting, Sphere Catalogue (pg 46 - 50), Presentation House Gallery, 2004 Haunted Media (Site Gallery, Sheffield), Art Monthly, April 2004 Miser and Now, essays in issues 1, 2 + 3 Expressive Recal l - «You said that without moving you lips», Limerick City Gallery of Art, Dougal McKenzie, Source 37, Winter 2003 Braziers International Artists Workshop Catalogue, 2002 Review of Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, Art Monthly, April 2003 Slade - Hannah Collins, Chris Muller, Lindsay Seers, Elisa Sighicelli, Catherine Yass, (A journal on photography, essay by John Hilliard), June 2002 Radical Philosophy, 113, Cover and pages 26/30, June 2002 Elle magazine, June 2002, page 92 - 93 Review, Dave Beech, Art Monthly, June 2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, Catalogue Lindsay Seers, Artists Eye, BBC Programme by Rory Logsdail The Fire Station, a film by William Raban and a catalogue by Acme The Double, Catalogue from the Lowry, Lowry Press, July 2000 Contemporary Visual Arts, Roy Exley, June 1999 Hot Shoe, Chris Townsend.
As one critic has noted, these spaces were «an experimental expansion of the work and the condition for its accomplishment»... [Ben Nicholson recollected that Mondrian's Paris] studio had a black floor, and white walls on which the ageing artist, 62 at the time of Nicholson's visit, pinned cardboard rectangles of primary colours that he could move around at will.
Collection, Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Orlando, FL Commemorating 30 Years (1976 — 2007): Part Three (1991 — 2007), Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago, IL The Blake Byrne Collection, The Nasher Museum of Contemporary Art, Duke University, Durham, NC 2006 Do Not Stack, Roberts & Tilton, Los Angeles, CA Black Alphabet: ConTEXTS of Contemporary African - American Art, Zacheta, National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland Down By Law, Wrong Gallery at the Sondra Gilman Gallery, Whitney Museum, New York, NY Hangar — 7 Edition 4, Salzburg Airport, Salzburg, Austria Redefined: Modern and Contemporary Art from the Collection, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Relics and Remnants, Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, Jamaica, NY 2005 Maximum Flavor, ACA Gallery, Atlanta College of Art, Atlanta, GA Neo-Baroque, Tema Celeste, Verona, Italy Neovernacular, Turner Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Kehinde Wiley / Sabeen Raja: New Paintings, Conner Contemporary Art, Washington, D.C. 2004 Eye of the Needle, Roberts & Tilton, Los Angeles, CA Glory, Glamour & Gold, The Proposition, New York, NY She's Come Undone, Greenberg Van Doren, New York, NY The New York Mets and Our National Pastime, Queens Museum of Art, Queens, NY Beauty, Kravets + Wehby, New York, NY African American Artists in Los Angeles, A Survey Exhibition: Fade, City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department, Los Angeles, CA 2003 Peripheries Become the Center, Prague Biennale 1, Galleria Nazionale Veletrzni Palac Dukelskych Hrdinu 47, Prague, Czech Republic Superreal, Marella, Milan, Italy New Wave, Kravets Wehby Gallery, New York, NY Re: Figure, College of DuPage, The Guhlberg Gallery, Glen Ellyn, IL 2002 Painting as Paradox, Artists Space, New York, NY Mass Appeal, Gallery 101, Ottawa, Canada Ironic / Iconic, The Studio Museum of Harlem, New York, NY Black Romantic, The Studio Museum of Harlem, New York, NY 2001 It's Bigger Than Hip Hop, Rush Arts, New York, NY
From this initial seed, The Black Artists Retreat [B.A.R.] was born with the goal of creating time and space for a community to engage outside of the institutional environment.
9:30 AM — NOON Data as Art Medium Chair: Jeff Thompson, University of Nebraska, Lincoln Data and Its Expression George Legrady, University of California, Santa Barbara From Kandinsky to the Database (Point, Line, Plane: Variable, Array, Table) Brian Evans, University of Alabama Web as Index and Archive Penelope Umbrico, Bard College and School of Visual Arts Art that Decodes: Making Sense of Data Process Heidi May, Emily Carr University of Art and Design and University of British Columbia 12:30 PM — 2:00 PM CAA Services to Artists Committee Making a Living as an Artist: With or Without a Gallery Chair: Sharon Louden, Louden Studio Sharon Butler, Eastern Connecticut State University William Carroll, The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Peter Drake, New York Academy of Art Ed Winkleman, Winkleman Gallery 2:30 — 5:00 PM CAA Services to Artists Committee Be Our Guest: Time and Space to Create at Artist Residencies Chair: Caitlin Strokosch, Alliance of Artists Communities Kathy Black, Vermont Studio Center Linda Marston - Reid, Bellagio Center Margaret Murphy, Fine Arts Work Center Mario Caro, Res Artis
Informed by Ringgold's legacy as well as the current political climate, the exhibition poses questions about how to reconceptualize cultural representation, engagement, and critique: What spaces for agency are available to black artists today, and by what means have they produced spaces for themselves?
1971 clears space for art historians, curators, and cultural producers to complicate black artists» participation in modernism as a multicultural process, not as a separate or oppositional endeavor.
1995 25 Americans: Painting in the 90s, Milwaukee Art Museum, USA Selected Works from the Collection The Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland Black & White & Read All Over, La Salle Lobby Gallery, Nationsbank Plaza, Charlotte, USA American Art Today: Night Paintings, The Art Museum, FL InternationalUniversity, Miami, USA The Artist's Camera, Photographs by Contemporary Artists, Thread Waxing Space, New York, USA From Impulse to Image, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, USA Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration for Human Rights, United Nations, Geneva, Switzerland Louvre, Paris, France, Commissioned for a special print edition Print Cabinet, Musee d'art Moderne, Geneva, Switzerland Philadelphia Museum of Art, PA Commissioned for a special print edition From Picasso to Woodrow: Suite of prints Long Vertical Falls, Tate Gallery, London, England
After buying Johnson's 2011 video «The New Black Yoga» depicting five black men performing choreographed movements on a beach, Economou commissioned the 36 - year - old American artist to create paintings and sculptures for the space in AtBlack Yoga» depicting five black men performing choreographed movements on a beach, Economou commissioned the 36 - year - old American artist to create paintings and sculptures for the space in Atblack men performing choreographed movements on a beach, Economou commissioned the 36 - year - old American artist to create paintings and sculptures for the space in Athens.
The artist is also driven to display how the tribally sanctified spaces in which those forms of worship and spirited performance takes place are Black pocket - universes of intense energy, eloquence and illumination — ones that exist in simultaneous alignment and detachment from the poetics of Black political and popular culture but are as well - organized as those realms around the acquisition and consumption of material wealth for culturally redemptive purposes.
However, the institution actually marginalized their presence by positioning the work — by around 25 Black women artists — in the corridor and reserving the two main exhibition spaces for solo exhibitions of two white male artists.
In doing this they created an important space for questioning the role of black artists within arts curriculum and exhibiting institutions in the UK.
Artists often incorporate AAC's unique building, which features bright, airy spaces and black box galleries for experimental works, into site - specific installations, resulting in a selection of never - before - seen exhibitions.
The Black Box is an exciting art exhibition and project space in Cape Town for emerging artists.
The postmodern techniques and sources employed in Black Celebrationhad been present in Cokes's early audio - visual work — which throughout the»80s was shown in venues such as The Kitchen, Artists Space, the New Museum, and the Whitney Museum of American Art — and have filtered and mutated through his oeuvre in the ensuing thirty years, for example with his four - person «art band» X-PRZ, 1991 — 2000, and in series of work like Pop Manifestos, 1999 — 2004, and Evil, 2003 — ongoing.
Both specific and universal, the works in «Romare Bearden: A Black Odyssey» present the artist's individual struggles and leave space for the viewer to impose her own story and discover her own meaning.
This shift is due greatly to the tenacious efforts of black women artists in the «60s and «70s — like Emma Amos, Camille Billops, and Faith Ringgold and many more — who simply would not be ignored, and as a response, created their own spaces for visibility like Where We At and The Hatch - Billops Collection.
And I realized I had to do something 1983 Rammelzee vs K Rob «Beat Bop» 1984 First shows at Clarissa Dalrymple and Nicole Klagsbrun's Cable Gallery (artists of Wool's generation who begin showing same period include Philip Taaffe Jeff Koons Mike Kelley Cady Noland and James Nares 1984 produces first book photocopied edition of four: 93 Drawings of Beer on the Wall 1984 Warhol Rorschach paintings 1986 First pattern paintings 1987 Joins Luhring Augustine Gallery 1987 First word paintings 1988 Collaborative installation with Robert Gober one painting by Wool (Apocalypse Now) one sculpture by Gober (Three Urinals) one collaborative photograph (Untitled) and a mirror Gary Indiana contributes a short piece of fiction to the accompanying publication 1988 In Cologne sees show of Albert Oehlen's work meets Martin Kippenberger 1988 First European shows Cologne and Athens 1988 Collaborates with Richard Prince on two paintings: My Name and My Act 1989 Museum Group shows in Amsterdam Frankfurt am Main and Munich Whitney Biennial 1989 One year fellowship at the American Academy in Rome 1989 Starts taking photographs 1989 Publishes Black Book an oversized collection of 9 - letter images 1989 Fall of the Berlin Wall 1990 Meets Larry Clark 1991 First survey mounted at Boymans - Van Beuningen Museum Rotterdam publishes accompanying artist's book Cats in Bag Bags in River color photocopies of photographs of black and white paintings 1991 Creates edition of small paintings for ACT - UP New York Needle Exchange 1991 Participates in Carnegie International includes painting and billboard with truncated text announcing «THE SHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa Black Book an oversized collection of 9 - letter images 1989 Fall of the Berlin Wall 1990 Meets Larry Clark 1991 First survey mounted at Boymans - Van Beuningen Museum Rotterdam publishes accompanying artist's book Cats in Bag Bags in River color photocopies of photographs of black and white paintings 1991 Creates edition of small paintings for ACT - UP New York Needle Exchange 1991 Participates in Carnegie International includes painting and billboard with truncated text announcing «THE SHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa black and white paintings 1991 Creates edition of small paintings for ACT - UP New York Needle Exchange 1991 Participates in Carnegie International includes painting and billboard with truncated text announcing «THE SHOW IS OVER» 1991 Meets Jim Lewis 1991 Relocates studio to East 9th Street in New York 1992 LA riots 1992 DAAD residency in Berlin 1993 Publishes Absent Without Leave 160 black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa black - and - white images from travel photographs taken over previous 4 years 1993 Begins silkscreened flower paintings 1993 Meets Michel Majerus 1994 Makes road - signs for Martin Kippenberger's Museum of Modern Art Syros 1994 New York Knicks lose to Houston Rockets in Game 7 NBA Finals 1995 Organizes retrospective of the New Cinema late 70's New York underground Super-8 films 1995 First spray - paintings 1995 Kids 1996 East Village studio severely damaged in building fire leaving Wool without a working space for 8 months artist's insurance photos become portfolio Incident on 9th Street 1997 Marries painter Charline von Heyl 1998 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles mounts mid-career retrospective travels to Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh and Kunsthalle Basel 1998 Begins silkscreen re-imaging of own work 2001 Solo exhibition at Secession Vienna 2002 «Grey» paintings 2003 East Broadway Breakdown photos of New York City 2005 First digital drawings 2006 Contributes art to Sonic Youth Rather Ripped 2007 Collaborates with Josh Smith on Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 2008 Collaborates with Richard Hell on Psychopts 2008 Christopher Wool lives and works in New York and Marfa Texas
In a show that already glosses over so many incredible artists, what does it mean that space has been made, even minimally for non-Black artists in an exhibition about Black Revolutionary arts?
New York and North Adams, Massachusetts, Drift of Summer, RM Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand Observe / Recognize, Berlin Gallery at Legends Santa Fe, Santa Fe, New Mexico 2010 Collision, Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence, Rhode Island Lush Life, Invisible Exports Gallery, New York, New York Everyday Mystics, Patricia Sweetow Gallery, San Francisco, California Vantage Point, Recent Acquisitions, Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, Washington DC Raw State, Shelby Street Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico New Paintings, Staley Wise Gallery, New York, New York Alluring Subversions, Timken Art Center, California College of The Arts, San Diego, California Currents, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, Colorado organized by Cicely Cullen 2009 On Stellar Rays, Lover, New York, New York, organized by Kate Gilmore and Candice Madey Signs Taken For Wonders, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, New York, organized by Isolde Brielmaier, Surveillance, Affirmation Arts, New York, New York, organized by Rachel Vancellete Solution, DiverseWorks, Houston, Texas, organized by Janet Phelps Eiteljorg Museum, Recent Acquisitions, Eiteljorg 2008 - 09 Fellows, Indianapolis, Indiana The Banality of Good, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California, organized by Chris Christion Currents, Metro Visual Arts Center, Denver, Colorado, organized by Cicely Cullen Relevant, Nathan Cummings Foundation, New York, New York, organized by Amerinda 2008 Blueballs, Production Fund LAB, New York, New York, organized by Jackie Saccoccio Visions, Flushing Town Hall Projects, Flushing, New York, organized by Omar Lopez - Chahoud Voices of the Mound, Institute of American Indian Arts, Santa Fe, curated by Linda Lomahaftewa - Singer Kentler International Drawing Space and Long Island University, Native Voices, New York, New York 516 Arts, Cautionary Tales, Albuquerque, New Mexico, curated by Holly Roberts Jersey City Museum, 1 × 1 Project, Shameless, Jersey City, New Jersey, curated by Rocio Aranda Alvarez Circa Art Fair, Puerto Rico, with Samson Projects Volta 4, Basel, Switzerland, with Samson Projects 2007 SONOTUBE, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, California, curated by Miki Garcia Off The Map, The National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution, New York, New York, curated by Kathleen Ash - Milby New England School of Art and Design, Boston, Massachusetts, organized by Charles Giuliano Postmillennial Black Madonna (in two parts): Paradise @ MoCADA, and Inferno @ Skylight Gallery, Brooklyn, New York Newark Open 2007, Newark, New Jersey, organized by Omar Lopez - Chahoud 2006 The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, No Reservations, Ridgefield, Connecticut, curated by Richard Klein Paul Kopeikin Gallery, Paperworks, Los Angeles, California, curated by Daria Brit Shapiro Westport Arts Center, BROOKLYN, Westport, Connecticut, curated by Amy Simon State University of New York, Paumanoka, Stony Brook, New York, curated by Stephanie Dinkins The Jersey City Museum, Tropicalisms, Jersey City, New Jersey, curated by Rocio Aranda - Alvarado ARCO, Madrid, Spain, with Samson Projects MACO Art Fair, Mexico City, Mexico with Samson Projects 2005 Le Désert de Retz, Massimo Audiello, New York, New York, curated by David Hunt Alona Kagan Gallery, From the Root to the Fruit, New York, New York, curated by David Hunt Out of Bounds, Wave Hill, Glyndor Gallery, Bronx, New York, curated by Jennifer McGregor Evolving Pattern, New Jersey State University, Jersey City, New Jersey, organized by Midori Yoshimoto Play, Iandor Fine Arts, Newark, New Jersey, curated by Jomo Jelani Heywood Artists Alliance AIR Exhibition, Cuchifritos Gallery, New York, New York 2004 The Urge That Binds, Samson Projects, Boston, Massachusetts Jersey City Museum, Jersey (New), Jersey City, New Jersey, curated by Dr. Rocio Aranda New American Talent, The Jones Art Center for Contemporary Art, Austin, Texas, selection by Jerry Saltz The Space Between Words, Kean University, Union, New Jersey, curated by Judith Page Timeless / Timeliness, Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, New Jersey, curated by Dominique Nahas Super Salon, Samson Projects, Boston, Massachusetts, curated by Camilo AlvaFor Wonders, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, New York, organized by Isolde Brielmaier, Surveillance, Affirmation Arts, New York, New York, organized by Rachel Vancellete Solution, DiverseWorks, Houston, Texas, organized by Janet Phelps Eiteljorg Museum, Recent Acquisitions, Eiteljorg 2008 - 09 Fellows, Indianapolis, Indiana The Banality of Good, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California, organized by Chris Christion Currents, Metro Visual Arts Center, Denver, Colorado, organized by Cicely Cullen Relevant, Nathan Cummings Foundation, New York, New York, organized by Amerinda 2008 Blueballs, Production Fund LAB, New York, New York, organized by Jackie Saccoccio Visions, Flushing Town Hall Projects, Flushing, New York, organized by Omar Lopez - Chahoud Voices of the Mound, Institute of American Indian Arts, Santa Fe, curated by Linda Lomahaftewa - Singer Kentler International Drawing Space and Long Island University, Native Voices, New York, New York 516 Arts, Cautionary Tales, Albuquerque, New Mexico, curated by Holly Roberts Jersey City Museum, 1 × 1 Project, Shameless, Jersey City, New Jersey, curated by Rocio Aranda Alvarez Circa Art Fair, Puerto Rico, with Samson Projects Volta 4, Basel, Switzerland, with Samson Projects 2007 SONOTUBE, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara, California, curated by Miki Garcia Off The Map, The National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution, New York, New York, curated by Kathleen Ash - Milby New England School of Art and Design, Boston, Massachusetts, organized by Charles Giuliano Postmillennial Black Madonna (in two parts): Paradise @ MoCADA, and Inferno @ Skylight Gallery, Brooklyn, New York Newark Open 2007, Newark, New Jersey, organized by Omar Lopez - Chahoud 2006 The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, No Reservations, Ridgefield, Connecticut, curated by Richard Klein Paul Kopeikin Gallery, Paperworks, Los Angeles, California, curated by Daria Brit Shapiro Westport Arts Center, BROOKLYN, Westport, Connecticut, curated by Amy Simon State University of New York, Paumanoka, Stony Brook, New York, curated by Stephanie Dinkins The Jersey City Museum, Tropicalisms, Jersey City, New Jersey, curated by Rocio Aranda - Alvarado ARCO, Madrid, Spain, with Samson Projects MACO Art Fair, Mexico City, Mexico with Samson Projects 2005 Le Désert de Retz, Massimo Audiello, New York, New York, curated by David Hunt Alona Kagan Gallery, From the Root to the Fruit, New York, New York, curated by David Hunt Out of Bounds, Wave Hill, Glyndor Gallery, Bronx, New York, curated by Jennifer McGregor Evolving Pattern, New Jersey State University, Jersey City, New Jersey, organized by Midori Yoshimoto Play, Iandor Fine Arts, Newark, New Jersey, curated by Jomo Jelani Heywood Artists Alliance AIR Exhibition, Cuchifritos Gallery, New York, New York 2004 The Urge That Binds, Samson Projects, Boston, Massachusetts Jersey City Museum, Jersey (New), Jersey City, New Jersey, curated by Dr. Rocio Aranda New American Talent, The Jones Art Center for Contemporary Art, Austin, Texas, selection by Jerry Saltz The Space Between Words, Kean University, Union, New Jersey, curated by Judith Page Timeless / Timeliness, Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, New Jersey, curated by Dominique Nahas Super Salon, Samson Projects, Boston, Massachusetts, curated by Camilo Alvafor Contemporary Art, Austin, Texas, selection by Jerry Saltz The Space Between Words, Kean University, Union, New Jersey, curated by Judith Page Timeless / Timeliness, Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, New Jersey, curated by Dominique Nahas Super Salon, Samson Projects, Boston, Massachusetts, curated by Camilo Alvafor Contemporary Art, Newark, New Jersey, curated by Dominique Nahas Super Salon, Samson Projects, Boston, Massachusetts, curated by Camilo Alvarez
«I want for people to see the work and feel empowered and normal,» he tells me, sitting in his Brooklyn studio before half finished collage paintings of black figures in repose for «Repose,» a solo show at UTA Artist Space opening October 28.
Among the artists featured at Kavi Gupta's booth was McArthur Binion, a charismatic sixty - eight - year - old African American who was the first black artist to graduate from Cranbrook, found champions in Sol LeWitt, Carl Andre, and other artists in 1970s New York, was in an exhibition at Artists Space during its inaugural year, and, after moving to Chicago, dropped out of sight for thirtyartists featured at Kavi Gupta's booth was McArthur Binion, a charismatic sixty - eight - year - old African American who was the first black artist to graduate from Cranbrook, found champions in Sol LeWitt, Carl Andre, and other artists in 1970s New York, was in an exhibition at Artists Space during its inaugural year, and, after moving to Chicago, dropped out of sight for thirtyartists in 1970s New York, was in an exhibition at Artists Space during its inaugural year, and, after moving to Chicago, dropped out of sight for thirtyArtists Space during its inaugural year, and, after moving to Chicago, dropped out of sight for thirty years.
The artist João Penalva presents the installation «People On Air» in the Corner Space of Galerie Thomas Schulte: the space has been painted red and covered with a collage of black and white photographs telling stories of sound artists working for radio in the 1940s and 1Space of Galerie Thomas Schulte: the space has been painted red and covered with a collage of black and white photographs telling stories of sound artists working for radio in the 1940s and 1space has been painted red and covered with a collage of black and white photographs telling stories of sound artists working for radio in the 1940s and 1950s.
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