Public Fiction

Last updated

Public Fiction is a curatorial project and quarterly publication based in Los Angeles. It was founded in 2010 by Lauren Mackler.

Graphic designer and curator Lauren Mackler moved from the east coast to L.A. to open Public Fiction in 2010. Public Fiction resides in an unmarked storefront in the Highland Park neighborhood of Los Angeles. Neither a commercial gallery nor a not-for-profit organization, [1] the space hosts exhibitions for three months on a theme, within which are staged solo shows, group shows, performances, artist talks, screenings, and dinners, connected to that theme, all of it culminating into a publication. The publication, inspired by other artist multiples such as Aspen, Semina by Wallace Berman and Vision magazine, includes a record of everything that happened within the series, but also presents new and additional content.

Though the space had already hosted several one night events, Public Fiction's first official exhibition, "Public Records," transformed the gallery into a "record" store, with a play on words between "collecting" and "archiving". The show centered on music, archives, and collections. For "The Free Church," its second show, artists turned the space into different iterations of a spiritual space for worship. The third iteration of the project was called the Manifest Destiny / Gold Rush series and addressed the impulse to move West, ambition and the economy. For this three-month period, one month was dedicated to a show of California artists on Entrepreneurialism, the second staged a functioning Hotel for east coast artists to come work west and the third presented a solo installation by artist David Hendren depicting a post-earthquake interior. The fourth Public Fiction series was held at the MoCA Geffen contemporary and was called "The Club". Mackler created a space and organized events addressing of social clubs, night clubs, and art clubs. Laura Owens did the poster for the series. The fifth series, was called "Theatricality and Sets" where for three months Public Fiction hosted an exhibition of artist using props, creating sets or staging a theater. The publication for this issue was called "The Lost Issue" and made jointly with "Lost In LA" a show curated by former Palais de Tokyo director Marc-Olivier Wahler. For the following "Foreign Correspondent" series, the whole space was turned into an anonymous office. In this presentation, the journal came out as a broadsheet, one week at a time, as Dispatches, [2] the broadsheets each presented an artist on one side and a writer on the other, the participants included Camille Henrot, Charlie White, Jonathan Lethem, Neil Beloufa, Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer and more.

In 2012, writer Andrew Berardini and Mackler the curated “Treating Shadows as Real Things,” in Torino at the Chapel of the Holy Shroud, Artists for this exhibition included Lucas Blalock, Anthony Lepore, Sarah Cain, Andrea Longacre-White, Giorgio de Chirico, Carlo Mollino, Samara Golden, Ry Rocklen, Mark Hagen. The Exhibition was presented as a tangent to the Artissima art Fair. Mackler and Berardini also organized "Set Pieces" at Milan gallery Cardi Black Box, including and inspired by the work of William Leavitt. [3]

In 2013, "The Stand In", an exhibition inspired by the surrealist model of the "exhibition as a medium", re-exhibited the same artists three times, for one month each. This was a collaboration with Alexandra Gaty.

For the 2014 Frieze Art Fair in New York, Public Fiction and Allen Ruppersberg reinvented "Al’s Grand Hotel", a project initially created by Ruppersberg in 1971 in Los Angeles. The hotel originally was open for six weeks and acted as a site for happenings, parties, performances and a place to sleep. Al's Grand Hotel was restaged as a fully functioning hotel installed within the fair, [4] with two rooms, and a lobby. Visitors could become guests of the hotel [5] and were allowed to book rooms to spend the night. [6]

Public Fiction was included in the 2014 Made in LA Biennial at the Hammer Museum, curated by Michael Ned Holte and Cornelia Butler. Mackler co-organized a double exhibition, within the main exhibition, titled "A Public Fiction" and "Tragedy + Time" with writer / curator Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer. The duo created a multifaceted and episodic series with revolving exhibitions taking place at the Hammer, Public Fiction's store front, and within a publication. [7]

Related Research Articles

Scott Benzel American musician

Scott Benzel, is an American visual artist, musician, performance artist, and composer. Benzel is a member of the faculty of the School of Art at California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA.

Andrew Berardini is an American writer known for his work as a visual art critic and curator in Los Angeles. Described as "the most elegant of all art critic cowboys", Berardini works primarily between genres, which he describes as "quasi-essayistic prose poems on art and other vaguely lusty subjects."

Maja and Reuben Fowkes are London-based curators, critics and art historians specialised in East European art history and contemporary art and ecology.

Sonia Khurana is an Indian artist. She works with lens-based media: photo, video, and the moving image, as well as performance, text, drawing, sound, music, voice, and installation.

Thaddaeus Ropac, is an Austrian gallerist specializing in international contemporary art. He founded the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in 1981, and represents today more than 60 artists with his galleries in Salzburg (Austria), Paris Le Marais, Paris Pantin and London.

Martha Friedman is a sculptor and college professor residing in New York City. Her work has been exhibited throughout the world in both solo and group exhibitions. Her primary exhibitor is Wallspace in New York. She has taught classes at The Cooper Union, Pratt Institute, Princeton University, Rutgers University, Wesleyan University and Yale University.

Anton Vidokle

Anton Vidokle is an artist and founder of e-flux. Born 1965, Vidokle lives in New York and Berlin.

Jeffrey Deitch American art dealer and curator

Jeffrey Deitch is an American art dealer and curator. He is best known for his gallery Deitch Projects (1996–2010) and curating groundbreaking exhibitions such as Lives (1975) and Post Human (1992). Deitch was director of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA) from 2010 to 2013. He currently owns and directs Jeffrey Deitch Gallery, an art gallery with locations in New York and Los Angeles.

LEO XU Projects is a contemporary art gallery based in Shanghai exhibiting young and international artists.

Simone Leigh American artist from Chicago (born 1967)

Simone Leigh is an American artist from Chicago who works in New York City in the United States. She works in various media including sculpture, installations, video, performance, and social practice. Leigh has described her work as auto-ethnographic, and her interests include African art and vernacular objects, performance, and feminism. Her work is concerned with the marginalization of women of color and reframes their experience as central to society. Leigh has often said that her work is focused on “Black female subjectivity,” with an interest in complex interplays between various strands of history.

Glenn Barkley is an Australian artist, independent curator and writer based in Sydney, Australia. As an artist he is represented by Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney, Niagara Galleries, Melbourne and Mindy Solomon Gallery, Miami and his works are held in institutional collections such as the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra and Artbank.

Helene Winer is an American art gallery owner and curator. She co-owns Metro Pictures Gallery in New York City with Janelle Reiring. Her career deeply involved the postmodern artists of the 1970s and 1980s known as the Pictures Generation. She lives in Tribeca.

Cesar Garcia is a Mexican-born American scholar, writer, curator, and educator. He is the founder and current director and chief curator of The Mistake Room, in Los Angeles.

Dianna Molzan is an American contemporary artist and painter based in Los Angeles. Thus far in her career, she is known for exploring the relationship between painting and sculpture through deconstruction and materialization of traditional painting materials and tools.

David Thorp

David Thorp is an independent curator and director. He curated GSK Contemporary at the Royal Academy of Arts and Wide Open Spaces at PS1 MoMA New York, among many others. He was Curator of Contemporary Projects at the Henry Moore Foundation and was also director of the South London Gallery, The Showroom and Chisenhale. He has been Associate Director for Artes Mundi, the biannual contemporary art exhibition and prize at the National Museum of Wales, and following the death of Michael Stanley in late September 2012 was appointed Interim Director at Modern Art Oxford. He was a member of the Turner Prize jury in 2004. Since the beginning of 2005 David Thorp has been an independent curator organising and initiating various projects in the UK and abroad. Thorp has held the positions of International Adjunct Curator at PS1 MoMA New York, Associate Curator at Platform China, Beijing, Curator of the Frank Cohen Collection, one of the most important collections of contemporary art in the UK.

Courtenay Finn is an American curator. She is the curator at the Aspen Art Museum, since January 2014.

1:54 is an annual contemporary African art fair held in London during the October Frieze Week since 2013. It was organized to improve the representation of contemporary African art in worldwide exhibitions, and is the foremost art fair dedicated to contemporary African art in the primary art market. By 2016, the show had become three times the size of the original exhibition with 130 artists represented. A spin-off, pop-up show, 1:54 NY, has been held annually in New York City during the May Frieze New York since 2015. Critics have described 1:54 as a highlight of the Frieze event, and wrote that the show's publicity for contemporary African art outweighs the issues of lumping disparate geographic traditions together. The fair's representation from African galleries has improved as the international market for African art expands.

Carole Ann Klonarides is an American curator, video artist, writer and art consultant that has been based in New York and Los Angeles. She has worked in curatorial positions at the Santa Monica Museum of Art (1997–2000) and Long Beach Museum of Art (1991–95), curated exhibitions and projects for PS1 and Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), Laforet Museum (Tokyo), and Video Data Bank, among others, and been a consultant at the Getty Research Institute. Klonarides emerged as an artist among the loosely defined Pictures Generation group circa 1980; her video work has been presented in numerous museum exhibitions, including "Video and Language: Video As Language", "documenta 8," "New Works for New Spaces: Into the Nineties,", and "The Pictures Generation, 1974-1984", and at institutions such as MoMA, the Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum, Contemporary Arts Center, the New Museum, The Kitchen, and School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2016). Her work belongs to the permanent collections of MoMA, the Whitney Museum of American Art, Getty Museum, Centre Pompidou, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Museu-Fundacão Calouste Gulbenkian (Lisbon), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (Madrid), and National Gallery of Canada, and is distributed by the Video Data Bank and Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI).

Mari Spirito is an American curator based in Istanbul and New York. She is the Founding Director and curator of Protocinema, a non-profit arts organization realizing site-aware exhibitions around the world, in cities including Istanbul, New York, Tbilisi, Paris, Seoul, New Delhi, Moscow, East Lansing, Basel, and Lima.

Petrit Halilaj is a Kosovar visual artist living and working between Germany, Kosovo and Italy. His work is based on documents, stories, and memories related to the history of Kosovo.

References

  1. "Night Gallery, Museum of Public Fiction and Other Eastside Experiments". L.A. Weekly. Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  2. Sue Bell Yank. "The Museum of Public Fiction: Collaboration in Highland Park". KCET.
  3. Yasmine Mohseni. "Milan Gallery Imports L.A. Art Scene for Angeleno-Only "Set Pieces" Exhibition - BLOUIN ARTINFO". Artinfo.
  4. Kennedy, Randy (2014-05-08). "Frieze Restages Ruppersberg's 'Al's Grand Hotel'". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  5. Kennedy, Randy (2014-05-09). "A Night at 'Al's Grand Hotel,' at the Frieze Art Fair". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2015-10-28.
  6. Noura Wedell. "Public Fiction". Flash Art International.
  7. Los Angeles Times (13 June 2014). "Public Fiction is collectively in Hammer Museum's 'Made in L.A.'". latimes.com.