Brother Can You Spare a Stack?

Sunday, January 13, 2013


Exciting News:

My handmade book, Alphabet Sonatina was selected for inclusion in an exhibition at the Center for Book Arts in New York called Brother Can You Spare a Stack. My book was traveling with the Sketchbook Project in 2011 and is part of the Brooklyn Art Library's collection. 

This exhibition focuses on experimental libraries and how they contribute to social change or serve a community. The curator, Yulia Tinkonova, visited the Brooklyn Art Library on several recent occasions to browse through the sketchbooks from The Sketchbook Project, and the books were installed this past Wednesday from her final selection. The books are displayed under locked glass museum cases, but visitors will be able to look at the books from the page that they are open to, or appreciate the covers of each book. My name is credited in the museum display.


28 W 27th Street, 3rd floor, New York, NY 10001
212-481-0295 www.centerforbookarts.org

Opening Reception for

The Center for Book Arts' Winter Exhibitions


When:TT Friday, January 18, 2013, 6-8pm  
Where: TT28 W. 27th St., 3rd Floor, New York, NY  
Subway: N/R to 28PPthPP St, or F to 23PPrdPP St   
Admission: TTFree

The opening reception for the winter exhibitions at the Center for Book Arts is Friday, January 18 at 6pm. Admission to the Center's galleries is free and open to the public.


Brother, Can You Spare a Stack?

Organized by Yulia Tikhonova,  Brother, Can You Spare a Stack? presents thirteen important socially engaged and performative art projects that adopt, as a model for their interventions, the symbolic and practical role of the Library and the Librarian. Working outside conventional gallery settings, and deeply committed to serving and inspiring local communities, they pursue a shared vision of the Library as a force for social change. Small and mobile, these projects resist the limitations of a controlled, highly organized system that governs our society.

The artists in this exhibit employ their own hands-on craft skills to respond to the current state of the public library system. They design and build from scratch, using the Library as model, to create an interactive field. In these libraries, there is an exchange that goes beyond the conventional checking-in-and-out of books, one that includes conversation, discussion and group activities. Hence, the artists' libraries have been enthusiastically welcomed by communities that have previously lacked these more personal and generous forms of exchange.

The exhibit borrows its title from one of the best-known American songs of the Great Depression. These mobile and interactive projects challenge old-fashioned library stereotypes - calling on them to "lend their stacks" to these alternative models. They insert themselves into the most unexpected situations and spaces, in this case libraries, to propose social and cultural improvement.

The exhibition includes: Arlen Austin and Jason Boughton; Brett Bloom and Bonnie Fortune; Stephen Boyer; BroLab (Rahul Alexander, Jonathan Brand, Adam Brent, Ryan Roa, and Travis LeRoy Southworth); Valentina Curandi and Nathaniel Katz; Finishing School with Christy Thomas; Anna Lise Jensen and Michael Wilson; Jen Kennedy and Liz Linden; The K.I.D.S. with Word Up Collective, Eyelevel BQE, Launchpad, NURTUREart, Weeksville Heritage Center, and individual partners, as well as with Emcee C.M., Master of None;Annabel Other; Reanimation Library; The Sketchbook Project (Leslie Pearson); and Micki Watanabe Spiller. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue.





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