Scott Andresen
Karen Azoulay
David Brooks
Milton Carter
Kate Gilmore
Nate Kassel
Ai Kijima
Shana Moulton
Natsu
Brent Owens
Maria Pineres
Tanea Richardson
Whiting Tennis
Megan Whitmarsh
Vadis Turner
Saya Woolfalk
Saya Woolfalk
Julie Fishkin
The work in the exhibition represents strategies of both the self-taught and formally trained. Rather than making a distinction between these tactics, Common Jive argues that these artists, presenting a resurgence of dedicated artistry combined with a concern for conceptual rigor, are part of a contemporary communal discourse. Curated by Saya Woolfalk and Julie Fishkin.
Curated by Saya Woolfalk and Julie Fishkin
Artists: Scott Andresen, Karen Azoulay, Milton Carter, Kate
Gilmore, Nate Kassel, Ai Kijima, Shana Moulton, Natsu, Brent
Owens, Maria Pineres, Tanea Richardson, Whiting Tennis,
Megan Whitmarsh, Vadis Turner and Saya Woolfalk
Opening April 3rd at EFA Project Space, Common Jive presents a spectrum of contemporary
artists who summon up vernacular and traditional craft approaches in their art-making practice.
Organized in a collaborative effort between curator Julie Fishkin, and artist Saya Woolfalk, the
fifteen artists in the exhibition engage the dichotomy between communal pasts and the individual
experience, intertwining them visually through the manipulation of common materials and re-
examination of time-honored aesthetic practices.
The work in the exhibition represents strategies of both the self-taught and formally trained. Rather
than making a distinction between these tactics, Common Jive argues that these artists, presenting a
resurgence of dedicated artistry combined with a concern for conceptual rigor, are part of a
contemporary communal discourse.
Some of the artists look to traditional approaches as means to critique and investigate current
political or cultural concerns. Brent Owens conjures the aesthetic of Appalachian woodcraft with
his chainsaw carved sneakers and whittled basswood laces to comment on the generic nature of
mass production. The objects recall the familiarity of a pair of Nikes or Air Force Ones while
remaining a nameless copy, albeit a hand-made one of a kind. Nate Kassel embroiders throw
pillows, utilizing the language of domestic decoration, as an unexpected platform for his sarcastic
and humorous social commentary, while Maria Pineres uses the traditional craft of her Colombian
origins to create intricate needlepoint “paintings” that illustrate pop culture and its icons at their
most decadent.
Other artists in the show act as collectors, foraging for relics and combining them with
contemporary artifacts and visual icons. Milton Carter’s “Self-Portrait: A Hobo Pop-Up Shop” is
an accumulation representing the artist’s fascination with the life of “things” and lifelong collection
of esoteric ephemera found in local yard sales, thrift stores, and flea markets. With Scott Andresen
and Ai Kijima, scavenged material is integrated with a multitude of other materials in their work.
Andresen’s found artifacts or discarded detritus are woven into his detailed quilts, narrating the
lives of a thousand nameless individual histories, while Kijima also uses quilted collage to illustrate a
both a historical and contemporaneous commentary on the iconography of pop culture. In Megan
Whitmarsh’s new work “Color Work Station,” the artist constructs an impression of a studio or
what she calls a “meta studio.” Cheerfully awkward and self-conscious, the work “celebrates the
process of making art” while making the often private and perplexing artist’s workspace palpable.
Pushing the theatrical potential of hand-constructed elements, some artists construct platforms for
their own created narratives, building intricately detailed environments. Kate Gilmore’s sets are
designed to provide her self-played protagonist with an endless array of difficult physical tasks,
which she documents herself, dolled up in a variety of feminine frocks, obsessively attempting to
conquer. Karen Azoulay’s lush fabricated backdrops play more to the desires of whimsy. Although
satisfyingly fantastical, her materials and labor remain transparent, ever reminding us of the human
hand that created these mythic worlds. Shana Moulton engages in an imaginative interplay with
commonplace items, as her devised protagonist navigates possible magical properties of her home
décor.
Performances and workshops will be scheduled throughout the duration of the show held by the
collective CYA, artist Heather Hart, and other related artists.
For more information on the exhibition, including press materials and images, please contact
Michelle Levy, Program Director, michelle@efanyc.org, 212-563-5855 x 227
Opening reception, Saturday, April 3, 6- 8 pm
EFA Project Space
323 West 39th Street, 2 Floor
between 8th and 9th Avenues
Opening reception, Saturday, April 3, 6- 8 pm
free admission