Upcoming

Crowd Scene • 9/10/2010 – 10/10/2010

Camel Art Space Presents:

• Crowd Scene •

September 10-October 10, 2010
Weekends only: 12 – 6 pm or by appointment
Opening reception: September 10, 2010, 6pm – 9pm
Location: 722 Metropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn NY 11237
Directions: L – train to Graham Avenue [map]

In 2008 Katy Siegel gave a lecture at School of Visual Arts titled, “A million artists, and all pretty good…” in which she examined the growing number of art students training in BA and MFA programs around the world setting out to compete for a limited audience’s limited attention span. The following year Dave Hickey commented in his SVA lecture, ‘Lately, I’ve begun to feel like
there are way too many artists…’ He went on to say that he is beginning to think of art in groups and categories rather than individual works by individual artists.

Even in the midst of an economic cull of galleries it is impossible to stay abreast of all the art on display at any given moment. Sustained looking and long-term involvement with an artist’s work are almost out of the question. How does an artist make work that gets noticed in this crowd? And how does one deal with the level of rejection that comes from viewers simply not having enough time to stop and look at everything? How does one process the barrage of images while continuing to make even more images? What new paradigm might this huge number of artists be forcing into existence that will question everything about the making of artwork and ownership of ideas?

• Crowd Scene • pulls together four artists making work that takes these questions into
consideration. Each artist working with completely different material and stylistic sensibilities shares a common introspective consideration of their place as artists within the expanding culture of art production and distribution.

Gina Dawson’s needlepoint rejection letters and fragile, cut-paper sculptures reminiscent of funeral wreaths provide consolation on the potential death of her career while simultaneously breathing new life and a bit of hilarity into it.

Eric Doeringer was recently compared to a ‘tribute band, someone faithfully providing a genuine aesthetic experience’ of another artist’s work. Eric has spent the past decade questioning an artist’s ownership of an idea by re-creating various well-known works. His identity in the art world is that of a talented artist making work that just so happens to have previously been made by someone else.

Todd Kelly is making abstract paintings that use the letters of his name or initials as an
organizing compositional structure. Viewers familiar with his practice find themselves
searching the painting for his name similar to the way modern painting might be scrutinized for recognizable imagery. Abstracting the once common practice of including an artist’s name on the work allows for artistic experimentation while providing the expected familiarity an artist must accomplish to be noticed in the current market.

Matthew Langland is painting scenarios in which multiple figures, all self-portraits, are examining, excited by, perpetuating, frightened of or overwhelmed by what they are doing. These paintings present a cyclical, unending vision that is at once hilarious and horrible in which imagery, products and logos threaten the image of the very person who continues to carefully paint them.

Camel Art Space is an Artist operated exhibition Space with a focus on current issues in art within a not for profit work frame, is an affiliate member of Williamsburg Gallery Association and is participating in 2:nd Friday Art Walk.

CAS is a part of Alternative Histories at Exit Art

Alternative Histories

Alternative Histories
September 24 – November 24, 2010
Opening Friday, September 24, 7-9pm

Alternative Histories is a history of New York City alternative art spaces and projects since the 1960s. Through audio interviews with founders and key staff, a reading room of magazines and publications, documentation, ephemera and narrative descriptions, the exhibition will tell the story of pioneering spaces – like P.S.1, Artists Space, Fashion Moda, Taller Boricua, ABC No Rio, The Kitchen, Franklin Furnace, Exit Art, 112 Greene Street, White Columns, Creative Time, Electronic Arts Intermix, Anthology Film Archives, Storefront for Art and Architecture, Just Above Midtown, and many more – as well as document a new generation of alternative projects such as Live With Animals, Fake Estate, Apartment Show, Pocket Utopia, Cleopatra’s, English Kills Art Gallery, Triple Candie, Esopus Space, and others.

Over 130 spaces are represented in the show, which elaborates on the significant contributions these organizations made to the cultural fabric of New York City. They gave visibility and inclusion to otherwise excluded artists and ideas. The idealism of the founders, the hard work and dedication of everyone involved in sustaining these histories, against all odds, illustrates the dynamic purposes that propel the artistic scene in New York. “Imagination is an alternative to reality, creating options that never end,” says Papo Colo.

The exhibition incorporates a broad definition of the term “alternative space,” and includes significant publications and artist collectives to cover a broad arc of this history – bridging neighborhoods, decades and themes. In the development and organization of this exhibition, the curatorial team viewed dozens of archives and personal collections – selecting critical materials from the histories of the spaces and projects – and interviewed founders and early staff members, when possible, to construct a narrative about the alternative space movement in New York and its continuing impact on the city’s cultural and artistic landscape.

More information at Exit Art.

Sanity Disobedience for a New Frontier • 10/23/2010 – 11/28/2010

Subliminal Space • 12/10/2010 – 1/16/2011

Netiquette • 2/5/2011 – 3/13/2011