Showing posts with label Steven Kasher Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steven Kasher Gallery. Show all posts

09/01/25

Andrew Mer aka BigFusss presented by Steven Kasher Gallery @ Mitchell Algus Gallery, NYC - "Agog" Exhibition

Andrew Mer aka BigFusss: Agog
Steven Kasher Gallery, New York
@ Mitchell Algus Gallery, New York
January 16 - February 1, 2025

Steven Kasher Gallery presents an exhibition of photographs titled Agog by Andrew Mer aka BigFusss mounted at Mitchell Algus Gallery, 132 Delancey St., NYC.

Active in the artworld since moving to NY over 30 years ago, Fusss is exhibiting his photography for the first time. The 30 images chosen for this exhibition, shot 2020 to present, map New York City by day and by night. The city seduces Fusss. He stands agog, full of intense desire, ardent, camera at the ready.

BigFusss created his pictures via Instagram. He is our Instagram flâneur, our IG urban observer. It is worth quoting Baudelaire: “The crowd is his element, as the air is that of birds and water of fishes…. For the perfect flâneur, for the passionate spectator, it is an immense joy to set up house in the heart of the multitude, amid the ebb and flow of movement, in the midst of the fugitive and the infinite…. Or we might liken him to a mirror as vast as the crowd itself; or to a kaleidoscope gifted with consciousness, responding to each one of its movements and reproducing the multiplicity of life and the flickering grace of all the elements of life.”

You may have seen BigFusss traversing the city, phone glued to his ear. As he takes his meetings while walking he stops to shoot that special something that captures his eye. His eye is trained in film editing, trained to pick out salient moments. In a Fusss picture real things shatter, dissolve, become translucent, lose their fixed identity. They re-form as a glimpse of magic or a magical glimpse. No need to believe in ghosts to be haunted here, haunted by a past, a present, a future that do and don’t exist.

This exhibition brings together longtime friends and talented forces; Fusss credits Steven Kasher and Mitchell Algus for decades of training his eye, knowledge, and passion for art and photography.

Andrew Mer aka BigFusss is veteran of the independent film world as a producer, distributor and actor. Some of his recent projects include Taking Venice, The Melt Goes On Forever: The Art and Times of David Hammons, and The Art of Making It, The Remix: Hip Hop X Fashion. He was SVP Content and Business Development at SnagFilms. As a lawyer he originally moved to NYC as head of the New York office of Fine Arts Risk Management.

STEVEN KASHER GALLERY
@ MITCHELL ALGUS GALLERY
132 Delancey St, 2nd fl, New York 10002

18/11/18

Joan Lyons @ Steven Kasher Gallery, NYC

Joan Lyons 
Steven Kasher Gallery, New York 
November 15 - December 22, 2018 

Steven Kasher Gallery presents a major solo exhibition of pioneering feminist artist JOAN LYONS. Lyons (American, b. 1937) is one of the great unsung artists of her generation. The exhibition features nine of Joan Lyons’ pivotal photographic projects. This is the first gallery solo exhibition of the artist’s work since 2013. Joan Lyons’ groundbreaking work freely combines feminist theory and personal experience. Her work is intimate and introspective, questioning the indexical quality of photography.

Over the past six decades, Joan Lyons has employed a variety of difficult and obscure image-making processes. Her work spans a broad range of media including archaic photographic processes, pinhole photography, offset lithography, Xerography, screen-printing, and photo-quilt making. In the 1960s and 1970s, Joan Lyons was one of the earliest artists to adopt xerography as an artistic practice and was recognized as an innovator in the use of Haloid Xerox drawing as an image making process. In a 1982 artist statement Joan Lyons said “I work with what is available, a variety of optical devices. I work through complexity, to something simple and direct. This distillation process becomes more evident as time goes on. I work at those things that are evident; how I see, not conventions of seeing.”

Joan Lyons’ work defies every artistic taboo of the 1950s. She had been taught that contemporary art should be universal, gestural, abstract, monumental, qualities which are inherently masculine. After trying and failing to follow these mandates, Joan Lyons’ realized that her work could not be separated from her own experiences as a woman. Her personal narrative, different in content and tone from the dominant male voice, pushed her to establish new artistic structures.

Highlights from the exhibition include Untitled (Bedspread), 1969, the earliest work in the exhibition, is a sharp, ironic commentary on the status of women in the late 1960s. The repeated image of an anonymous, nude woman that has been screenprinted onto a fabric bedspread is a fierce response to the idea that women are best “barefoot and pregnant.” The work also references practices widely considered to be women’s work including sitchery, quilting and the “lesser” decorative arts.
 
In the Haloid-Xerox portraits, taken between 1972 and 1980, Joan Lyons’ utilized her own body in as a means of questioning photographic portraiture and female archetypes. The work is a deliberate attempt not to objectify women but to internalize their representation. Working in opposition to an instantaneous snapshot or a decisive moment, each image is a composite created over the course of many hours. The prints are the result of multiple transfers onto large sheets of paper using the original view-camera based flatbed Xerox equipment that yielded a carbon image on plain paper.

Artifacts, 1973, is a portfolio of 11 offset lithographs created in part as a response to Andy Warhol's soup can and other pop culture images. This body of work was informed by a desire to pay homage to the power objects in the artist’s home, items that ruled the artist’s everyday world.

Joan Lyons’ seminal 1974 work Prom is a ritual artifact, a trompe l’oeil deconstruction of her teenage daughter’s first prom dress. Like most of Joan Lyons’ work, Prom is conceptual and process based. The piece is comprised of six life-size sections of the dress, pressed like flowers onto six pages. The weave of the fabric itself replaces a conventional halftone screen, emphasizing the connection between printing and weaving. Prom was personal, concrete and feminine, a forceful contradiction of everything Lyons’ was taught that art should be.

In addition to her artistic practice, Joan Lyons was the Founding Director of the influential Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1972 – 2004. Under Joan Lyons’ direction, the VSW Press has been active in the evolution and definition of the field of artist’s books over the past three decades. Joan Lyons was responsible for the publication of over 450 artist’s books. The VSW Press also designed and produced books by photographers and writers, and titles relating to theory and historical inquiry in the visual arts. Joan Lyons is the editor of the highly influential annotated bibliography, Artist’s Books: Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1972–2008 (2009) and of Artist’s Books: A Critical Anthology and Sourcebook, (1986, 1988, 1991, 1993, 1995).

JOAN LYONS (b. 1937) completed a BFA at Alfred University, New York (1957), and an MFA at SUNY Buffalo, New York (1973). Since 1963 her work has been exhibited at major institutions worldwide including Museum of Modern Art, New York, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, DeCordova Museum, Arts Council of Great Britain, Center for Creative Photography, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Museo de Arte Contemporaneo, Sevilla, Art Gallery of Ontario, National Gallery of Canada and the Bibliothéque Nationale de France. Lyons’ work is found in permanent collections including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Minneapolis Institute of Art, Norton-Simon Museum, J. Paul Getty Museum, Yale University Art Gallery, DeCordova Museum, Museum of Modern Art, New York and the National Gallery of Canada. Lyons has published over 30 editions of her artist’s books since 1972. A retrospective exhibition, Maker/Mentor: Selected Work from Four Decades, appeared at the Rochester Contemporary Art Center in 2007.

STEVEN KASHER GALLERY
515 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10001

23/04/17

Ted Russell: Bob Dylan NYC 1961-1964 at Steven Kasher Gallery, New York

Ted Russell: Bob Dylan NYC 1961-1964
Steven Kasher Gallery, New York
April 20 – June 3, 2017

Dylan singing at Gerde’s Folk City, Greenwich Village, 1961
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

Dylan and Suze Rotolo, 161 W 4th St, 1961
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

Steven Kasher Gallery presents Ted Russell: Bob Dylan NYC 1961-1964, an exhibition of exceptionally early photographs of the 2016 Nobel Laureate in Literature. Russell, a New York based photographer still living in Forest Hills, depicts Dylan at key moments that established him as one of America’s greatest artists. He performs one of his earliest gigs, makes music and love in his first New York apartment with his first and most important muse, receives his first public award (in the company of James Baldwin) and writes some of his earliest songs. The exhibition features 40 black and white prints of recently discovered images never before exhibited in New York. The exhibition is accompanied by the 2015 Rizzoli book of the same title.

In November of 1961, Bob Dylan was 20 years old, a folk singer on the cusp. His first paid performances, mostly at Gerde’s Folk City, were attracting interest. His first review was just out, a surprising rave in the New York Times, which said “Mr. Dylan is both a comedian and a tragedian.” John Hammond was in the process of signing him to a major label and recording his first demo tapes. This included his first breakthrough original composition, “Song for Woody,” a song more contemporary and personal than any of its time and the template for all the singer-songwriter music of the 1960s and beyond.

In November of 1961, Ted Russell was a photojournalist working regularly for LIFE in New York when an RCA records publicist hired him to photograph their latest discovery, Ann Margret. Shortly after, the RCA publicist moved to Columbia Records and invited Russell to take some pictures of their new hire, Bob Dylan. Russell liked the idea, thinking a story on an up-and-coming Village folksinger could interest Life.

Ted Russell first shot Bob Dylan singing at Folk City. The next day he shot Dylan with his girlfriend, Suze Rotolo in their walk-up brownstone apartment at 161 West 4th Street. Rotolo worked for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and for SANE (The Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy). Dylan first wrote civil rights and anti-nuclear war songs under her influence and called her “the most erotic thing I’d ever seen.” In this 1961 set Dylan is adolescent, smooth, relaxed. He pretends to be unaware of the camera, but clearly basks in its gaze. On stage and off, he is a performer, a charmer of great suavity. He plays guitar and harmonica on stage, and on and off the mattress on the apartment floor. He takes his glasses on and off. He fiddles with Rotolo, who the camera also loves. The apartment is full of endearing personal effects: a wicker trimmed phonograph, a stuffed beagle, wine bottles on the floor, a framed reproduction of Roualt’s “The Old King”.

Dylan and Baldwin enjoying each other’s company 
at the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee’s Bill of Rights Dinner, 
New York City, 1963
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

In December of 1963, shortly after the assassination of JFK, Ted Russell photographed Bob Dylan and James Baldwin for Life as Dylan received the Tom Paine award from the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee. In a speech at the reception Dylan scandalized the audience by saying “Lee Harvey Oswald… I saw some of myself in him.” Baldwin’s affection for Dylan is manifest in his broad smile, and Dylan seems to reciprocate.

Daylight through the window, 161 W 4th St, 1964
Gelatin silver print
© Ted Russell / Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery

In 1964, again on assignment for Life, Russell photographed Dylan in his same Village apartment. Rotolo had broken up with Dylan, inspiring “Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright” and other great ballads. The Roualt on the wall has been replaced by the framed Tom Paine award. Dylan has traded in his guitar and harmonica for a typewriter and a telephone. By now Dylan is a recording star, and has written some of the most important songs of the century. He is older, more anxious. Russell even portrays him as a silhouette looking out a window, a classic pose for a dignitary in deep thought.

TED RUSSEL was born in London in 1930. He began photographing at age 10, and by age 15 was apprenticing in London's Fleet Street. The following year he worked as a stringer photographer for Acme Newspictures in Brussels. He later joined the staff of Now, an English language picture magazine, and then U.S. Army's Spotlight magazine. In 1952 he boarded the Queen Mary for New York, arriving with four cameras and $200. He was soon drafted and served as unit photographer with the U.S. Army's 2nd Engineers in the Korean War. After attending the University of California at Berkeley, he returned to New York and became a contributing photographer for Life magazine for over 12 years, shooting hundreds of domestic and overseas assignments. Later Russell did numerous advertising campaigns before ending up as Cover Photo Editor of Newsweek magazine for 11 years. His work has appeared in Life, Newsweek, Time, Saturday Review and New York magazines. His photographs have been exhibited at the International Center of Photography and Museum of Modern Art.

STEVEN KASHER GALLERY 
515 W. 26th St., New York, NY 10001