EXIT ART: ALTERNATIVE HISTORIES
by Robert Sievert
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Colorful guests packed EXIT ART opening night
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EXIT ART is a gallery that has been around for 27
years. It had a space downtown where they specialized
in fringe art, art that was out of the mainstream.
Now Exit Art has morphed into "arts center" that
has a space on 10th Avenue and 36th St. This was
the site for a new show, ALTERNATIVE HISTORIES,
that opened September 24, 2010.
The point of the show was to document the ALTERNATIVE
CULTURE of the past 50 years. They focused on art
spaces and projects since 1960. A large gallery was
used to display posters, menus, other printed matter
relating to a project on the wall.
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Gallery at EXIT ART: here one can see the set up of wall posters and explanatory essays below on a ledge
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Directly below
that on a ledge was an essay describing the above
art group. It was one of those shows that you had to
read. The opening night crowd was a brilliant mix of
faces from past and a healthy amount of new faces
trying to be seen. Undoubtedly the show drew many
viewers from the rich past it was documenting.
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Opening night viewers peruse the boxes of documentation
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In another room (gallery) was a large table
that held document boxes containing records of
each project. Boxes were labeled with a project
name. Viewers could open and review the contents,
provided they wore archival gloves. The table seemed
at least 100 feet long. Once several people started
opening boxes it seemed to catch on. People began
reviewing the documentation. The document boxes were
stacked in the middle of a long long table.
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Posters and handbills lined the walls of the main gallery at EXIT ART
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What was remarkable about the show was really the
content. If you lived in New York over the last 50
years you were sure to have visited one of these
alternative sites. Judson Poets Theater, PS1, and
there was even documentation of FOOD, an artist's
coop that ran a restaurant on Prince Street where
you could get a bowl of wonderful soup and a slice
of hearty home-baked bread for fifty cents. A whole
other era was evoked.
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Gallery filling up: As the evening wore on more and more patrons arrived
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I spoke with Arthur Hughes who had helped to document
"Museum A PROJECT OF LIVING ARTISTS." He and fellow
organizer of this group John Bauch recounted tales of
meetings in lofts on Broadway that grew and grew until
they were totally out of hand. This was a different
time, the 1970's, when social and political movements
involved meetings and groups of people shouting at one
another. Today's social networking on the Internet
has made this sort of communication passe. However
it was exciting to revisit and remember many of these
past venues
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Two members of the rich history of the exhibition, Lanie Fleischer and Arthur Hughes
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A partial list of them includes: 106 Green Street,
A.I.R. Gallery, Artists Space, Alternative Museum,
Bronx River Art Space, Creative Time, Film Makers
Cooperative, Flux Factory, FOOD, Franklyn Furnace,
LaMaMa, Socrates Sculpture Park, White Columns, The
Kitchen -- in all over 150 groups were represented.
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Francis Seigal and John Bausch in the main gallery of EXIT ART
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In talking with Frances Siegal, artist, we noted
that many of the artists' coops,--Blue Mountain,
Bowery, and Prince Street Galleries -- that we had
been part of, were not included in the list. It is
interesting to speculate why not. These independent
galleries have been a strong movement in the art
world for over 40 years and were certainly part of
the alternative scene. I'm sure the curators had
their reasons as well as limitations. But the overall
effect of this show is one of recalling a rich history
of independent thinking and effort.
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Exit Art must be congratulated for it's clear presentation of a massive amount of material
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