|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In conjunction with the "Festival of Ideas for the New City,"
Sloan Fine Art is pleased to present "Kin," a group exhibition
with works by Mia Brownell, Nicole Etienne, Clare Grill, Greg Hopkins,
Noah Landfield, Jean-Pierre Roy, Jonathan Viner and Jeremy Wagner in the
main gallery and "Kammeropolis," an installation by Daimon Marchand
in the project room.
Opening Reception: Saturday, May 7th, 6 to 8 pm
"Kin" Exhibition Dates: May 7 through 28, 2011
"Kammeropolis" Installation / Exhibition Dates: May 7th &
8th, 2011
The “Festival of Ideas for the New City” is a major collaborative
initiative involving scores of Downtown organizations working together
to harness the power of the creative community to imagine the future city
and explore ideas that will shape it. The Festival will include a three-day
slate of symposia an innovative StreetFest and over eighty independent
projects and public events. As one of the organizers, the New Museum invited
local galleries to present projects tied into one or more of the festival’s
themes. Sloan Fine Art is pleased to participate in “Festival of
Ideas for the New City,” presenting “Kin” an exhibition
inspired by The Heterogenous City, and “Kammeropolis” an installation
inspired by The Reconfigured City.
“Kin” is a group exhibition representing a selection of New
York based painters working with a range of mediums and ideas. What binds
them together is the shared experience of coming of age at an extraordinary
time in the art world – a truly heterogeneous time.
At my first art gallery job I remember viewing slide submissions,
Fed Exing polaroids and handwriting rejection letters. Times have certainly
changed and I’ve watched with fascination over the years as the
fine art world has adapted, at times reluctantly, to the advent of technology.
More than anything else, I’ve enjoyed witnessing young and disenfranchised
artists find each other, their audience, their people, and I’ve
marveled at the way these artists, collectors and fans have gained strength
in numbers through accessibility and communication. As a result, the art
world as a whole has been forced to grow, expand and embrace (or at least
tolerate) art from a broader range of genres and intentions. The days
of a single-minded, art-world-insider approved aesthetic are long gone.
Pluralism has arrived and there is no stopping it. The art world has become
a melting pot, a heterogeneous society, perhaps for the first time ever,
and whether it likes it or not. – Alix Sloan, owner/director, Sloan
Fine Art
“Kin” highlights eight extraordinary painters who represent
the heterogeneous nature of painting today. All are New York based and
most came from elsewhere in the US to build a career and life for themselves
in the art capital of our country. They represent the variety and inclusivity
of our current climate. They may not see eye to eye - or necessarily want
to sit at the same holiday dinner table - but they are cousins, colleagues
and companions in their passion for their work, love of painting and the
opportunity timing has afforded them to be part of the contemporary dialog.
Sculptor/installation artist Daimon Marchand (whose body of work explores
the relationship between nature and technology and our impact on the environment)
presents “Kammeropolis,” a work inspired by The Reconfigured
City. Multiple low-tech projection boxes integrated with natural elements,
cast moving images on the walls of the 10’ x 13’ project room,
thus placing the viewer inside an environment created by, and composed
of, both organic and technological elements. The goal of this immersion
is to cause the participant/viewer to reflect on his or her relationship
with, and between, nature and technology. Where does one end and the other
begin? How do we meet the challenge of sustaining a relationship, within
the context and progression of nature and technology, that is both symbiotic
and developmental? How do we define and reconfigure this relationship
as time, innovation and evolution march on?
"Kammeropolis" will be on display May 7 & 8, 2011 only.
"Kin" will run May 7 through 28, 2011.
Image:
Mia Brownell, “Still Life with Grape and Pear,” 2011, oil
on canvas, 36” x 36”
|
|