Dedicated to covering the visual arts community in Connecticut.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Lamson exhibit opens at Artspace Thursday

Artspace
50 Orange St, New Haven, (203) 772-2709
William Lamson: Time Is Like the East River
Nov. 12—Dec. 19, 2009
Public Opening: Thurs., Nov. 12, 6—8 p.m.

Press release

Artspace is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new work by Brooklyn artist William Lamson. Frequently engaging with elemental forces such as gravity, wind, and tides, Lamson uses the time-bound mediums of performance and video to explore the limitations of human control and the material nature of time. This show marks the first occasion that Artspace has turned over the entirety of the gallery space to an individual artist.

In his new video, Time is Like the East River, Lamson takes New York's East River as his subject matter, addressing the transitions that occur with the crossing of thresholds and boundaries. The video opens with Lamson and a friend paddling two small boats toward each other from opposite sides of a broad body of water. Upon meeting in the middle, the boats link together, revealing that each boat was in fact half of a seventeen-foot canoe. As the two paddle into the distance, the camera (located on the Manhattan Bridge) slowly zooms out, revealing a radiant Manhattan skyline. Shot at slack tide, the moments between the change in direction of tidal currents, the normally turbulent river appears as calm a lake. Only in this transitional state, when the river changes directions and time is seemingly arrested, is Lamson's passage possible. The artist's homemade props and artifacts from the performance will also be on view in the gallery.

In conjunction with this video, the exhibition features two new site-specific works including a 40-foot wall drawing that evokes a theoretical timeline. The drawing is made from fuses and firecrackers, materials that both signify singular moments and lengths of time. Lamson subverts the traditional timeline progression, creating the drawing by lighting the fuse from both ends. In the adjacent room, a similar record of an event remains in the form of a series of lines of video tape stretched tight between arrows shot into opposing walls. At the end of the room, a sculpture consisting of two bows mounted in opposite directions hint at the unseen performance behind the installation. Experimental in nature, these performative works address the measurement of time and make manifest the liminal space between opposing forces.

William Lamson lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He has exhibited nationally and internationally; his work is in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum and the Dallas Museum of Art, among numerous private collections.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

The public opening of "Long Shot," scheduled for The Lot tomorrow, postponed til Sunday

Artspace
50 Orange St, New Haven, (203) 772-2709
The Lot: Long Shot
Sept. 12, 2009—Jan, 2010
Public opening at The Lot: rescheduled to Sun., Sept. 13, 2—4 p.m. with pick-up basket ball game

Press release

The public opening and pick-up basketball game for Long Shot, originally scheduled for tomorrow, Sept. 12, has been postponed due to a rainy forecast.

NEW DATE: Sunday, Sept. 13, 2—4 p.m. in The Lot at 812 Chapel Street, New Haven.

Long Shot will complement Lamson's solo exhibition at Artspace in November 2009, a comprehensive exhibition of his work to date.

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Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Saturday pick-up b-ball opening at The Lot in New Haven

Artspace
50 Orange St, New Haven, (203) 772-2709
The Lot: Long Shot

Sept. 12, 2009—Jan, 2010
Public opening at The Lot: Sat. Sept. 12, 2—6 p.m. with pick-up basket ball game

Press release

William Lamson will install basketball backboards and hoops enlarged 2.5 times to the scale of The Lot's 25-foot high rigger poles. The poles define the perimeter of the 90' x 90' site and the interior open gravel plaza of about 20' x 40'. The result is the creation of a miniature basketball court of massive proportions. Artspace will provide basketballs to anyone who wishes to use the court through an exchange program with the gallery. You can use your own balls too—please play and enjoy!

The Lot is an 8,000 square foot pocket park located in downtown New Haven, CT. Situated between two highly trafficked streets in the historic and culturally diverse Ninth Square neighborhood, this formerly derelict parking lot was redeveloped in 2005 as a public transit site and green space for communal use. Long Shot continues in Artspace's tradition of expanding opportunities for public art and commitment to community. Lamson's basketball court will create a function for The Lot's underused space, promoting play, community interactions, and physical exercise; it will also activate an otherwise dormant, unkempt area.

Long Shot will complement Lamson's solo exhibition at Artspace in Nov., 2009, a comprehensive exhibition of his work to date.

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