Apexart

apexart is a not-for-profit art space in Lower Manhattan. Founded by artist Steven Rand in 1994, it was conceived to offer opportunities to independent curators and emerging and established artists, as well as to challenge ideas about art, its practice and curation. apexart realizes this mission through exhibitions, an international residency program, a book publishing initiative, public programs, and events. To date it has worked with over 1,500 artists from around the world in its exhibition and residency programs. 2013 marked the publication of apexart's fourth book, Life Between Borders: The Nomadic Life of Curators and Artists, a collection of essays on the nomadic nature of participants in the art world.

apexart has exhibited over 190 exhibitions and hosted over 130 residencies.

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

Exhibition Program

Presenting nine shows annually, apexart’s exhibition program seeks to put new people in the position of curator through three different initiatives: the invited curator series, Unsolicited Proposal Program, and Franchise Program.

Each year, apexart presents two exhibitions organized by invited individuals, three exhibitions selected through the Unsolicited Proposal Program, and four exhibitions selected from the Franchise Program. These last two programs are open call curatorial opportunities that allow anyone from anywhere to propose an exhibition to be presented by apexart at its Tribeca location (in the case of the Unsolicited Proposal Program), or elsewhere in the world (in the case of the Franchise Program).

Past invited curators include: David Bianculli, Leah Buechley, Dan Kois, Rob Walker, Greg Allen, Simon Critchley, David Byrne, Boris Groys, and Dave Eggers. Past Unsolicited Proposal Winners include: Alastair Noble (2014), Avi Lubin (2014), Martin Waldmeier (2013), Natalie Musteata (2012), Gary Fogelson and Michael Hutcherson (2011), Courtenay Finn (2010), and Sandra Skurvida (2009) Past Franchise winners include: Chuong-Dai Vo (Cambodia, 2014), Paul Falzone and Marisa Jahn (Uganda 2013), Katharina Rhode (South Africa, 2012), Corina Oprea, Isabel Löfgren, Judith Souriau, Milena Placentile, and Valerio Del Baglivo (Sweden, 2011), and Logan Bay (Thailand, 2010).

Residency Program

The apexart Residency is an alternative educational program that invites creative professionals to leave their familiar surroundings for a month-long stay in a foreign country. Inbound Residents travel to New York, while Outbound Residents are sent from New York to locations including Ethiopia, Thailand, and Brazil.

apexart provides each resident with a detailed schedule of daily activities, meetings, and unexpected new experiences designed to provide creative and professional development. The program is a geographical, historical, and intellectual exploration that combines the high and the low, art and non-art, and the mundane with the extraordinary and seeks to catalyze ideas for future work. Participants—from different disciplines and at different points in their career—are recommended by noted individuals from their home country who believe their practice could benefit from a non-working visit to a foreign country.

Publications

apexart’s publishing program examines timely issues in contemporary art and culture with new essays by members of the field from around the world.

In 2006, apexart published its first book, On Cultural Influence: Collected Papers from apexart International Conferences. This book, a compilation of essays presented at three apexart Conferences, offers a unique perspective of international viewpoints of the changing cultural landscape. Cautionary Tales: Critical Curating, published in 2007, asked academics, writers, and curators to consider how the proliferation of 'cultural producers' has changed the definition, evolution, and purpose of the curator over the last ten years. apexart’s most recent book, Playing by the Rules: Alternative Thinking/Alternative Spaces, published in 2010, addresses the perceived rules of the development and running of alternative spaces, and where those rules came from. The book provides new inspiration and fresh perspectives for those working in these spaces. 2013 marked the publication of apexart's fourth book, Life Between Borders: The Nomadic Life of Curators and Artists, a collection of essays on the nomadic nature of participants in the art world.

Public Program

To complement its exhibitions and residency, apexart also presents approximately 30 events annually that are designed to contextualize its activities for its audience, and provide opportunities for artists, curators and cultural thinkers to engage in conversation.

Founder

Steven Rand is an artist and the Founding Executive Director of apexart. When he created apexart in 1994, the original mission was to facilitate independent curators—a fairly new employment at that time—by giving them a space in which to experiment.

Rand's artwork has been exhibited in galleries and museums through Europe, Asia, and the United States, including The Permanent Light Installation for the European Patent Regional Office in Munich, Germany. His work was included in the 49th Venice Biennale, the Pusan Biennial, and is currently in numerous private collections. He has exhibited with Mark Pasek Gallery (New York), Wschodnia Gallery (Lodz), Awangarda Gallery (Wroclaw), ddm warehouse Gallery (Shanghai), Biblioteca Luis Angel Arango (Bogata), Ruth Benzacar Gallery (Buenos Aires), White Columns (New York), and has been represented by Schueppenhauer Galerie in Koln, Germany. Rand has been an internationally received lecturer, speaking to organizations such as Seoul Art Space_Geumcheon; Residency Unlimited; College Arts Association; The Contemporary Art Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii; Espao AGORA/CAPACETE; and BWA Wroclaw-Galerie Sztuki Wspolczensnej. Rand received an MFA from the University of Arizona in 1976.

References

[1] [2] [3]

apexart in the Press

  1. http://www.brooklynrail.org/2014/09/art/twenty-years-of-apexart-a-profile-of-founder-steven-rand
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-05-05. Retrieved 2015-04-25.
  3. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/11/arts/design/death-of-a-cameraman.html
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