Thursday, March 25, 2010

New York,


Ok, I apologize for the extremely late updates but it’s been a crazy past few weeks.  I’m sure you feel my pain of business, I mean when are we all not busy?

The Friday before my Spring Break, March 6th, I was given the opportunity to go to New York and work at Verve Art Fair, a part of The Armory Show.  My friend Rachel King was an intern at Khaki Gallery for a few weeks and the owner of the gallery wanted us to come and help out with her space at the show, hold down the fort and grab classy clients.  So on Friday we got into New York at 4 am and found ourselves at the Dylan Hotel sleeping in the extra bedroom/storage room our gallery reserved.  We slept a couple hours, got up and walked outside to realize we were only a block and a half away from Grand Central Station, squished between Park Ave and Madison Ave.  This was for both of us our first time in New York, we were absolutely thrilled.  Everything was active; we were blocks from the Empire State, Times Square, 5th Avenue…the center of it all.  It was so exciting!


We spent our day working Verve, which was in a series of really nice rooms in the Dylan Hotel, and running around the city trying to see as much as possible.  We ended up getting free passes to Volta NY and The Armory (though we didn’t have enough time to see the latter) popped over to take a look.  Volta was so strange.  I’m really not sure how I feel about huge art fairs like that.  The booths cost a fortune, the artists honestly didn’t impress me for the most part, and it was like some strange window-shopping experience. 

Jörg Colberg of Conscientious had some interesting thoughts on fairs like Volta recently, take a look.  Of course events like Volta are great ways to see fresh new work and sell some work, but it felt so artificial.  The way I was looked at by the representatives and artists was like I was a hamburger after they’d starved themselves for a week.  They approached me like I was a buyer, which in a way was refreshing not to be dismissed for being just a student but was really strange at the same time.

© Nat Ward

Later that evening Rachel and I walked over to Affirmation Arts to see the 31 Women in Art Photography exhibit put on by the Humble Arts Foundation.  After a few distractions—we were driven like flies to porch lights to Times Square and stuffed our faces with saurkraut and sausage—we finally got there and there were two gigantic lines snaking out from the entrance and only fifteen minutes left to get in.  Luckily our dear beloved Ms. Tara Bogart was inside and was able to snag us some wristbands and get us inside immediately.  Go Tara!  We entered the space and immediately I was overwhelmed and intimidated.  Everyone was gorgeous, young and social.  The show was lined up in a way that I couldn’t see any of the work because of the model-height of so many of the attendees and the mass of the crowd swarmed in the space.  I’m so glad Tara was there!  We walked around and looked at the work, most of which I really enjoyed.  Justine Reyes was one of the picks, remember when she had her work up in the Perspectives Gallery at school?  Here’s a list of all the women and their pieces that were in the show.  Billie Mandle and Claire Beckett actually teach classes here at MassArt (honestly this school has amazing faculty!).

Unfortunately Rachel and I had to leave pretty quickly to catch our bus back to Boston.  We got into Boston at 3 am and I immediately turned around and went to the airport for my 5 am flight to San Francisco.  I’m going to have to do this in segments, I’m in the process of writing about San Francisco still.

 


Side note: my image of Jason Lazarus’ poster Try Harder that I got in the mail made it onto his website! Tom, Sarah, Mandie and Barbara, all of your photos are on the same wall so you’re on there too!

I hope your spring breaks were lovely!  I miss you all!
 

1 comment:

  1. You needn't apologize Rose. We are all busy and understand. It sounds like you had a fantastic time. I am happy that you are taking advantage of so many experiential opportunities!

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