Residents of New York Opening Reception

Posted on Friday, May 30th, 2014

On May 21st we had our public opening for Andres Serrano: Residents of New York at La Guardia Place in the West Village. The weather was perfect and the plaza was filled with great conversation, and of course the stunning images from our collaboration with Andres Serrano. There was a performative element to this event, images were affixed to sign posts and were held throughout the night.

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Residents of New York Phone Booth Campaign

Posted on Friday, May 16th, 2014

On Sunday (May 18th) you will be able to see the West 4th Street Subway Station transform into a public arts exhibition called Residents of New York in collaboration between More Art and Andres Serrano. We will have an opening reception for the public at LaGuardia Place (btwn W. 3rd and Bleecker St) on Wednesday, May 21st from 6 to 8 pm.  Our collaboration with Andres Serrano is in full speed! Currently you can see some of the images from Residents of New York, on public phone booths (courtesy of Van Wagner) around Manhattan! If you see one on your daily walk/jog/bike ride around the city feel free to tag it on instagram, twitter, or facebook using the hashtag #ResidentsofNewYork. Below is a list of locations where you can find our Residents of New York phone booths:

Canal St & Broadway
Broadway on Reade St
Chambers St & Westside Hwy
Wall Street / City Hall
Broadway & Walker St
Broadway on Beaver St (off Broad st)
Wall Street / City Hall
Sixth Ave & 21st St
Sixth Ave & 21st St
Broad St & So William St
Sixth Ave & 24th St
Centre St & Worth St
Water St & John St
Third Ave & 19th St
Third Ave & 16th St
Second Ave & 26th St
Second Ave & 27th St
Third Ave & 15th St
Park Ave S & 24th St
Second Ave & 19th St
Fifth Ave & 18th St
Fifth Ave & 17th St
Park Ave S & 20th St
Second Ave on 21st St
Third Ave on 25th St
Tenth Ave & 57th St
Second Ave & 32nd St
Second Ave & 33rd St
Second Ave & 28th St
First Ave on 28th St
First Ave on 39th St
Columbus Ave & 94th St
Columbus Ave & 95th St
Columbus Ave & 94th St
Broadway & 104th St
Broadway & 105th St
Broadway & 105th St
Amsterdam Ave & 101st St
Broadway & 106th St
Columbus Ave on 96th St
Columbus Ave & 96th St
Columbus Ave & 94th St
Broadway & 78th St
Broadway on 80th St
Broadway on 84th St
Broadway on 89th St
Broadway on 67th St
Columbus Ave & 82nd St
Columbus Ave & 84th St
Columbus Ave & 83rd St
Columbus Ave & 83rd St
Broadway on 82nd St

Residents of New York: Charise and Michael

Posted on Thursday, May 8th, 2014

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Left: Andres Serrano, Residents of New York (Charise M. Paschall), 2014; Right: Andres Serrano, Residents of New York (Michael Pilgrim), 2014

Charise and Michael are a homeless couple that has been together for four years. Charise (a.k.a Egypt) is from New Jersey, Michael is from Manhattan.

We stop and talk to them frequently on our daily commute and despite their circumstances, they are incredibly positive and outgoing. They are passionate about art, Charise draws and loves color. They are two of the many people Andres Serrano photographed that we’ve had the pleasure to get to know.

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“It’s important to stay strong. Things can’t stay the same forever. It’s not easy but we’re trying to make the best of everything. It’s harder for a couple than it is for single people out here. Human compassion goes a long way. When we get help from people it blesses them and it blesses us…We are not invisible, this (homelessness) is a real problem in this country right before our eyes…People wonder: ‘how is this happening in America?’ Why is this country more concerned with the problems around the world than the problems that affect us at home?”

See Charise and Michael in Andres Serrano’s Residents of New York opening May 19th at the W. 4th Street Subway Station, LaGuardia Place, and at phone booths and various locations throughout the East and West Village.

Art Walks: Red Hook

Posted on Monday, May 5th, 2014

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We had a great time in Red Hook to kick off our Art Walks series!

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Our walk began at Dustin Yellin’s studio, then continued to Pioneer Works, the wonderful interdisciplinary creative space he founded.

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Our next destination was the Kentler International Drawing Space, where Florence Neal gave us an in depth tour of their gallery and flatfiles.

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Last but not least, we visited the studio of More Art collaborator Michael Joo. It was an amazing experience to see what Michael has been up to since collaborating with More Art on his project Bodhi Obfuscatus (Allegiance) in 2007.

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We were accompanied by John McGettrick, the co-president of the Red Hook Civic Association, who gave us a fascinating insight to the neighborhoods past, present, and what’s to come in the future.

Art About Poverty and Homelessness

Posted on Thursday, May 1st, 2014

In anticipation of our collaboration with Andres Serrano called Residents of New York, opening May 19th, we are featuring artists who have made socially engaging work about poverty and homelessness

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Andres Serrano, Nomads (Sir Leonard), 1990, Cibachrome print. Joseph and Charlotte Lichtenberg Collection. © Andres Serrano

Andres Serrano has a keen awareness for the people who live on the streets of New York City.  The artist first photographed the homeless in 1990 for a series called Nomads. In this series, Serrano went around the city with a portable studio and photographed homeless individuals whom he found on the streets and subway tunnels. Serrano gave no definitive directions to his sitters, however many of them chose to take a very heroic pose as seen in the case of Sir Leonard. The result shows the dignity and honor that these men and women had in being involved in the art making experience.

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Andres Serrano, Residents of New York (Timothy Hicks), 2014.

Over a decade later, Serrano chose a different approach for photographing homeless men and women in Residents of New York. In Residents of New York, he removed his signature studio elements, focusing instead on personal connectivity and interaction directly on the streets of New York City, where the homeless live. During the photography shoot, participants of Residents of New York mentioned how it is a blessing when someone takes time to interact with them and to acknowledge them as not being invisible.

Texas based artist, Willie Baronet has incorporated his work with the homeless into his art practice for twenty years. Baronet’s “We Are All Homeless” series of work has led the artist to devote his practice to understanding homelessness and spread his passion for helping and advocating for the homeless.

Artists Kenji Nakayama and Christopher Hope started Signs for the Homeless. The artists would meet homeless individuals on street, interview them, and offer to make them new hand-painted re-creations of the old signs.

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Mike a.k.a. “The Pope of Harvard Square” with his before and after signs, part of Kenji Nakayama and Christopher Hope’s “Signs for the Homeless” project (via homelesssigns.tumblr.com)

Two past More Art collaborators Krzysztof Wodiczko (2011) and Michael Rakowitz (2007), created conceptual works of art that addressed homelessness. Wodiczko’s Homeless Vehicle Project was made in collaboration with the local homeless population in New York city between 1987 and 1989. The idea was to work with this population on producing both a psychical object and a concept that would make their “participation in the urban economy visible and self-directed.” [Kathleen MacQueen, Tactical Response: Art in an Age of Terror (Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Publishers, 2010 pg. 88)]

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Krzysztof Wodiczko, Homeless Vehicle, 1988-89.  © Krzysztof Wodiczko

While the public was cautious, the operators of the vehicles took the project seriously. According to Wodiczko, “You see this in certain gestures, certain ways of behaving, speaking, dialoguing, of building up stories, narratives: the homeless become actors, orators, workers, all things which they usually are not. The idea is to let them speak and tell their own stories, to let them be legitimate actors on the urban stage.” [Krzysztof Wodiczko – Critical Vehicles: Writings, Projects, Interviews (The MIT Press, 1999 pg. 177)]

Michael Rakowitz’s project called paraSITE, also a collaboration with the homeless, developed inflatable shelters that run off expelled HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) air from buildings. The artist consulted with individuals and couples on what they’re needs were and then created the shelters based on the model they discussed.

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While artist interventions are not seen as a big picture solution for homelessness, they provide a moment of powerful and holistic interaction. The issue of homelessness is removed from being a statistic or public service announcement that often feels like an indifferent approach to contextualizing the issue.

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Rakowitz said, “My project does not make reference to handbooks of statistics. Nor should this intervention be associated with the various municipal attempts at solving the homeless issue. This is a project that was shaped by my interaction as a citizen and artist with those who live on the streets.”

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Heather Stoltz, Temporary Shelter, 2011.

Heather Stoltz’s Temporary Shelter Project is reminiscent of a sukkah which is used on the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. The sukkah tells the stories of homeless New Yorkers ages 4 to 75. The inside panels each represent one individual staying in NYC’s faith-based shelters and the outside walls are made from fiber art created by children in New York’s family shelters.

Jody Wood’s ongoing project is called Beauty in Transition, sets up a mobile beauty salon that serves the homeless at shelters around the city. The mobile salon originated in 2006 in Kansas, and has since traveled to Denver Colorado, and through the support from A Blade of Grass will be traveling city-wide to multiple locations in NYC in late Summer/Fall 2014. According to the artist “Through providing human-to-human dialogue beyond institutional constraints, this project aims to facilitate empathetic understanding and to unravel the reductive label of home-less.” These are just some examples of the way artists are visualizing homelessness. Are there any projects that we didn’t cover? Are you an artist who has worked with the homeless community on a collaborative artwork? We’d love to hear about it!

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Marc Clamage, Colleen, 2011. (via: http://www.ipaintwhatisee.com/panhandlers.htm)

Another project is by Boston artist Marc Clamage who painted portraits of the homeless in Harvard Square.

According to the artist “My approach remains the same. I’m torn on the issue of giving money to beggars, but I have no problem paying for services rendered, so by paying $10 to let me set up my french easel and paint them I feel these folks are earning a fee, not just accepting a handout. All paintings are done from life, on site, plein air and alla prima, and take between one and four hours to execute.Additionally, as I’ve worked more and more on this series it’s turned not only into an art project but a socioliterary one as well. Over the course of the past few years I have become aware of some continuing sagas, like the tragic love story of Gary and Whitney or the mysterious Rabbi, and these continuing chapters are included as notes where appropriate. For the most part I have not updated the stories as originally recorded, but appended updates as addenda at the end of each description.”

The Real Dick Richman

Posted on Thursday, February 20th, 2014

Wall Street’s secret society (Kappa Beta Phi) is a little less of a secret after a writer namedKevin Roose sneaked into the fraternity’s recent induction ceremony and wrote about it inNew York Magazine During the ceremony new members dressed in drag and made “bad jokes about Hillary Clinton, drunkenly mocked Main Street (the “99%”), and laughed at the financial crisis.” The fact that these authoritarian figures of Wall Street had the audacity to laugh at a crisis (caused by corruption on Wall Street) that resulted in housing foreclosures, ruined retirement plans, and a devastating unemployment crisis for millions illustrates their complete divorce from reality. These individuals have become devoid of ethical responsibility and social awareness.

Roose crashed the party as research for his book called Young Money. In the book Roose investigated the lives of young Wall Street bankers “the 22-year-olds toiling at the bottom of the financial sector’s food chain.” He wanted to know how and why these run of the mill bottom feeders become so ravenous when they reach the top. Roose posed the question “what if Wall Street doesn’t just attract pre-existing douchebags, but actively draws normal people into an inescapable vortex of douchebaggery?”

For our Envision New York 2017 campaign Federico Solmi submitted a video called Douche Bag City. In Solmi’s work he describes his protagonist Dick Richman as “a greedy, dishonest, and selfish Wall Street employee who has been banished to live in Douche Bag City. The City is a hopeless place, where the greedy villains of society are imprisoned for their atrocities committed against the community. There is neither hope nor escape from Douche Bag City; there are no exits and there is no chance for salvation, only punishment and torture. Here prisoners are defenseless against the increasingly barbaric creatures and demons. Money, stocks, and wealth are meaningless.” Solmi’s work is a “satire of the capitalist world that is being drowned in the economic crisis.” Solmi asks the question “How many Dick Richman’s are still out there?” That question might have gained a little more insight in light of Kevin Roose’s expose of Kappa Beta Phi.