Eliza Griffiths
Julie Voyce
Stephen Andrews
Glenn Ligon
Byron Kim
Paul Ramirez Jonas
Harrell Fletcher
Alexander Nagel
Gifts resist simple accounting in terms of exchange value. Even when they are materially useful things, the fact that they have not been purchased but offered as gifts gives them an added, intangible, symbolic value. Human beings don’t only eat and procreate; we make meaning out of things. Curated by Alexander Nagel.
Curated by Alexander Nagel
Gifts resist simple accounting in terms of exchange value. Even when they are
materially useful things, the fact that they have not been purchased but offered as
gifts gives them an added, intangible, symbolic value. Human beings don’t only eat
and procreate; we make meaning out of things. Gifts isolate and exercise that
meaning-generating faculty. Some anthropologists believe that gift-giving was one of
the first ways in which humans engaged in symbolic activity. That is, gifts may be
deeply linked to the activity of art-making.
How do the two terms, art and gift, define each other? This summer’s exhibition
results from putting that question to a number of artists and non-artists. Each
interview produced accounts of gifts given and received, and reflections on how those
gifts relate to artistic practice. Accounts of gift-giving led to the next giver or
recipient, who was in turn interviewed, leading to the next, and so on. The inquiry
brought forth a sequence of art works and some non-art objects that show how gifts
redefine the boundaries of artistic production, how they relate to other kinds of
exchange, and how they move inside and at the edges of the art market. The gift
chain that will course through the space of apexart thus prompts reflection on basic
definitions—on the definition of the work of art and on the boundaries of an artmaking
and art-collecting community.
Alexander Nagel is a writer and art historian who teaches at the University of Toronto.
A selection of gifts given and received by: Eliza
Griffiths, Julie Voyce, Stephen Andrews, Paul P.,
Glenn Ligon, Byron Kim, Paul Ramirez Jonas,
Harrell Fletcher, Harriet Sigal, Lisa Sigal, Amy
Sillman, Eric Banks, Jutta Koether, Richard Phillips,
Inez van Laamswerde and Vinoodh Matadin
Opening: Wed July 5, 6 - 8 PM
Apexart
291 Church Street 212 - New York
Gallery hours are Tues - Sat, 11-6.