Sunday, December 4, 2011
Up next: FOTOFEST!
For FOTOFEST 2012, Gallery 1724 is pleased to present:
Kristy Peet (www.kristypeet.com) with "How I Will Die" (above image) and Britt Ragsdale (www.brittragsdale.com) with "Members." Both artists reference the body and performance through photography. This exhibition is curated by Emily Sloan and hosted by Tim Deason.
The exhibition will open Saturday, March 31, from 8-10pm and run through May 31, 2012.
ABOUT GALLERY 1724
Gallery 1724 is a gallery, salon, home, and chicken ranch located in the Houston Museum District at 1724 Bissonnet Street. The space features experimental rotating house exhibits, and a salon.
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Hair Washing and Memory Recording this Sunday morning
As last year, this Sunday, September 11, 2011, Emily Sloan will be washing people's hair and recording their memories of "where we were and what we were doing on this day in history..." This event will take place from 10am to noon at 1724 Bissonnet (between Dunlavy and Woodhead), Houston, Texas 77005.
In her practice, Sloan utilizes hair washing for memory, story telling, cleansing, ritual and intimacy. Hair washing has been a vehicle for people to share stories for decades in salons. Additionally last spring, this ritual helped us to raise funds, similarly to a car wash as a fundraiser, for relief efforts in Japan after the tremendous earthquake.
(Photo by Dean Liscum.)
ABOUT EMILY SLOAN
Emily Sloan is an internationally unknown artist, curator of The Kenmore an exhibition mini-fridge, and founding Reverend of the controversial Southern Naptist Convention.
ABOUT GALLERY 1724
Gallery 1724 is a gallery, salon, home, and chicken ranch located in the Houston Museum District. The space features experimental rotating house exhibits.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Event time: Sunday, September 11, 8am to 12pm
CONTACT
Emily Sloan
c/o Gallery 1724
1724 Bissonnet St.
Houston, TX 77005
gallery1724@gmail.com
713-582-1198
In her practice, Sloan utilizes hair washing for memory, story telling, cleansing, ritual and intimacy. Hair washing has been a vehicle for people to share stories for decades in salons. Additionally last spring, this ritual helped us to raise funds, similarly to a car wash as a fundraiser, for relief efforts in Japan after the tremendous earthquake.
(Photo by Dean Liscum.)
ABOUT EMILY SLOAN
Emily Sloan is an internationally unknown artist, curator of The Kenmore an exhibition mini-fridge, and founding Reverend of the controversial Southern Naptist Convention.
ABOUT GALLERY 1724
Gallery 1724 is a gallery, salon, home, and chicken ranch located in the Houston Museum District. The space features experimental rotating house exhibits.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Event time: Sunday, September 11, 8am to 12pm
CONTACT
Emily Sloan
c/o Gallery 1724
1724 Bissonnet St.
Houston, TX 77005
gallery1724@gmail.com
713-582-1198
Thursday, July 7, 2011
BOBBY: A STUDY OF THE FIGURE, curated by Hagit Barkai and Aisen Caro Chacin
BOBBY: A STUDY OF THE FIGURE and panel discussion of related topics
Curated by Hagit Barkai and Aisen Caro Chacin
Opening Thursday, July 14 from 6pm to 9pm
On view through August 12, 2011
Above: Bobby Younce with a painting of Bobby Younce by Kevin Richert.
For over a dozen years, Bobby Younce has been working as a nude model for art classes throughout the city of Houston. His image, through drawings, paintings and sculptures, is approaching a quiet iconic state for many artists all over the city. This abundance of Bobby is the starting point for this project. Apart from being moved by the phenomenon and wanting to give it visibility in the form of an exhibition, we see it as an opportunity for an open conversation about approaches and attitudes to studies of the figure in contemporary art practices.
The exhibition will present a retrospective of Bobby's involvement in educational art practices in Houston. We will fill the gallery space with artworks and studies of Bobby that were executed over the past decade in different art centers in Houston. Since we seek showing the abundance of these works, there will be no discriminative selection process. Due to the abundance of work and lack of space, some of the pieces will be displayed on the walls and others will be presented on tables allowing viewers to flip through them. There is also the possibility of having a panel discussion with local art professionals that deal with related concepts; from artistic examinations to the history of art, social issues of the working model, and to contemporary accounts of technique, figuration, the visibility of the body, and performance.
To participate:
Bring Bobby works to Art League Houston in the Live Figure Labs: Thursday, Saturday or Sunday 1-4, or contact Bobby Younce or Hagit Barkai on FB. A contract will be provided. You may donate or sell your work. 30% of sale goes to Gallery 1724, 20% to Bobby Younce. Art not picked up will become property of Bobby.
Questions and contacts for info:
Hagit: 717-503-2640
Aisen: 713-444-5139
Bobby: 713-213-4797
Location:
Gallery 1724
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Woodhead and Dunlavy)
Houston, Texas 77005
Curated by Hagit Barkai and Aisen Caro Chacin
Opening Thursday, July 14 from 6pm to 9pm
On view through August 12, 2011
Above: Bobby Younce with a painting of Bobby Younce by Kevin Richert.
For over a dozen years, Bobby Younce has been working as a nude model for art classes throughout the city of Houston. His image, through drawings, paintings and sculptures, is approaching a quiet iconic state for many artists all over the city. This abundance of Bobby is the starting point for this project. Apart from being moved by the phenomenon and wanting to give it visibility in the form of an exhibition, we see it as an opportunity for an open conversation about approaches and attitudes to studies of the figure in contemporary art practices.
The exhibition will present a retrospective of Bobby's involvement in educational art practices in Houston. We will fill the gallery space with artworks and studies of Bobby that were executed over the past decade in different art centers in Houston. Since we seek showing the abundance of these works, there will be no discriminative selection process. Due to the abundance of work and lack of space, some of the pieces will be displayed on the walls and others will be presented on tables allowing viewers to flip through them. There is also the possibility of having a panel discussion with local art professionals that deal with related concepts; from artistic examinations to the history of art, social issues of the working model, and to contemporary accounts of technique, figuration, the visibility of the body, and performance.
To participate:
Bring Bobby works to Art League Houston in the Live Figure Labs: Thursday, Saturday or Sunday 1-4, or contact Bobby Younce or Hagit Barkai on FB. A contract will be provided. You may donate or sell your work. 30% of sale goes to Gallery 1724, 20% to Bobby Younce. Art not picked up will become property of Bobby.
Questions and contacts for info:
Hagit: 717-503-2640
Aisen: 713-444-5139
Bobby: 713-213-4797
Location:
Gallery 1724
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Woodhead and Dunlavy)
Houston, Texas 77005
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Closing Party: For the Man...The 9 to 5 Show
Next Saturday, June 25 from 1-5pm come to Gallery 1724 to watch the movie "9 to 5", hang out with the working artists one last time, and drink booze!
"For the Man...The 9 to 5 Show" is curated by Stephanie Saint Sanchez and includes the work of Cameron Blaylock, Meredith Cunningham, Matthew Glover, Brent Himes, David Lamb III, Rebecca Novak, Lizbeth Ortiz, Tifani Pust, Soyla Santos, Emily Sloan, Tish Stringer, and Julia Wallace.
Location:
Gallery 1724
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, TX 77005
gallery1724@gmail.com
"For the Man...The 9 to 5 Show" is curated by Stephanie Saint Sanchez and includes the work of Cameron Blaylock, Meredith Cunningham, Matthew Glover, Brent Himes, David Lamb III, Rebecca Novak, Lizbeth Ortiz, Tifani Pust, Soyla Santos, Emily Sloan, Tish Stringer, and Julia Wallace.
Location:
Gallery 1724
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, TX 77005
gallery1724@gmail.com
Thursday, May 5, 2011
For the Man...The 9 to 5 Show, curated by Stephanie Saint Sanchez, opening Saturday, May 14, 8-10pm
For The Man... The 9 to 5 Show
Curated by Stephanie Saint Sanchez
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS:
Tish Stringer
Matthew Glover
Emily Sloan
Rebecca Novak
Soyla Santos
Brent Himes
Julia Wallace
Tifani Pust
David Lamb III
Cameron Blaylock
Meredith Cunningham
Lizbeth Ortiz
Gallery 1724 is the spot for the exciting show spotlighting artwork created while at work.* Visual, photo, sculpture. Video. Art daredevils in the form of clockwatchers, peons, surfs, butchers, bakers, candlestick makers, johnny paychecks who have the audacity to keep creating even after they have clocked in!
Awesome Opening to include 9 to 5 themed surprises!
Installation dates MAY 12&13
OPENING RECEPTION: Saturday, May 14, 8-10pm
Show Date MAY 14-JUNE 25
Questions? Call Stephanie at 281-701-3452
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, TX 77005
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
CALL FOR ART!!! For the Man: The 9 to 5 Show
For The Man... The 9 to 5 Show
Curated by Stephanie Saint Sanchez
Gallery 1724 is seeking clockwatcher, peon, surf, butcher, baker,
candlestick maker, johnny paycheck artist types who have the audacity
to keep creating even after they have clocked in! This is a show
exclusively for artwork created while at work.* Visual, photo,
sculpture. Video. *you must be able to document that you were at work
at the time of creation*
Please send
project proposals by APRIL 22 to Chicanalaundry@yahoo.com
Selection notification APRIL 26
Installation dates MAY 12&13
Show Date MAY 14-JUNE 25
Questions? Call Stephanie at 281-701-3452
Please feel free to share this with anyone you think may be interested!
--
__________________
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, TX 77005
Curated by Stephanie Saint Sanchez
Gallery 1724 is seeking clockwatcher, peon, surf, butcher, baker,
candlestick maker, johnny paycheck artist types who have the audacity
to keep creating even after they have clocked in! This is a show
exclusively for artwork created while at work.* Visual, photo,
sculpture. Video. *you must be able to document that you were at work
at the time of creation*
Please send
project proposals by APRIL 22 to Chicanalaundry@yahoo.com
Selection notification APRIL 26
Installation dates MAY 12&13
Show Date MAY 14-JUNE 25
Questions? Call Stephanie at 281-701-3452
Please feel free to share this with anyone you think may be interested!
--
__________________
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, TX 77005
Announcing our Curatorial Residency!
Stephanie Saint Sanchez of La Chicana Laundry Pictures has been awarded a curatorial residency at Gallery 1724. For the residency she is working on: For the Man: The 9 to 5 Show.
Sanchez directing "The Freshleez..." in early 2011.
About Stephanie Saint Sanchez:
Raised in Beaumont corrupted in Houston…Stephanie Saint Sanchez is an awesome multi-media artist, movie maker, instigator and it says so right on her business card so it must be true. As founder of La Chicana Laundry Pictures she has made over 25 award winning, genre-bending shorts. She also started the Senorita Cinema film festival the only all Latina Film Festival in Texas.
She is a recipient a (SWAMP) Southwest Alternate Media Project Emerging Filmmakers Fellowship and Lawndale Artist Studio Program. A super fan of movies with an ensemble cast and ties to friends and artists from all disciplines she looks forward to pushing the limits of their collective talents. For more information, please visit: www.lachicanalaundrypictures.com
Sanchez directing "The Freshleez..." in early 2011.
About Stephanie Saint Sanchez:
Raised in Beaumont corrupted in Houston…Stephanie Saint Sanchez is an awesome multi-media artist, movie maker, instigator and it says so right on her business card so it must be true. As founder of La Chicana Laundry Pictures she has made over 25 award winning, genre-bending shorts. She also started the Senorita Cinema film festival the only all Latina Film Festival in Texas.
She is a recipient a (SWAMP) Southwest Alternate Media Project Emerging Filmmakers Fellowship and Lawndale Artist Studio Program. A super fan of movies with an ensemble cast and ties to friends and artists from all disciplines she looks forward to pushing the limits of their collective talents. For more information, please visit: www.lachicanalaundrypictures.com
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Hair Washing Benefit for Japan, this Sunday, March 20 from 10am to 6pm
Hair Washing Benefit for Japan, this Sunday, March 20 from 10am to 6pm.
Performance artist Emily Sloan will recreate her hair washing performance with all proceeds going to the Red Cross.
This is a "drop-in" event. Both participants and observers are welcome.
If you would like to help out (i.e. assisting participants, providing refreshments, etc.) at any time during the event, please contact Emily at 713-582-1198 or emily@emilysloan.com
Location:
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, Texas 77005
www.gallery1724.blogspot.com, gallery1724@gmail.com
Performance artist Emily Sloan will recreate her hair washing performance with all proceeds going to the Red Cross.
This is a "drop-in" event. Both participants and observers are welcome.
If you would like to help out (i.e. assisting participants, providing refreshments, etc.) at any time during the event, please contact Emily at 713-582-1198 or emily@emilysloan.com
Location:
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon
1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead)
Houston, Texas 77005
www.gallery1724.blogspot.com, gallery1724@gmail.com
Monday, March 7, 2011
Doug Cason: Solo exhibition opening Friday, March 11, 8-10pm
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon is pleased to present “Doug Cason and Zepeda: Double Life” at Gallery 1724, 1724 Bissonnet St., Houston, Texas 77005. The double solo shows open Friday, March 11, 2011 from 8pm to 10pm. The exhibition runs through Saturday, April 30, 2011.
Doug Cason and Zepeda both create such thoroughly developed and highly skilled bodies of work that it can be quite a surprise to find out they are both actually created by the same artist. Cason is two fully realized artists in one. This is a very exciting approach to embracing the freedom and complexity available in contemporary art. Their adjacent shows at Gallery 1724 will be the first time Doug and Zepeda have had dual solo exhibitions at the same venue.
Curated by Emily Sloan.
"discard", oil on panel (above)
About Doug Cason’s art: Through an intervention with text, objects, and the traditional formats and trappings of contained knowledge, historical narratives become altered and contemporized. These historical documents are manipulated to the point where fact and fiction lines blur. The new work acts as a catalyst for reevaluating the validity of traditional historical narratives by creating newer fictionalized histories, which highlight irrational or problematic ideologies long overlooked over time. Photographs interface with ink, forcing one to search through layers as they pursue the concept of identity. Books become modern illuminated manuscripts through cover-to-cover revampings through painting, printmaking, bookbinding and digital manipulations.
The end products become museum-type, installations of categorized and encased books, photographs, paintings and ephemera that work together to create a falsified past. In some cases, the installation becomes viewer interactive making it possible to sit and “read” the books along with dossiers of related artifacts as if one was stepping into a scriptorium or library of a compulsive scribe or historian. It is with this ability to “read” the work, handle objects or study each under glass that information becomes reanimated. What was once a cast-off allusion to the past becomes alive again but with new identity, rooted in modernity and footnoted by the past.
About Gallery 1724: Gallery 1724 is a d.i.y. contemporary art salon offering rotating, experimental art exhibits and performances. The venue is located in the Houston Museum District at 1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead), Houston, Texas 77005. For more information, please visit: www.gallery1724.blogspot.com
Doug Cason and Zepeda both create such thoroughly developed and highly skilled bodies of work that it can be quite a surprise to find out they are both actually created by the same artist. Cason is two fully realized artists in one. This is a very exciting approach to embracing the freedom and complexity available in contemporary art. Their adjacent shows at Gallery 1724 will be the first time Doug and Zepeda have had dual solo exhibitions at the same venue.
Curated by Emily Sloan.
"discard", oil on panel (above)
About Doug Cason’s art: Through an intervention with text, objects, and the traditional formats and trappings of contained knowledge, historical narratives become altered and contemporized. These historical documents are manipulated to the point where fact and fiction lines blur. The new work acts as a catalyst for reevaluating the validity of traditional historical narratives by creating newer fictionalized histories, which highlight irrational or problematic ideologies long overlooked over time. Photographs interface with ink, forcing one to search through layers as they pursue the concept of identity. Books become modern illuminated manuscripts through cover-to-cover revampings through painting, printmaking, bookbinding and digital manipulations.
The end products become museum-type, installations of categorized and encased books, photographs, paintings and ephemera that work together to create a falsified past. In some cases, the installation becomes viewer interactive making it possible to sit and “read” the books along with dossiers of related artifacts as if one was stepping into a scriptorium or library of a compulsive scribe or historian. It is with this ability to “read” the work, handle objects or study each under glass that information becomes reanimated. What was once a cast-off allusion to the past becomes alive again but with new identity, rooted in modernity and footnoted by the past.
About Gallery 1724: Gallery 1724 is a d.i.y. contemporary art salon offering rotating, experimental art exhibits and performances. The venue is located in the Houston Museum District at 1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead), Houston, Texas 77005. For more information, please visit: www.gallery1724.blogspot.com
Zepeda: Solo exhibition opening Friday, March 11, 8-10pm
Gallery 1724, Contemporary Art Salon is pleased to present “Doug Cason and Zepeda: Double Life” at Gallery 1724, 1724 Bissonnet St., Houston, Texas 77005. The double solo shows open Friday, March 11, 2011 from 8pm to 10pm. The exhibition runs through Saturday, April 30, 2011.
Doug Cason and Zepeda both create such thoroughly developed and highly skilled bodies of work that it can be quite a surprise to find out they are both actually created by the same artist. Cason is two fully realized artists in one. This is a very exciting approach to embracing the freedom and complexity available in contemporary art. Their adjacent shows at Gallery 1724 will be the first time Doug and Zepeda have had dual solo exhibitions at the same venue.
Curated by Emily Sloan.
"Zepeda likes this", oil on panel (above)
About Zepeda’s art: From readily accessible digital media and online social networks, a new fashion of (desperate) narcissism and pornography has risen to serve as the modern day booty call.
Bevies of individuals now seek to reconceive their identities in a virtual world. Although some people will use their real names, most who use the Internet for the purpose of reinvention prefer the use of pseudonyms, which often reveal subtle or metaphorical hints of personal information. As users interact with an established online identity a reputation builds which enables others to decide whether the identity is worthy of trust.
The concept of the personal self, and how emerging technology influences it is currently studied in the fields of psychology and sociology. Research suggests that unwise and uninhibited behavior on the Internet rises as a result of the relationship between anonymity and (immediate) audience gratification creating a loosening or even complete abandonment of social restrictions and reticence that would otherwise be present in traditional face-to-face interactions.
The notion of “You don’t know me” equates to simple anonymity. Anonymity affords a sense of protection, and feeling protected provides an individual with a virtual playground allowing for a meaningful release. The release may be as simple as making a comment that would otherwise be embarrassing in a conventional interaction, or as complex as an outlet for sexual fantasies. Certain release-seekers photograph themselves in the mirror or with their own extended arm striking seductive poses in scant clothing. These studies in particular are the focus of my Zepeda paintings.
The women depicted show a complexity of character in an easily dismissed, attention deficit fed forum. The need for the subject to photograph herself, rather than trusting another individual to assist her may suggest the woman’s distrust of a flesh and blood world, finding the virtual world more accepting and forgiving. Contrarily it may point to an isolation that previously existed, and a need for attention that has not been gratified with real human contact. The isolation apparent in each of these photographs is compounded by inattention for the setting or quality of the photograph. Neglected environments made of dirty laundry, unmade beds, empty food containers and flashes from the camera share the scene in a large collection of these on-line photos. The disheveled environment casts a light on the women’s detachment from the material world, and lack of interest in her daily drudgeries. The anticipated adoration waiting online preempts in importance the need to care for home.
About Gallery 1724: Gallery 1724 is a d.i.y. contemporary art salon offering rotating, experimental art exhibits and performances. The venue is located in the Houston Museum District at 1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead), Houston, Texas 77005. For more information, please visit: www.gallery1724.blogspot.com.
Doug Cason and Zepeda both create such thoroughly developed and highly skilled bodies of work that it can be quite a surprise to find out they are both actually created by the same artist. Cason is two fully realized artists in one. This is a very exciting approach to embracing the freedom and complexity available in contemporary art. Their adjacent shows at Gallery 1724 will be the first time Doug and Zepeda have had dual solo exhibitions at the same venue.
Curated by Emily Sloan.
"Zepeda likes this", oil on panel (above)
About Zepeda’s art: From readily accessible digital media and online social networks, a new fashion of (desperate) narcissism and pornography has risen to serve as the modern day booty call.
Bevies of individuals now seek to reconceive their identities in a virtual world. Although some people will use their real names, most who use the Internet for the purpose of reinvention prefer the use of pseudonyms, which often reveal subtle or metaphorical hints of personal information. As users interact with an established online identity a reputation builds which enables others to decide whether the identity is worthy of trust.
The concept of the personal self, and how emerging technology influences it is currently studied in the fields of psychology and sociology. Research suggests that unwise and uninhibited behavior on the Internet rises as a result of the relationship between anonymity and (immediate) audience gratification creating a loosening or even complete abandonment of social restrictions and reticence that would otherwise be present in traditional face-to-face interactions.
The notion of “You don’t know me” equates to simple anonymity. Anonymity affords a sense of protection, and feeling protected provides an individual with a virtual playground allowing for a meaningful release. The release may be as simple as making a comment that would otherwise be embarrassing in a conventional interaction, or as complex as an outlet for sexual fantasies. Certain release-seekers photograph themselves in the mirror or with their own extended arm striking seductive poses in scant clothing. These studies in particular are the focus of my Zepeda paintings.
The women depicted show a complexity of character in an easily dismissed, attention deficit fed forum. The need for the subject to photograph herself, rather than trusting another individual to assist her may suggest the woman’s distrust of a flesh and blood world, finding the virtual world more accepting and forgiving. Contrarily it may point to an isolation that previously existed, and a need for attention that has not been gratified with real human contact. The isolation apparent in each of these photographs is compounded by inattention for the setting or quality of the photograph. Neglected environments made of dirty laundry, unmade beds, empty food containers and flashes from the camera share the scene in a large collection of these on-line photos. The disheveled environment casts a light on the women’s detachment from the material world, and lack of interest in her daily drudgeries. The anticipated adoration waiting online preempts in importance the need to care for home.
About Gallery 1724: Gallery 1724 is a d.i.y. contemporary art salon offering rotating, experimental art exhibits and performances. The venue is located in the Houston Museum District at 1724 Bissonnet St. (between Dunlavy and Woodhead), Houston, Texas 77005. For more information, please visit: www.gallery1724.blogspot.com.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Up next: Doug Cason and Zepeda
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