theinvisibledog

Archive for 2009

THE ANT / XAVIER ROUX / THE TEAM

In News on December 28, 2009 at 06:17

XAVIER ROUX
The Conceptual One

Based in New York, Xavier Roux is a postmodern artist who has developed conceptual artworks based on public participation. He has developed a brand name through Redseeds and proposes participative art projects to corporations. With Schlumberger he has created the Tree of Life, a giant set of sculptures, which incorporate drawings made by children from 26 countries. He has also created a participative art project aiming at connecting the universities from different countries.

On the aftermath of 2001 Xavier Roux had “recreated” the Twin Towers using the grid of Manhattan avenues and streets and planting 4,000 giant Russian Mammoth sunflowers in the streets. Winner of the Panchiao International Art Competition he completed “The Swimmers” in 2003 – a 225 foot long glass wall representing transparent swimmers in motion. In 2007, Xavier Roux launched the Artist Studio Project in collaboration with the Yahoo Research Lab at Berkeley. The project was an experimental exploration of the role and place of the artist in our society. He has also contributed to Praxis Dreams & Possibilities show at The Whitney Museum in New York.

He is currently building The Ant at The Invisible Dog in New York, a sixty foot long steel and nylon sculpture of a an ant based on 1943 French Surrealist Robert Desnos’ poem “La Fourmi”.

THE TEAM

JUAN ALFARO
Juan is in charge of building the steel sculpture supporting the four giant balloons. Juan is an artist using metal as his primary medium. He has worked numerous artist including Yoko Ono and he has collaborated with Louise Bourgeois on her famous Spider.

GUILLAUME PATUREL
Guillaume has created all the 3-D images and movies used on this website. The 3_D rendering was also used to scale and position the sculpture in the space at Invisible Dog. Guillaume is an expert on 3-D imaging. You can see more of his work on the website of his company website.

SOLANGE CYPEL
Solange Cypel is responsible for fundraising efforts and managing the public support of The ANT.  Solange is currently studying Fundraising within the Master’s Program at New York University and works as a Senior Management Consultant in Paris and in New York. She is also a member of the board of  AUTOUR DE L’EAU, a non profit organization she founded in 2007 to support clean water projects in poor countries.

LAURA BRON
Laura Bron is responsible for fundraising efforts and managing the public support of The ANT particularly through the video and social media compaign. She is currently studying Fundraising within the Master’s Program at New York University and works as an Arts consultant. Laura’s interest and experience in Arts and International relations has lead to her involvement in the production and planning of various events in NYC, Berlin, Paris and Geneva. Website: Website

CINDY SMITH  & MIKE GRECO
Cindy and Mike work with Aerostar, the company that fabricates the airtight balloons elements that will make the body of the Ant. They are based in South Dakota and are mostly known in New York for their work for the annual Macy’s balloons parade.  Website

Donate

THE ANT / THE POEM

In News on December 28, 2009 at 06:02

Une fourmi de dix-huit mètres
Avec un chapeau sur la tête, Ça n’existe pas,
ça n’existe pas.
Une fourmi traînant un char Plein de pingouins et de canards, Ça n’existe pas,
ça n’existe pas.
Une fourmi parlant français, Parlant latin et javanais, Ça n’existe pas,
ça n’existe pas.
Eh! pourquoi pas?

An 18-meter long ant With a hat on its head That doesn’t exist,
that doesn’t exist.
An ant pulling a cart Full of penguins and ducks That doesn’t exist,
that doesn’t exist.
An ant speaking French, Speaking Latin and Javanese, That doesn’t exist,
that doesn’t exist.
Hey! Why not?

Donate

70 DAYS TOGETHER

In News on December 26, 2009 at 15:11

70 DAYS TOGETHER IN 2009 THANK YOU!

AND HAPPY NEW YEAR 2010

70 DAYS – 70 PHOTOS (and more)
click here

Protected: THE ANT DOWNLOAD

In News on December 19, 2009 at 10:40

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


JONATHAN LETHEM & TOM SANFORD MURAL

In News on December 2, 2009 at 11:06

In the neighborhood spirit, Tom Sanford brings Jonathan Lethem’s novel “Motherless Brooklyn”– which takes place on this block, to life via a fantastic, larger than life mural.

Last week, Jonathan Lethem was at the Invisible Dog Art Center ….

Watch NY1 video here

CREATIVEMORNINGS

In News on December 2, 2009 at 07:52

FRIDAY DECEMBER 11th 8.30am

Swissmiss is a design blog and studio run by Tina Roth Eisenberg, a swiss designer gone NYC
Charlie Todd
, the inspiring force behind Improv Everywhere will be the upcoming speaker

CreativeMornings, created by Tina Roth Eisenberg, is a monthly morning gathering of creative types. Each event includes a 10 minute lecture, followed by a 20 minute group discussion. The gathering begins at 8:30am with the topic presentation starting at 9:00am. The whole thing closes down at 10am.

Interested in attending? Guestlist only. Please contact Swiss Miss Sorry but we’ve reached full capacity!

http://www.creativemornings.com/
http://improveverywhere.com/

THE ANT / DONATION

In News on November 27, 2009 at 00:36

DONATE ON LINE HERE

Please become a supporter of The Ant by donating and help us create this meaningful artwork.
Please remember
that no amount is too little or too big, in hard economic times a small token can go a long way.

We would like to thank our generous supporters:

Corporate Supporters

Guillaume Paturel – By-encore (NY)
Chez Joce (F)
Otherpress (NY)

with the generous support of the
Cultural Services of the French Embassy
& Association Les Amis de Robert Desnos

Donors
Floanne Ankah, Anne Mourier Attal, Stéphanie Arpage & Guillaume Paturel, Sabine Aslan, Corinne Bal, Philippe Barreaud, Gisela Blanc, Marianne Bron, Laura Bron, Chong Gon Byun, Kathleen Calabrese, Pierre Carava,  Martha Caroll, Florence Carmont, Marie Castro, Francis Cholle, Katharina Christl, Jay Cleary, Colin Clement, Simon Courchel, Eva & Régis Courchel, Catherine Courrier, Elisabeth Cros, Joëlle Deroy, Vincent Devisscher, Gina Diwan, Cito Dizon, Steven Feuerborn, Jeanne Fouchet & Richard Nahas, Isabelle Jouanneau Fertig, Jocelyn Guegnault, François Ghirardi, Muriel Guépin & Christophe Lemée, Judith Gurewich, Jason Hall, Michel Kelemenis, Taekyung Kim, Christine Lambert, Marine Laouchez, Jean-Francois Laugel, Jean-Pierre Lechevalier, Jean Lee, Brigitte Lemercier, David Liatti, Sara Lubtchansky & Gilles Seclin,  Florence Magne, Gael Malleret, Ella Marder & Daniel Horowitz, Germain Moyon, Marcelo Noverstein, Valentina Pace & Solo Houssein, Romain Pelleray, Julien Princiaux, Laurence Roucouly, Philippe Roux, Sophie Roux, Claude & Renée Roux, Arnaud & Beatrice Roux, Véronique Roux, Paul Rozek, Hugues de Saint Simon, François Servranckx, Clément Sobtejou, Charlotte Toulis, Aurélie Vaneck & Jean-François Salessy, Thomas Viguier, Emmanuele & Bruno Vinciguerra, The Windmill Factory.

Some donors wish to remain anonymous

The Ant has been supported by French Morning

Special thanks to Solange Cypel and Laura Bron who helped us for the fundraising campaign

Special thanks to Roy, Steve, Juan, Ramon, Tomas and Julio for their advise and help.

Without whom the construction of the exhibition would not be possible.

Donations are still welcome and deeply appreciated.Become one of our generous supporters whom have contributed to creating an exciting,
very talked about art piece.

DONATE HERE

Low on money but want to contribute anyway? We can always use an extra hand, please contact us to discuss various opportunities for volunteer jobs.

DONATE ON LINE HERE

For more information about donation or volunteers, please contact theinvisibledog.ny@gmail.com

RENTAL SPACES

In News on November 22, 2009 at 21:15

ID_Space_for web

The third floor loft space at the Invisible Dog is a gorgeous open space of approximately 4000 square feet.  Although this historic building has been extensively renovated with new windows, heating, and electricity, the majority of the original details remain intact.  Hardwood floors, brick walls, and 19th century wooden beams give the space a uniquely raw and beautiful atmosphere, perfect for wedding receptions, birthday parties, theater performances, concerts, rehearsals, fundraising galas, film shoots, fashion shows, sample sales, photo shoots, art exhibitions, craft fairs, product launches, record releases, film screenings, panel discussions, pop up shop and more.

more about Rental Spaces

BULL AND BEAR MARKET

In News on November 22, 2009 at 21:07

SUNDAY DECEMBER 13th
11am to 8pm

Wondering how to buy your friends holiday gifts after a year of scraping by with the sickly stock market? The Bull and Bear Market starting at noon on December 13 will have art and crafts from local creators at affordable prices in the Invisible Dog, Brooklyn. In addition to original pieces from area artists, the Bull and Bear Market will feature a bake sale, as well as cookie decorating and face painting for young penny-pinchers. Stock market representatives Bull and Bear will be at the market to welcome shoppers and make apologies.

Admission to the Bull and Bear Market is free. Visit www.recessionartshows.com/current Proceeds support Recession Art, an organization devoted to helping emerging artists show and sell their work while giving art lovers and collectors avenues to buy original work at reasonable prices.

A Recession Art Show
www.RecessionArtShows.com

ZERO FILM FESTIVAL

In News on November 22, 2009 at 21:03

WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 9th-7pm
SATURDAY DECEMBER 12th-3pm

Focusing on a niche in the independent film community which has been traditionally ignored, Zero Film Festival is dedicated to screening self financed and zero budget films from the United States and around the world.

In the age where the majority of festivals are Hollywood marketing campaigns, and even “indie” and “underground” festivals screen financed films, we are here to offer something different. We recognize authentically independent films and filmmakers who take risks and fight the odds to see their visions through.

The Zero Film Festival is the first festival exclusive to self-financed filmmakers, providing a platform to screen their bold and innovative films in Los Angeles and New York City.

In 2009 ZFF added it’s 1st annual West Coast Tour – screening in Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Hollywood and Orange County. North American Tour slated for Spring 2010.

http://www.zerofilmfest.com/

smART BROOKLYN GALLERY HOP

In News on November 11, 2009 at 16:32

PARTICIPATING Gallery Poster

The Invisible Dog & smART Brooklyn Gallery Hop

This year’s smART Brooklyn Gallery Hop will take place on the week end of November 21st and 22nd from 1p.m.–6p.m.and feature visits toBrooklyn’s unique art galleries. Free smART Brooklyn Gallery Hop buses will run from five different hub locations. Each bus will best affed with art docents to inform you about Brooklyn’s art scene and to discuss and distribute smART tip sheets containing important information about buying and collecting art. See what Brooklyn art galleries, some of the best in the world, have to offer to enhance your art collection or start one!

Register by phone: 718-802-3530 or email: smart@visitbrooklyn.org

More information and map www.visitbrooklyn.org
or download the map here PARTICIPATING Gallery Poster

WELCOME IAN TRASK

In News on November 10, 2009 at 23:00

THE INVISIBLE DOG WELCOMES IAN TRASK
ARTIST IN RESIDENCY

In October 2009, Ian Trask has been part of the Recession Art Show, No Money No Problem (October 3rd-10th).
Invited by Lucien Zayan, Ian starts a residence within The Invisible Dog.

During  The Ant exhibition.  Ian Trask, artist in residency at The Invisible Dog, present his transformative cardboard installation The Worm which is a new species of detritivore with a voracious appetite and a talent for consuming uban waste.

staplegun

Ian Trask is a sculptor who explores the inherent aesthetics of material waste. He collects discarded, manufactured goods, sparing them from disposal or recycling programs, in order to invent and impose his own process of decomposition. As a decomposer, he breaks down society’s refuse into smaller composite parts and rearranges them into newer, larger and more interesting forms. By finding creative sustenance in urban detritus, he believes that he imbues undervalued material with an uncommon value, thereby presenting the processes of disposal and decomposition as fascinating rather than revolting.

Variable

www.forkartist.mosaicglobe.com

THE SCAR BERLIN

In News on November 5, 2009 at 21:27

06
This November 9th to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall,  The Invisible Dog is proud to present the USA premier of

THE SCAR BERLIN
A Film by Burkhard von Harder

MONDAY NOVEMBER 9th – 7pm

Screening in parallel at the German Historical Museum in Berlin and the State Theatre in Stuttgart.

The event epitomized the collapse of the Iron Curtain and provided the final impulse for the end of communist rule by the Soviet Union. Almost forgotten by some, it is one of the events that has most shaped our contemporary history and identity.

The Scar Berlin is a film dealing with the former division of the city of Berlin into East Berlin, the capital of the GDR, and West-Berlin, a symbol for Western freedom of thought and movement. The Wall was carved into the landscape in 1961 and fell in a peaceful revolution in 1989. 20 years after the eradication of the German divide, The Scar features the total length of the approximately 160 km-long former Death-Strip isolating West-Berlin within the East German State: this heavily guarded zone that reinforced the “antifascist protection bulwark” was between 70 and 500 meters wide.

Read the rest of this entry »

CHONG GON BYUN

In News on October 28, 2009 at 22:06

A KISS FROM GOD

Chong Gon Byun

www.chonggonbyun.com

PANEL DISCUSSION

In News on October 28, 2009 at 19:14

Local Initiatives in the Brooklyn Community

NOVEMBER 4th – 7pm

This panel will specifically discuss the grassroots art initiatives that have transformed the art scene in Brooklyn. The audience is encouraged to contribute to the discussion by offering individual views of how the art scene has impacted the different neighborhoods.

Participating Panelists include:
Ella Weiss, President of Brooklyn Arts Council
Jose Parla, Artist of NLE’s “Something Out of Nothing” Exhibition
Catherine Hickey, Director of Retail/Commercial Development of Metrotech BID and sponsor of Willoughby Windows Project
Risë Wilson and Petrushka Bazin, Founder and Program Coordinator respectively for The Laundromat Project

No Longer Empty

KIYA KIM

In News on October 27, 2009 at 21:46

magazine-2 copy

Kiya Kim

Through my paintings, I speak out with my soul. While I am painting, I feel as free I possibly can feel. Things that I make in mixed media are often playful.  They also show my curiosity about the world around me. Perfection is nothingness  and then I go on to just try to look within myself and enjoy discovering new ways to express my life as art.

JULIA KENT SPECIAL SOLO PERFORMANCE

In News on October 25, 2009 at 17:49

andreapiccione

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7th
7pm

A special solo performance by cellist Julia Kent in connection with Giuseppe Stampone’s installation at The Invisible Dog

After years of playing cello with a myriad of artists and ensembles, from Antony and the Johnsons to Rasputina, Julia Kent holed up in her Lower East Side apartment to make a solo record inspired by touring and the disjunctions of travel. Incorporating multitracked cello, omnichord, and field recordings from airports around the world, her “lovely, melancholy,” compositions, full of “aching romanticism … rich melodicism, and detailed arrangements,” make up Delay, her solo debut, released by Shayo Records in Europe and Important Records in North America.

Read the rest of this entry »

SUREVOLUTION POP UP SHOP

In News on October 24, 2009 at 16:29

ag 24 024

FRIDAY OCTOBER 30th
SATURDAY OCTOBER 31th
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 1st

SURevolution is opening a popup store @ The Invisible Dog
presenting a selection of hostess and holiday gifts!

SURevolution is inspired by the culturally rich artisanal world.  Our mission is to create sophisticated products for the luxury market that honor artisans’ traditions, craftsmanship and our natural resources.

SURevolution Pop Up Store
October 30th, 8am to 8pm
October 31th, 10am to 8pm
November 1st, noon to 6pm

www.surevolution.com

HALLOWEEN FAMILY WORKSHOP

In News on October 17, 2009 at 13:52

HALLOWEEN FAMILY WORKSHOP

Moe webpumkin02webSusan teachingwebWithches hat web

SUNDAY OCTOBER 25th
1-4pm

Prepare, Imagine, Embellish & Create your own Halloween look!

Led by professional image makers

Read the rest of this entry »

THE INVISIBLE DANCE

In News on October 15, 2009 at 18:30

The “Invisible” Dance

In tribute to Alain Crombecque

SATURDAY OCTOBER 24th – 7pm

photosimoncourchel

Thierry Thieû Niang Paris based dancer and choreographer invites you to follow him into improvised dances and music!

with Peter Richards, Damiyr Shuford & Erwin E.A. Thomas, New York based dancers
and Klaus Janek Berlin based bassist

They will create a special dance improvisation inspired by the Invisible Dog building and history. The performance will be held on the ground floor and will be influenced  by the current No Longer Empty exhibition and the unique character of their surrounding environment .

Free admission – Donations Welcome

DISCOMONKEYS LIVE CONCERT

In News on October 10, 2009 at 16:38

discomonkeys

Thursday October 15th – 8pm to 10pm

@The Invisible Dog

51 bergen street, Brooklyn, NY

Disco Monkeys

The DiscoMonkeys are a progressive rock dance club trance band.  They combine rock guitar, deep electronic drum beats, groove bass, congas, and DJ-style synthesizer sounds.

Drums: Alejandro Greeco, Guitar: Martin Parca, Dr Redford, Keyboard: Big Shaun, Bass: Marco Soto, Congas: Dave Bourla and guests

Free Admission – Donations welcome

Sponsored by 333  Productions

and No Longer Empty

OPENING PARTY PHOTO

In News on October 10, 2009 at 12:56

Enjoy ! If you have photos, please send and share to

theinvisibledog.ny@gmail.com

THANKS

IDDSC_0154Manon Jose Carlo Jamie Read the rest of this entry »

INVISIBLE DOGS / IMPROV EVERYWHERE / NO LONGER EMPTY

In News on October 5, 2009 at 20:34

READ THE FULL STORY

click below on the photo

dog02

ANDRE DA LOBA

In News on October 5, 2009 at 06:39

André Da Loba

André Da Loba

André da Loba

Manifesto. 009

What? My work?
My work about you
and about me.

About anarchists,
fortune-tellers,
fleeing kings
blasphemers
and mutineers.

Also about fire starters,
and threatened witches.
And luminaries
and other artists. Thieves,
(those poets), biologists
and sexologists.

First-grade teachers married with journalists
and the priests that became atheists.

Poets and wall painters, but
not as much as it is about
tall dwarves,
black cats,
color visionaries
and survivors from shipwrecks.

People with odd limps,
dust in road humps,
Light-bulbs changers,
professional vagabonds,
perfect stammers,
and spontaneous mutes.

It is about looking and seeing and seeing and looking (for).
It is about being secretly,
secretly happy.

www.andredaloba.com

GILES LYON

In News on October 5, 2009 at 06:36

Giles Lyon

Giles Lyon

Giles Lyon’s comic book abstractions are simultaneously microscopic and macrocosmic. Mixing automatist spills, domestic detritus, and carefully outlined biomorphs, Lyon creates funhouse explosions that reference pop culture and art history as well as biological cycles and intergalactic nebula. Scientific exploration mixed with Kandinsky, Pollock, Guston, Zap Comix and Japanimation are insightfully reconciled to create new relationships between gesture, image, illusion and abstraction.

ANNE MOURIER ATTAL

In News on October 5, 2009 at 06:25

Anne Mourier Attal

I am originally from northern France but have lived in Brooklyn for the past 17 years. I began my career in Paris as a make-up artist. I chose to raise my 3 children and then went back to school at NYU. After being a make-up artist I have a fascination for colors and how, when arranged a certain way they magically create beauty. I am also interested by the complicated relationship between children and their parents and how love and control are intertwined. How do you find a balance between roots and wings?
Photography is often my favorite way of expression but I am curious and love to explore…

MALCOLM BROWN

In News on October 5, 2009 at 06:23

nightdunes

Malcolm Brown

With a background in Environmental Design & Behavior from Cornell, Malcolm Brown first worked as a consultant at an architecture and design firm in Manhattan.  He explored how the structure and design of space influences how people live, work and play.  Now with a shift to photography, he uses this experience to creatively capture how people fit into both the natural and built environment.

JOANNA NEBORSKY

In News on October 5, 2009 at 05:56

01NovelsinThreeLines_Neborsky

Joanna Neborsky

Joanna Neborsky is an illustrator who draws imaginary events from memory. Her collages, which combine ink, crayon, pencil, construction paper, fabric, and Pop absurdism, reflect a habit of liking things made in Britain in the 1960s. France interests, too. Her first book, an illustrated version of Fénéon’s Novels in Three Lines, will be published by Mark Batty Publisher in 2010.
Her clients include Farrar Straus & Giroux, Riverhead Books, and TimeOut New York. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

GABRIEL JONES

In News on October 4, 2009 at 22:20

Gabriel Jones

Gabriel Jones’ (b. 1973) works has been part of group and solo shows in various institutions and private galleries throughout the USA, Canada, France, Germany, Spain, England and Holland. It has been reviewed by magazines such as HotShoe (London), Frame (Vienna), Le Monde 2 (Paris) and Eyemazing (Amsterdam) as well as the BBC (London). Gabriel mainly works with photography but has a current ongoing project using video and paper cut-outs entitled The Most Accomplished Saturday Of Our Lives.

Gabriel lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Jonathan Lethem visits Tom Sanford’s mural at the Invisible Dog

In News on September 30, 2009 at 21:06

IMG_1712

THANK YOU – IMPROV EVERYWHERE AND NO LONGER EMPTY

In News on September 28, 2009 at 20:32

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron

Yesterday, 2000 people participated in Improv Everywhere’s mission  in Brooklyn !

Improve Everywhere

No Longer Empty

NO MONEY NO PROBLEMS A RECESSION ART SHOW

In Events, News, Uncategorized on September 27, 2009 at 12:34

ian_trask_temptationRecession Art is a new arts organization devoted to helping emerging artists show and sell their work while giving middle-income art lovers and collectors an opportunity to buy original work at reasonable prices. We believe that in spite of hard economic times, artists and art lovers don’t have to put their passions on hold! We aim to break the traditional gallery model and make exposing, purchasing, and enjoying art more accessible for people who have been hit by the recession. We believe that we can start our own art stimulus plan today!

Recession Art – No Money No Problems
October 3rd – 10th, 2009
Weekdays Noon to 10pm
Weekends Noon to Midnight

http://recessionartshows.com/

MARTINE FOUGERON PHOTOGRAPHY

In Events, News, Uncategorized on September 27, 2009 at 02:19

copyright – 2009, Martine Fougeron

Martine Fougeron explored the building at 51 bergen street and through her pictures shows us what she felt and what she “smelled”.

www.martinefougeron.com

NO LONGER EMPTY EXHIBITION

In Events, News on September 27, 2009 at 00:55

gview

LAST DAYS / CLOSING DAY NOVEMBER 22th

The latest group exhibition produced by No Longer Empty, “The Invisible Dog” is a show “out of nothing” in a warmly decrepit out-of-use belt factory on Bergen Street in Brooklyn.

Following the tails of the Improv Everywhere stunt last week, the show presents a multitude of site-specific works reflecting both the history of the space and the profound beauty of the Invisible Dog.   A rift on the 70’s gag, it’s a void object waiting for creative minds and hands to bring it to life.

No Longer Empty
October  3rd –November 22th, 2009
Thursday & Friday 2-8pm
Saturday & Sunday noon-8pm
Read the rest of this entry »

THE INVISIBLE DOG CHANDELIER by STEVEN AND WILLIAM

In Events, News on September 27, 2009 at 00:35

logoSteven and William Ladd, two artists residing in Brooklyn, NY, were invited by The Invisible Dog to create a chandelier for the art space. Upon visiting the art space, the artists were immediately drawn to the basement, where they found buckets piled high with old belt buckles and industrial parts.  Sifting through the treasure-filled buckets was right up their alley.  For years, they have been getting their hands dirty while cleaning, purifying and transforming objects into beautiful structures.  The massive chandelier they designed and created combined elements of the found buckles with intricate hand-loomed, glass-beaded textiles.

www.stevenandwilliam.com

Video about Steven and William Ladd

PERMANENT COLLECTION

THE INVISIBLE DOG GRAND OPENING

In Events, News on September 27, 2009 at 00:20
openingparty

photo:simon courchel

THE INVISIBLE DOG

is pleased to invite you

SATURDAY OCTOBER 3rd

from 6 to 9 pm

THE INVISIBLE DOG CHANDELIER

NO LONGER EMPTY – EXHIBITION

SHOP ART GALLERY – VISUAL VERNICALAR

MARTINE FOUGERON PHOTOGRAPHY

INVISIBLE DOG’S ARTISTS OPEN STUDIOS

NO MONEY NO PROBLEMS – RECESSION ART

INTRODUCING THE INVISIBLE DOG

In Events, News on September 26, 2009 at 23:49
photo:simon courchel

photo:simon courchel

One of the most complex and crucial questions of twenty-first century culture is how to preserve history while simultaneously making way for the new. Nowhere is this dilemma more peaked than in New York, where constant motion and blink-and-you’ll-miss-it change have long dominated the ethos. But today New Yorkers are increasingly aware of the value of preservation, of both the natural world, our city’s legacy, and our communities. Recent civic projects like the High Line signal a subtle but undeniable shift in New York culture: now, repurposing already-existing architecture seems more of the moment than does anything brand new. Call it gentrification backlash, call it environmentalism, call it recession chic, but its effects are palpable, and sometimes, startlingly touching.

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