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http://aaronjohnsonart.com/home.html
#class Organized by Jennifer Dalton and William Powhida
Type:
Music/Arts - Opening
Date:
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Time:
4:00pm - 7:00pm
Location:
Winkleman Gallery
Description
Jennifer Dalton and William Powhida will transform Winkleman Gallery
into a ‘classroom’ in which they will work with the public audience,
guest artists, critics, academics, dealers, and collectors to discuss
the role of class in the art world and to identify and propose
alternatives/reforms/solutions to the current market system. The notion
of the gallery as a work space will be explored aesthetically,
socially, critically, and academically.
#class Hours:
Wed. - Sun. 2-8 PM
Schedule of events:
Key: P = Performance; T = Table discussion; E = Event/Presentation
Sunday, February 21, 4-7 PM
* Opening Reception, 4-7 PM
* Work Space
* P: An Xiao will present "Photoglam," during which she and her
glamorous entourage will be photographing attendees during the opening
reception and posting them on the Facebook event page. The photos with
the top number of 'likes' will be publicly posted.
* P: Street Reporter : Alan Lupiani is a self-styled street reporter
utilizing his own blend of humor and wit to get the inside scoop
regarding art news and events around New York City. Please feel free to
chat with him at the opening of "#class" between 6 - 7pm."
Wednesday, February 24
* Work Space (2-3 pm)
* T: The System Works (6-7 pm) (Suggested by several people who would
like to remain anonymous) What's wrong with the market? Well, for many
artists fully invested in it, nothing! We recognize that the market has
worked and continues to work for a lot of artists (including
ourselves!) and #class would be a one-sided debate without inviting in
artists, dealers, collectors, and others who find more right than wrong
with the market-based arts-investment system. We say chance and you say
luck.
Thursday, February 25
* Work Space
* T: Success (4-5 pm) Another open invitation to discuss how the easy
and plentiful money of the art boom fueled perceptions that this one
was different and that it would last forever. How does the influx of
money change artists, dealers, collectors, and is it a trap that
promotes a defensive, cautious position? Does success promote creative
stagnation or is money what we all really miss, deep down inside in the
dark place?
* E: James Leonard - Warbonds Performance (6-7pm) How does a single
human being raise an army? James Leonard asks just that with his
Warbonds Performance. After conceptualizing an ambitious installation,
rather than waiting for someone else to do the fundraising after his
career has taken off, James has decided to take matters into his own
hands. He's printed his own series of Warbond Certificates complete
with multiple security features such as microprinting and a holographic
foil tape. The profits from the sale of these prints will fund the
manufacture of 100,000 custom toy soldiers. Through the theatric
language of a quasi-para-military briefing, James will weave a web of
connections between The Warbonds Project and the larger economy in
which we all participate. Certificates will be available for sale,
signing and sealing following the performance along with open
interaction with James regarding the project and any related discussion.
Friday, February 26
* P: Rocio Salceda - Receta (2-3 pm) Rocio Rodriguez Salceda presents
"Receta," a
one-hour performance from a symbolic "kitchen" where women from four
different generations in Spain will discuss, plot and reveal secrets
about how they were getting by during their time. Their voices will be
represented by Rocio Rodriguez Salceda alone. Images, music, text and
other ingredients from this "kitchen" will accompany the artist on this
historic trip.
* T: Access (4-5 pm) One of the defining issues at the heart of #class.
Is open access for all artists even a possibility in the broadest sense
of the art experience? Is it the wisdom of the crowd, a lottery
drawing, or the discerning 'eye' of the curator, dealer, or tastemaker
that should shape we see? Galleries are open to the public, but they
are not the most inviting spaces, while public museums can cost more
than a trip to the I-MAX for Avatar 3-D. Reading an issue of Artforum
often feels like it requires a pocket theory translator (where is the
app for that?). The complexion of the art world is a lighter shade of
pale, and despite the Whitney Biennial's gender parity all is not well
in the market. So, we raise the question of elitism and hegemony for
#class.
* E: Bad Curating (6 -7 pm) Stamatina Gregory and Jovana Stokic will
present “Bad Curating” a presentation and open platform for discussion.
More humorous than
hypercritical, it takes on the roots, criteria, and typologies of this
practice in its various incarnations.
Saturday, February 27
* E: Powhida's Chelsea Tour (2-3 pm) William Powhida will lead an
informal art walk through several Chelsea galleries encouraging people
to exercise their judgment and discuss the value of the work on display
turning each stop into a think space. (Hopefully we won't be thrown out
for discussing the art!)
* E: Mira Schor (4-5 pm) Painter and writer Mira Schor will read her
1990 essay “On Failure and Anonymity” and lead a discussion on how
these conditions might play a positive role in making art.
* T: Collecting with Your Eye, Not Your Ears (6-7 pm) What motivates
collectors to acquire work? Is it what you hear about an artist or is
it the work itself? It can't just be to fill the New Museum or flip at
auction! Barry Hoggard and James Wagner have been invited to lead a
discussion around how and why people build private collections, with an
emphasis on the committed enthusiast with limited funds. The evening is
intended to address collecting, not as a hobby, furniture or
investment, but as a way of repurposing a worthy human impulse in
danger of being reduced to a convention, an adornment, even a racket.
The discussion will be facilitated by Julia Weist.
Sunday, February 28
* E: Hang Out/Competition space (2-4 pm) On Sundays #class will be the
only show open in Chelsea, and we encourage you to come out and help
turn the show into an informal, social space. Jen and William will be
making work for the market space and discussing the progression of
ideas within the think space. During the day from approximately 2pm-4pm
will be "Competition Time," a game-playing hangout where visitors can
overtly show their competitive side and play video games, card games
and board games. Come hang out, talk, have a beer, do some work on the
walls, read a text, play, or maybe even make an offer on a drawing.
It's the only thing going on in Chelsea.
* E: Battleship (2-4 pm) Amanda Browder (of badatsports.com) presents
FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT! You sunk my Battleship! Up with the Anchor yo ole
Matey! This trip is all about BATTLESHIP! For this discussion we are
going to embrace our inner art competitor! Plan for a day of actual
Battleship gaming where two sides go head to head in an art
conversation battle. Refereed by podcast/artist correspondent Amanda
Browder, people should be ready to man your ships.
Battle One: Formalists vs. Conceptualists.
Battle Two: Painters vs. The World.
Battle Three: Artist vs. Dealer
All are welcome and encouraged to choose your weapon. At the end we will
tally up the points and see who really reigns supreme. It's a WAR ON THE
SHORE!
* E: Debbie Ainscoe - Second Life (5-6 pm) Debbie Ainscoe will host an
event in Second Life from the UK which will be viewed at #class.
Optimists, Pessimists and Skeptics seem to revolve around technology.
It is relevant to some, but not to others. The appeal of spaces like
the virtual world of Second Life lies in its visual and social appeal.
Boundaries physical, spatial, and creative can be crossed. Second Life
is a giant sandbox where you can create in 3d and experiment without
material costs.
Wednesday, March 3
* E: El Celso - Art Shred (2-3 pm) ART SHRED is an on-site shredding
service that will help artists and other participants liberate
themselves of important works of art, meaningful love letters and
one-of-a-kind photographs – and other significant material created,
printed, or written on paper. After being sliced and diced, all works
will be scattered on the gallery floor. If you have something of
consequence that you would like to have shredded, e-mail
celso@elcelso.com. Walk-ins welcome. link: http://elcelso.com/
* P: Lisa Levy - Investigating Personal Obstacles to Creativity (4-5
pm) Dr. Lisa Levy, S.P. (Self-Proclaimed) will present "Investigating
Personal Obstacles to Creativity and Creative Productivity," a workshop
using the tools of psychoanalysis to begin to identify how personal
history and emotions subvert and misdirect our actions to make creative
work so we can realize our full potential as artists.
* Work Space (6-7 pm)
Thursday, March 4
*
E: Lizabeth Rossof - Do I Have to Live in NYC? (2-3 pm) San
Francisco-based artist Lizabeth Rossof will ask, "Do I have to Live in
New York City?" to a cast of New York-based experts, in and out of the
art world.
* T: The Ivory Tower (4-5 pm) Organized by Sharon L Butler Art schools
have drawn heavy fire recently for churning out young artists driven
towards quick commercial success at the expense of their long term
artistic development. Yet most artist-academics do not consciously try
to instill in their students an impatient mercenary sensibility. Where,
then, does it come from? Artists who are lucky (right?) enough to find
full-time teaching jobs have to find a way to fit into conventional
university systems that don't understand anything about art. Promotion
and Tenure Committees, comprising professors from all departments, may
understand the importance of gallery exhibitions, but are completely
baffled by relational aesthetics, new media distribution, and other
contemporary art practices. How do unorthodox artists maintain their
identity and artistic integrity while working within the traditional
academic system? Dialectics and lectures as art form. Hey--aren't art
academics the experts in this area? How come we didn't come up with it
first? Are we guilty of simply maintaining the status quo by accepting
that teaching and art practice are two separate and distinct
activities? Are we failing to think creatively?
* Work Space (6-7 pm)
Friday, March 5
* E: Carolina Miranda - Art Yoga (2-3 pm) Bow to the Art Industry: Get
body and mind ready to navigate the spiritual and physical hazards of
working in the art world with this 75 minute yoga class geared at those
who want to re-contextualize the nature of luminal space while doing
core-strengthening exercises that will keep you lithe enough to be
considered for any possible art/fashion spreads in T Magazine. The
class will be led by Carolina A. Miranda, a certified yoga teacher (Om
Yoga Center, 2003) and art blogger. Bring your own mat and an open
mind. Class capacity 18; first come first serve.
* E: WAGE Artists (4-5 pm) WAGE Artists will present "Wake Up Call,
Artists Need to be Paid Too!"
* E: Nic Rad The Celebritist Manifesto (6-7 pm) Nic Rad will present
"The Celebritist Manifesto," a stirring defense of celebrity culture as
the boldest creative expression of a democratic society, in which it
will become abundantly clear that James Franco is the most significant
artist of the decade, if not all time.
Saturday, March 6
* E: Leigh Waldron-Taylor - Kaprow Reading (2-3 pm) Leigh
Waldron-Taylor will present "Meme no more? Has the artist become a
21stC trope?" A rereading of Allan Kaprow's "The Artist as a Man of the
World" 45 years later.
* T: Background and Identity (4-5 pm) As William Powhida wrote, "The
complexion of the art world is a lighter shade of pale, and despite the
Whitney Biennial's gender parity all is not well in the market." Artist
An Xiao would like to invite an open table discussion about how
artists' identities and backgrounds influence the perception, reception
and display of their work. How do factors like perceived race, gender,
age, socioeconomic status and sexual orientation affect our experience
of the art world? To what extent *should* an artist's background be
considered? We welcome those of all backgrounds with open arms to talk
about your art, which could be worth making the implicit explicit. This
panel will be moderated by writer Joanne McNeil.
* E: Rod Verplanck, Motivational Speaker (6-7 pm) Author and
motivational speaker Rod Verplanck CSP, CPAE will be giving an
entertaining and inspirational talk on how to make it to the top of the
Contemporary Art World. Let Rod help you unlock what is stopping you
from wild creativity. Avoid the fear of overfulfillment, unshackle your
ambition and face the maelstrom of horrible possibilities. Learn that
the very smallness of your ideas is key to your wild success. (The
opposite of what you thought!)
Sunday, March 7
* E: Hang Out/Competition space (2-4 pm) On Sundays #class will be the
only show open in Chelsea, and we encourage you to come out and help
turn the show into an informal, social space. Jen and William will be
making work for the market space and discussing the progression of
ideas within the think space. During the day from approximately 2pm-4pm
will be "Competition Time," a game-playing hangout where visitors can
overtly show their competitive side and play video games, card games
and board games. Come hang out, talk, have a beer, do some work on the
walls, read a text, play, or maybe even make an offer on a drawing.
It's the only thing going on in Chelsea.
* P: Art Blahg - Art Wake (5-6 pm) The Art Blahg will present "Art
Wake," a funeral ritual for contemporary art.
Wednesday, March 10
* P: Man Bartlett - 24h #class Action (Wed, March 10, 5pm – Thu, March
11, 5pm) Man Bartlett will be presenting "24h #class action," a
marathon group intervention involving systematically blowing up
hundreds of skinny balloons and popping them, without creating or
harming any cute little puppies.
* E: Jennifer Dalton - Access Begins with Education (11 am - 12 pm)
Jennifer Dalton will present "Access Starts with Education and
Education Starts with Access," in which she'll lead her son's
Bedford-Stuyvesant public school kindergarten class on a short Chelsea
art walk, ending up at Winkleman Gallery to eat lunch and make an art
project about what they've seen.
* E: Suzanne Stroebe and Caitlin Rueter - Feminist Tea Party (2-4 pm)
Caitlin Rueter and Suzanne Stroebe will host a Feminist Tea Party, an
event that lies somewhere in between a contemporary consciousness
raising group, a panel discussion, a performance, and a joke. They will
create an installation of sorts, with a table set for tea, complete
with tablecloth, porcelain cups, finger sandwiches and cookies. While
attempting to maintain a visual and stylistic protocol consistent with
an afternoon tea party, they will engage visitors in a dialogue around
contemporary women's issues that contrasts sharply with the formal,
prissy setting.
*
Q & A with Magda Sawon, Art Dealer (6:15 pm - 7:15 pm) Magda Sawon
of Postmasters Gallery will host "Ask the Art Dealer," vowing to
truthfully answer any and every question posed to her as long as it
does not involve her weight, social security number or other people's
money. We're starting to collect questions now, if you post one in the
comments here it will get asked!
Thursday, March 11
* P: Man Bartlett - 24h #class Action continues (Wed, March 10, 5pm –
Thu, March 11, 5pm) Man Bartlett will be presenting "24h #class
action," a marathon group intervention involving systematically blowing
up hundreds of skinny balloons and popping them, without creating or
harming any cute little puppies.
* Work Space (2-3 pm)
* P: Rebecca Goyette Market U (6-7 pm) Rebecca Goyette will present
"Market U," an art critique as experiential theatre. The Ringmaster of
Market University will review the live examples of artwork of selected
recent graduates of of various NYC MFA Programs including Market U. A
panel of judges, internationally recognized art critics, gallery owners
and artists who work for Market U will be the jury... or will you?
Friday, March 12
* E: Yevgeniy Fiks - Communist Artists (2-3 pm) Yevgeniy Fiks will
present a slide-lecture titled "Communist Modern Artists and the Art
Market," showing how many of the the most highly valued art of the 20th
century was produced by artists who considered themselves communists
(Picasso, Leger, Kahlo, Rivera and more).
* E: Bernard Klevickas - Labor Class (4-5 pm) Bernard Klevickas will
present "Labor Class-." Learn what it is like to construct a
masterpiece." From 2000-2005 Klevickas worked at an art foundry
fabricating art for Jeff Koons, Louise Bourgeois, Frank Stella and
others. This will be a great opportunity to hear what the experience is
like from the labor and production side of things.
*
T: The Critics (6-7 pm) What will happen when some of New York's most
prominent critics come to the table at #class? We have a few brave
volunteers to bring the critic's perspective to the discussion, but we
are looking for other voices out there in the trenches.
Saturday, March 13
* P: Bryan Zanisnik - Judicial Review (2-3 pm) Bryan Zanisnik will
present "Judicial Review," a performance and panel discussion that
brings together practicing lawyers and professional artists. By drawing
parallels between a legal profession and an arts profession, Zanisnik's
piece will address issues of professionalism, academicism, and ethical
anomalies that exist within the art world.
* T: Nocation, Nocation, Nocation (4-5 pm) How does not having a
traditional brick and mortar space affect the roles of independent
curators, pop-up galleries, roving spaces, independent dealers? Is it a
matter or resistance, a new business model, a niche role in the market,
or a reaction to the recession as fixed costs displace dealers and
empty real estate creates new opportunities? What's happening out in
Bushwick? We want to hear from you.
* T: The System Doesn't Work (6-7 pm) What's wrong with the market?!
Well, for many artists with nothing invested in it, everything! We
recognize that even just getting access to the market seems to be based
on pedigree, insider connections, randomness, and a byzantine social
hierarchy right out 18th Century France. Then there's what happens when
you work within the system; ruthless competition, sellouts to zero
sales, dealers vanishing in the night, bounced checks, no art reviews,
and a sense of ever impending doom. If this sounds like your
perspective and luck is as likely as hitting a Win For Life scratch
off, then we'd love to have you at the table.
Sunday, March 14
* E: Hang Out/Competition space (2-4 pm) On Sundays #class will be the
only show open in Chelsea, and we encourage you to come out and help
turn the show into an informal, social space. Jen and William will be
making work for the market space and discussing the progression of
ideas within the think space. During the day from approximately 2pm-4pm
will be "Competition Time," a game-playing hangout where visitors can
overtly show their competitive side and play video games, card games
and board games. Come hang out, talk, have a beer, do some work on the
walls, read a text, play, or maybe even make an offer on a drawing.
It's the only thing going on in Chelsea.
* E: Jennifer & Kevin McCoy's Collector Focus Group (5-6 pm)
Jennifer & Kevin McCoy will lead "Let's Figure Out What They Want,"
a collector focus group. They aim to ask direct questions not only
about what art piques collectors' interests, but also what their
expectations are vis a vis the presence of the artist's life behind the
work.
Wednesday, March 17
* E: Phil Buehler - Advertising Methods (2-3 pm)
* T: Art World as High School (4-5 pm) You can't possibly have a
discussion about the art market without thinking about New York as a
series of carefully placed lunchroom tables where even the subtlest
glance, bit of gossip, or movement can set off a fight. Are you a cool
kid? A rich kid? A fat kid? A jock? A nerd? An Outcast? Think about it,
and if you want to address how reputation, coolness, likability,
personality, wealth, and other social aspects shape the art world,
please volunteer to have a deeply uncomfortable discussion.
* E: "My Sweatshop, My Sweet," (6-7 pm) Mary Walling Blackburn examines
the art world's unregulated romance with the factory. Kisses to the
workers and warm hugs to the product!
Thursday, March 18
* Work Space (2-3 pm)
* E: Zachary Cohen - Social Media (4-5 pm) Zachary Adam Cohen will be
presenting on social media as a flattening agent in the art world and
its implications for broadening the discussion and community of the
arts. He will also touch on issues of the unsustainability of the art
world, the concept of Free and gift societies and how they relate to
the current art market. He may propose the installation and adoption of
artificial price support mechanisms and touch on the issue of
collusion. His goal is to promote a bottom up, people powered movement
in the art world with the power to continually restore and repair
damaged nodes, as well as offering up a much needed dose of
transparency into the current system.
*
E: MTAA - Autotrace Artists (6:30 - 7:30 pm) MTAA will demonstrate
"Autotrace," a completely automatic, software-generated appropriation
and shape creation system.
Friday, March 19
* T: Bolshevik! (2-3 pm) An open invitation to Marxists (and
sympathizers!) to have a special dialog about the aging alternative to
Capitalism.
* E: Franklin Einspruch - Conceptualism for Sale (4-5 pm) Franklin
Einspruch will give a lecture entitled "Conceptualism for Sale: How the
Art World Uses Low Standards for Fun and Profit."
* E: Kimberly Wright - Collectors' Tastes Presentation (6-7 pm)
Saturday, March 20
* E: Zoe Sheehan Saldana - Art Wrap (all day) Free Gift Wrapping!
Anyone who buys an artwork during the run of the show can have it
gift-wrapped by Zoë Sheehan Saldaña in handmade brown paper
and twine.
* E: Dr. Gloria and Dr. Kristin's Writing School (2-3 pm) Princeton
University writing professors Dr. Gloria and Dr. Kristin will lead
partipants in a thinking and writing exercise to assess the value of
their assessments of value. Every participant will leave with a renewed
understanding and a letter grade.
* Work Space (4-6pm)
* E: RANT NIGHT (6-????) On the final night of the show we will host
"Rant Night," where everyone is encouraged to come and let it rip on
whatever's still bothering you.
Month-long events during #class
* Sarah Smizz will give away free posters featuring her "Maps of the
Art System."
* Hyperallergic has prepared $ECRET$ OF THE NEW YORK ART WORLD, which
invites visitors to reveal who in the city's art industry owes them
money. Will the pyramid scheme that is the art world collapse when the
secrets come out? Hyperallergic hopes so.
* Rebecca Armstrong will present "Working Artist," a contract-based
performance art piece that sets up an agreement between an artist and
collector by which the artist is paid for labor rather than product,
thus ostensibly freeing the art-making process from the market. The
contract is currently unsigned.
* Broadsheet, the zine by two lady artists with their knickers in a
twist, will make its long-awaited return with a Broad vs. Broad
smackdown on the pros and cons of working for free.
* [name withheld by artist's request in the spirit of open content] has
organized "Shut Up Already, I'll Look at your Art!" open source call to
artists on the "Outside" to have their work viewed by an "Insider". For
this project, gallerist Ed Winkleman will spend a portion of his time
in the gallery during #class reviewing digital images of art sent via
the internet to #class by artists globally. Artists will be asked to
submit a digital image of one piece of art to be reviewed by Mr.
Winkleman for at least 10 seconds, TWICE the average time museum goers
spend viewing a piece of art. (the website for this is almost ready...)
* (Day)Job--the very name is a qualifier--implying that it isn’t one’s
“job” per se--though, in the case of many (most?) cultural producers,
it may be the only income generating job*. * /(Day)Job/ is a photo-
archive of cultural producers and their “dayjobs,” self-posted using
the social networking reach of Facebook. Artists Tara Fracalossi and
Thomas Lail ask: How do we define ourselves? How do we want to be
defined? What’s /your/ (Day)Job? Join the Facebook Group /(Day)Job/
(www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=313416103889&ref=ts) and post your
photographic answer.