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Facing Fifth Avenue on the main floor of the building, the Amie and Tony James Gallery, at 365 Fifth Avenue (35th Street) is a focal point of the Graduate Center's campus and a conspicuous presence amidst its surrounding commercial storefronts. Under the leadership of its new director Linda Norden, the gallery is generating an ambitious experimental, mostly comtemporary, exhibition program. Its mission is to use these exhibitions to catalyze a dialogue between the contemporary New York art worlds and the scholarly community of the Graduate Center.

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The Amie and Tony James Gallery
The Graduate Center
The City University of New York
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10016

Gallery Hours:
Tues-Fri, 12:00-8:00 pm
Sat-Sun, 12:00-6:00 pm
Free

Contact:
Telephone: 1-212-817-7138
Fax: 1-212-817-1517
E-mail: jamesgallery@gc.cuny.edu

Linda Norden
Director
 
Anna Conlan
Assistant Curator
 
Ray Ring
Director of Building Design and Exhibitions
 
Chris Lowery
Assistant to Director of Building Design and Exhibitions


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The Amie and Tony James Gallery


Pepple Weekly exhibit - multicolor curtains
Photo: Lucien Castaing-Taylor

People "Weekly"

People "Weekly," the inaugural exhibition of the CUNY Graduate Center’s Amie and Tony James Gallery, is a sequence of six specially commissioned artist projects and a small "exhibition-within-the exhibition" curated by the gallery’s new director, Linda Norden. Norden describes People “Weekly” as a "group show in time." The exhibition is designed to introduce new artwork directly into the dynamic academic arena of the Graduate Center. The artists invited to contribute to People "Weekly" vary considerably, but each artist’s project responds in some way to the exceptional location and context of this midtown, public university gallery.

Now on View

Lucien Castaing-Taylor, “Sheep Rushes”
November 15–November 30, 2008
Producer: Lisa Barbash
Sound Editor: Ernst Karel

Exhibition Reception, with Lucien Castaing-Taylor
November 14, 2008, 6-8 PM

Screening, introduced by Castaing-Taylor and Barbash
November 29, 2008, 6-8:30 PM

 

“Sheep Rushes” is the title anthropologist/filmmakers Lucien Castaing-Taylor and producer Lisa Barbash have given to a series of video works recorded between 2001 and 2005 in and around the Absaroka-Beartooth range of Montana. With remarkable clarity, and uncompromising attention to the aesthetics of image and sound, they depict the birthing, herding and shearing of several thousand sheep on one of the last substantial family ranches in the American West. Castaing-Taylor and Lisa Barbash spent three summers filming on the mountainous public lands used to pasture these sheep, and almost five years editing the footage. In the process, they have also produced a feature-length documentary, "Sweetgrass," which will be released in 2009. At the James Gallery, "Hell Roaring Creek," "Into-the-Jug ("Geworfen")," and "Turned at the Pass" will be installed as continuous projections. On November 29th, Castaing-Taylor and Barbash will screen all eight of the video works, offering yet another variation on document and/as narrative. The videos reveal a world in which nature and culture, animals and humans, vulnerability and violence are all intimately meshed. At once beautiful and unsparing, they display a relentless attention to the aesthetics of image and sound.

Lucien Castaing-Taylor teaches in the Departments of Visual & Environmental Studies and Anthropology at Harvard, where he heads up the Film Study Center and the Sensory Ethnography Lab. Lisa Barbash is Associate Curator of Visual Anthropology at the Peabody Museum, Harvard University. Previous works of theirs include In and Out of Africa (1992), a long-form video about authenticity, taste, and racial politics in the transnational African art market, which won eight international awards, and has been exhibited and the subject of symposia at the British Museum and the Smithsonian Institution. Ernst Karel is a musician, sound artist, and phonographer who focuses on abstract soundworlds. In his solo work, he works with analog modular synthesizers, sometimes combined with acoustic sound sources, and phonography. He is the Assistant Director of the Film Study Center, and Manager of the Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard University, and has also collaborated with artist Helen Mirra on various sound works.

Pepple Weekly exhibit - multicolor curtains
Photo: Yunhee Min

People "Weekly"

Barbara Kruger Untitled
October 2 - February 28
(window installation)

Yunhee Min, For instance
October 2 – November 30

What You Wish For
October 8 – 22
Barbara Kruger, Justice, 1997
Rachel Mason, My Cabinet, 2004–ongoing
William Pope.L, One Substance, Eight Supports,
One Situation
, 2008
BIN (Version 2), 2008
Art Spiegelman, Breakdowns, 2008
Meredith James and Jacques Louis Ramon Vidal, True Stories, 2008
William Klein, In and Out of Fashion, 1998

Linda Pollack, Habeas Lounge
October 29 – November 6
(Rachel Mason, My Cabinet, continues)

Lucien Castaing-Taylor,with Lisa Barbash and Ernst Karel, Sheep Rushes, 2000-8 November 15 – November 30
(Reception, with the director and producer, November 14, 5-8 pm)

Daniel Joseph Martinez, the west bank is missing, i am not dead, am i, 2008 December 11 – January 4, 2009
(Reception, with the artist December 10, 6-8pm)

Thomas Torres Cordova, Everybody Loves the Sunshine, 2007; I wish you could color correct my films for the rest of my life, 2007
January 17 – January 31, 2009
(Reception with the artist, January 21, 6-8pm)

Yunhee Min, For instance
February 11-February 28, 2009
(Reception with the artist, February 19, 6-8pm)

 


New Director Brings New Directions to James Gallery



Previous exhibitions >


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Join The Gallery Associates

The Graduate Center invites you to join The Gallery Associates. Membership benefits include complimentary catalogues, invitations to opening receptions, selected lectures and concerts, visits to important private collections and artists' studios, behind-the-scenes visits to museums, private gallery talks, and listings in publications of The Amie and Tony James Gallery.

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