Showing posts with label The Dark Fair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dark Fair. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Dark Fair at Swiss Institute, NYC

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I was surprised to see a large queue of people out in front of the Swiss Institute, but happy, in a way, to see if the Armory Show VIP card I was holding would get me in before all the rest. I had been told, earlier that day that "it would grant me special powers". A man was holding a clip-board that said "Armory VIP" with an arrow, so it looked promising but, upon reaching the front of the line I was denied entrance like everyone else. Seems the SI was too full, the fair was in danger of being shut down, and I would have to return in an hour.

When I returned the queue was still forming and growing, but this time I was able to slip right in the doors and into a tiny elevator with ten other people. We were let out onto the 3rd floor. It was dark, hot, and of course; crowded.

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Marlo Pascual at White Columns' booth

The 411 on the Dark Fair, is that it is presented by the Milwaukee International, a little art fair in Milwaukee that was written up by Matthew Higgs in Art Forum's "Best of 2006" (From that text:)

[The Milwaukee International was]"Conceived and organized by an informal collective of Milwaukee-based artists and galleries (among them Kiki Anderson of Jody Monroe Gallery; Nicholas Frank of Hermetic Gallery; John Riepenhoff of Green Gallery; and Tyson Reeder, Scott Reeder, and Elysia Borowy-Reeder of the General Store), it opened more modestly than Frieze, in the Polish Falcons Beer Hall in the city's Riverwest neighborhood. The fair temporarily displaced the hall's typical goings-on--cribbage, dart-ball (a game that "combines darts with baseball," according to my local guide), spaghetti dinners--but, even though the space had been tricked out for the weekend to look like a typical art fair, the spirit of these activities remained as a spectral ambience."

The Dark Fair itself was billed (from the SI PR) as a "subversive and experimental miniature art fair [that] will take place without the use of natural or electric light"

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Pin-ball machines (2) made possible by Ara Peterson.

So the Dark Fair=the anti-fair, the opposite of white walls, the opposite of being able to see, instead of being in a crowd of people in a large space struggling to look at art with the lights on, I was fumbling around with a crowd of people in the dark looking for a beer. I really didn't understand anything that was going on, but I was surprised to see that there were some efforts put into making the Dark Fair an actual art fair. There were about 32 galleries/participants set up in little booths, reminiscent of booths in an italian restaurant (I am probably thinking this because of all the candles). Most of the "vendors" looked just as bored as the "vendors" at The Armory.

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A painting of VHS tapes at a gallery? called B'Ling

All in all a great little idea, this fair, reminds me of all the antics Marchel Duchamp used to get on with (you know, arranging for coal dust to fall on people's heads or making it impossible to see the work because of a maze of string. . .). My only critique is to wonder where the artist is in all of this, because the props go out to the organizers; everyone else is left in the dark.

Still, I wish I would have bought a T-shirt.

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I had no idea why this crowd of people had formed, but I have put together some clues with the help of the internet and now believe this to be a "Wordless Choir" put on by the Grey Ghost Press.

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I have no idea.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

UPDATES:

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I'm bringing bike painter Taliah Lempert to Copy Gallery this April. The show is opening next week: Opens Friday, April 4th 6-11.

I'm writing an essay that takes painting the bike back to around Renaissance era and compares it with the old-school inclination to paint horses, there may even be a word or two in there about custom paintings in general. I promise to publish it here when it's done and also to have copies available at the gallery for the opening.

This painting show will also coincide with R.E.Load's 8th Annual April Fools Fun Ride (more info here.) which Copy salutes and supports. Bikes rule.

Below are some pictures I took when I visited Taliah's studio last year:

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Also I'm headed to The Armory Show this Friday, and I mean to check out The Dark Fair at The Swiss Institute, and I want to stop by Honey Space. I'll probably also go to many more things, but these things sound the raddest. If you have a hot tip let me in on it.

Also! Next week I'm going to the press preview for Murakami at the Brooklyn Museum. Yes! Art candy!