Showing at Brooklyn Fire Proof in the The Williamsburg area.
This event has ended.
Media: Painting, Installation
What stereotypes and personal associations do we attach to the word "grandma"? This exhibition invited artists to contemplate their own experience of family, memory, and the cultural divide between youth and old age. Who remembers grandma without thinking about growing older, about being old, loneliness, fulfillment, and deathÉ
Chris Bogia uses string and nails and lots of yarn to make flowerpots in appreciation of crafty old ladies' home décor. Matt Borruso made a grotesque school portrait of a young-old person with a huge red nose and oversized ears. Stacy Fisher connects her Grandma and new Grandma-in-law with a spaghetti & meatballs sculpture made from patterned fabric and paper maché. Hein Koh remembers her grandmother's native home through the endless amounts of chili peppers she dried on straw mats in the living room. Jeffrey Ralston assembles bright collages deconstructing his mother's drawings of Aunt Ruth's memories of Grandmother's house in Fountain Bridge, GA. Deb Sokolow maps the paranoid delusions of questionable tenants in a Chicago apartment building and its gossipy 80 year old superintendent, Abby (a.k.a "Grandma"). Ann Toebbe channels Grandma Moses in faux-folksy paintings of her childhood memories of her grandmother's farm in Southern Indiana.
Exhibition organized by Ann Toebbe.
From 2008-07-31 To 2008-09-07
Free
From 12:00 To 18:00
by appointment
Closed on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays
L to Lorimer Street or G to Metropolitan Avenue, 8 block walk
101 Richardson St., Top Fl., Brooklyn, NY 11211
Phone: 7183024702
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