Flux Factory presents...
New York, New York, New York
So nice we named it thrice.
Curated by Jean Barberis, Melanie Cohn, and Chen Tamir. Original concept by Jean Barberis.
New York, New York, New York
So nice we named it thrice.
Curated by Jean Barberis, Melanie Cohn, and Chen Tamir. Original concept by Jean Barberis.
"Manhattan is an accumulation of possible disasters that never happen."
--Rem Koolhaas, Delirious New York (1978)
Opening Night: Friday, December 14, 7pm
December 14, 2007 – January 13, 2008
Opening night performances by: Miwa Koizumi: “New York Flavors Ice Cream”
and Matt Levy: “Action, Direction, Creation presents: Interactive activity”
Admission: Free
--Rem Koolhaas, Delirious New York (1978)
Opening Night: Friday, December 14, 7pm
December 14, 2007 – January 13, 2008
Opening night performances by: Miwa Koizumi: “New York Flavors Ice Cream”
and Matt Levy: “Action, Direction, Creation presents: Interactive activity”
Admission: Free
Imagine Coney Island's Dreamland, Steeplechase, and Luna Park reborn. Imagine a sea monster in the East River, a volcano erupting in Manhattan, Midtown in ruins. The contemporary brownstones of Cobble Hill buried beneath its original namesake hill, a big whale in the place of the Museum of Natural History, and The New York Crystal Palace returned to 42nd Street.
In short, a New York City that is the forgotten past and the fantastic future all at once. A New York City where anything is possible.
New York, New York, New York is an interactive, multimedia installation. It is a continuation of Flux Factory's interest in urban landscapes and takes inspiration from the Panorama, Robert Moses’ scale model of New York City in the Queens Museum of Art. Members of the Flux Factory art collective will work in collaboration with over 100 artists from all five boroughs and around the world to re-imagine the public and private spaces of New York.
Each artist will contribute a building, a landmark, a street, an avenue, a block, a park, a neighborhood, an expressway, a bridge, an island, an airport—one or several elements of the urban environment. All of these individual works will be combined to produce a cohesive yet chaotic installation, a multimedia, scale-model of the city. Instead of being an exact replica to scale of the city of New York, this project offers a mental map, a replica of an imaginary New York. The goal of the show is to explore the architectural and conceptual elements of everyday space. It is an investigation into the collective unconscious of the cultural capital of the planet: The sum of all of New York's potential exposed in a great experiment in psychogeography.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS
Boris Achour, Sandy Amerio, Carla Aspenberg, Leah Beeferman, Dominique Blais, Lise Brenner/Uli Lorimer/Katrina Simon, Adam Brent, Adam David Brown, Jason David Brown, Ben Bunch, Paul Burn, Ian Burns, Matthew Callinan, Anibal Catalan, Emmy Catedral/Valerie Opielski, Andrea Christens/ Takashi Horisaki, Emily Clark, Cluster8 (Parsons the New School for Design), Lewis Colburn, Daupo, Johannes De Young, Andrea Dezsö, Brandan Doty, Thomas Doyle, Kerry Downey/Alan Resnick, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture de Montpelier, Gregor Eldarb, Stephane Gilot, Tamara Gubernat, Ira Joel Haber, Aya Kakeda, Devrim Kadirbeyoglu, Israel Kandarian, Stephanie Koenig, Miwa Koizumi, Yunmee Kyong, Katerina Lanfranco, Maria Levitsky, Matt Levy, Ellen Lindner, Katja Loher, Marie Lorenz/Doug Paulson, Molly Lowe, Marian Macken, Mapping it Out (Eugene Lang College/The New School for Liberal Arts), Evie McKenna, Mary-Anne McTrowe, Greg Martin, Simone Meltesen, Ian Montgomery, Kirsten Mosher, Martina Mrongovius, Joel Morrison/Hiroshi Shafer, Heidi Neilson, Jo Q. Nelson, Rashaad Newsome, Lothar Osterburg, Miguel Palma, Gail Pickett, Bridget Parris, Bruno Persat, Celia Picard, Annie Reichert, Leonora Retsas, Renée Ridgway, Jaimie Robson/Kristal Stevenot, Karl Saliter, Jon Sasaki, Jean Shin, Mike Peter Smith, Soft City (Rose Bianchini, Sarah Couture McPhail, Yvonne Ng, Catherine Stinson, Jason van Horne), Claudia Sohrens, George Spencer, Joel Braden Stoehr, Etosha Terryll, Nick Tobier, Joseph Craig Tompkins, Momoyo Torimitsu, Christopher Ulivo, Gabriela Vainsencher, Jason Van Horne, Vydavy Sindikat/Anytime Development, Lee Walton, Barbara Westermann, Lauren Wilcox, and Ian Wojtowicz.
Gallery hours: Fridays – Sundays, 1-5pm. Closed Dec. 23rd and 30th.
New York, New York, New York is made possible with public funds from New York State Council on the Arts,
New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and Queens Council on the Arts, as well as generous support from
the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Greenwall Foundation,
Materials for the Arts, and Carnegie Corporation of New York.
New York, New York, New York is made possible with public funds from New York State Council on the Arts,
New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and Queens Council on the Arts, as well as generous support from
the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Greenwall Foundation,
Materials for the Arts, and Carnegie Corporation of New York.
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Flux Factory is located at:
38-38 43rd Street
Long Island City, Queens
For further information:
http://www.fluxfactory.org
Phone: 718-707-3362
Email contact: Stefany Anne Golberg, info@fluxfactory.org
For directions to Flux Factory: http://www.fluxfactory.org/directions
Flux Factory is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit arts organization
38-38 43rd Street
Long Island City, Queens
For further information:
http://www.fluxfactory.org
Phone: 718-707-3362
Email contact: Stefany Anne Golberg, info@fluxfactory.org
For directions to Flux Factory: http://www.fluxfactory.org
Flux Factory is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit arts organization
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