Levan Mindiashvili : BORDERLINES

January 16th, 2014 – February 4th, 2014

Opening Reception: Friday, January 17th, 7-9pm 

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Levan Mindiashvili has been making work about urban landscapes that inform our sense of identity and the intimate connections we make with the spaces we inhabit since 2012. In 2003 he graduated from Tbilisi State Academy of Arts (Republic of Georgia) and the same year started intensively exhibiting his works in Europe. From 2008 – 2012 he lived and worked in Buenos Aires, Argentina where he received his MFA from the National University of Art of Buenos Aires

Mindiashvili’s new series, entitled Borderlines, is a study of his reflections on cities as both public and private meeting points. Originally conceived in Buenos Aires, this recent body of work explores the artist’s personal and collective experiences with the architecture and public structures of New York, where he is currently based. It is through his renderings of reflections amongst monumental objects, combined with a uniquely subjective reinterpretation of urban stimulation/inundation, that he reveals his complex and evolving personal relationship with the city.

Borderlines is an investigation into the sediment of his global experience, the invisible realities that have been burned into his subconscious country by country, city by city, block by block. “Generally, architecture most clearly defines and reveals the changes in our contemporary world, in our approaches and common visions,” says Mindiashvili.

His new work depicts distorted, almost abstract fragments of old architecture reflected on new, transparent surfaces or seen through them. “I perceive them as maps of consciousness of the contemporary world with its migrations, gentrification, identity and social issues,” the artist explains, “I want to trigger a dialogue about recent history.” The idea that a personal history is valuable and that the reflected perception of each individual dictates the overall substance and spirit of the larger urban landscape is deeply rooted in his intentions.

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TOTALLY GAY FOR SPORTS

Curated by Paul Brainard at The Lodge Gallery

December 13th, 2013 – January 12th, 2014
Opening Reception: Friday, December 13th, 7-9pm

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Artists Include: Paul Brainard, Chris Caccamise, Peter Daverington, TM Davy, Franklin Evans, Evie Falci, Dawn Frasch, Duncan Hannah, Kurt Kauper, Hyun Jin Alex Park, Jean Pierre Roy, Tom Sanford, Lane Twitchell, Eric White, Barnaby Whitfield, Kelli Williams

Self-actualization is defined as the process by which an individual achieves a more authentic version of oneself; a realization of one’s full potential. Sports, or more specifically, the athlete engaged in a sport, are often seen as a celebration of this process. The Olympian. The champion. The lone long distance runner determined to consistently improve on her performance. Pushing the boundaries of our known human limitations.

This journey of self-discovery is possible if the individual is free to address their personal nature and discover what lies within. We’ve forgotten this. The relatively recent celebritification of athletes, and the mania of modern fan culture, has changed the game.

It is from this perspective that we have arrived at our current position; “Totally Gay for Sports” combines an irreverence for the culture of sports celebrity while wrestling with one of the major issues of our time, equality for all.  -Paul Brainard

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HEROES

October 15th, 2013 through November 1st, 2013

Opening Reception: Tuesday, October 15th, 6-8pm

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The Lodge Gallery is pleased to present “HEROES”, the first group exhibition by Lower East Side artist collective Glassine Box. The show, coinciding with Glassine Box’s 2nd anniversary, features works by Adam GreenArturo VegaChad MooreChristopher YeringtonColin BurnsFabrizio MorettiJack Ridley IIIJack WallsJohnny T YeringtonMarcel CastenmillerMike Langley,Molly RaeSara Anne Jones, and The Virgins.

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Orlando Arocena / Traversing the Vector, August 2013 – The Lodge Gallery

New Works by Orlando Arocena
August 22nd through September 5th, 2013
Opening Reception: Thursday, August 22nd, 6-8pm

Republic Worldwide is proud to present the opening reception of Traversing the Vector, an exhibition of newly created digital vector transfers on wood by artist Orlando Arocena. This exhibition, the premiere of The Lodge Gallery’s experimental new program, The Gradio Initiative, will showcase Arocena’s celebrated mastery of digitally created artworks utilizing vector as a tool in it’s purest form. Arocena’s use of this software transcends the traditional use of the medium and has created a new precedent in the field of art and design. Never static, the motion that Arocena creates through his layers of varying intensity, color, and form is dynamic and vibrant. Within these compelling works, there are suggestions of abstracted landscapes, corporeal and archetypal forms. Accompanying his one of a kind, hand transferred works of art, there will be an array of grouped sequential panels illustrating the process behind his work.

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Ted Riederer / Only Forever, September 2013 – The Lodge Gallery

September 7th, 2013 – September 21st, 2013

http://nycartscene.info/post/60850377096/ted-riederer-the-lodge-gallery-nyc

Opening Reception: Tuesday, September 10th, 6-8pm
(Featuring performance by HOLYMAN)

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The Lodge Gallery invites you to experience the work of Ted Riederer. This two week ensemble set will consist of paintings, sculpture, photography, and interactive old media analog assemblage, all of which provide a deep view into a more intimate body of work by Riederer, best known for his critically acclaimed international performance project, “Never Records.”

“In My Memories, Wheels Make Melodies,” an interactive bricolage of guitar and bicycle parts, allows visitors to produce looped melodies from a fixed set of notes and percussive elements. The melodic elements are constant, but, by varying speed and direction, an infinitely variable melody is possible. It is here that we are introduced to the leitmotif of this exhibition and Riederer’s continuing body of work: We are empowered to create our own path. Paired with a single devotional painting of a woman entitled “Rose”, we can add: love enables us to break life’s fixed loops, to find beauty within the banal.

An array of flaming guitars (“Your Love Is Never Going to Survive The Heat Of My Heart”) line the gallery, oil paintings made with old master mediums and leaded glass powder that, as Riederer explains, “is related to a quasi Shinto belief that objects can be conduits of the divine. The guitar is an existential symbol. Are we instruments? Are we being played? The flames engulfing the guitars depict transmutation. Of course there is also the rock and roll references which are tongue and cheek, but I am always exploring the redemptive power of music and music communities by manipulating the symbols of music.”

Also filling the space is the warm sound of Bing Crosby’s voice, a looped vinyl record repeating the words “Only Forever” on a vintage turntable. This repeated phrase simultaneously answers and raises questions that Riederer continuously brings forth with this work. At the center of the record is a label stamped with an overhead view of a spiral staircase which, as the record spins, infinitely ascends or descends.

A “one-time refugee from punk and sometime band member,” Ted Riederer has armed himself with painting supplies, electric guitars, amplifiers, old LPs, record players, drum kits, hard disk recorders, photography equipment, a vinyl record lathe, and long-stemmed roses as he’s ambled artistically from the Americas to the Antipodes. His work has been shown nationally and internationally including exhibitions at PS1, Prospect 1.5, Goff and Rosenthal Berlin, Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, Jack Hanley Gallery (San Francisco), Marianne Boesky Gallery, Context Gallery (Derry, Ireland), David Winton Bell Gallery (Brown University), The University of South Florida Contemporary Art Museum, the Liverpool Biennial, and the Dhaka Arts Center, Bangladesh. His “Never Records” project has traveled from New York, to Liverpool, to Derry, to New Orleans, to Texas, and to London, which was sponsored by the Tate Modern.

Curated by Keith Schweitzer and Jason Patrick Voegele

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John-Dunivant

The Expatriate Parade / John Dunivant, September 2013 – The Lodge Gallery

September 25 – October 12, 2013

http://art-nerd.com/newyork/the-expatriate-parade/

http://www.papermag.com/2013/09/_the_fall_gallery_season.php

John-Dunivant

John Dunivant has achieved notoriety throughout the city of Detroit, and internationally, as the mastermind behind Theatre Bizarre. Self-funded and built by dozens of artists over the course of months the Theatre Bizarre would take place for one night each year and featured massive carnival rides, pyrotechnics, elaborate lighting rigs, and Coney Island-esque performers. Theatre Bizarreoperated for ten years before its discovery and subsequent closure by Detroit city authorities in 2010.

The Expatriate Parade features a series of paintings and bronzes inspired by the closure of Theatre Bizarre. Facing an existential crisis, Dunivant chose to embrace the turmoil of the situation, with the resulting works on view in The Expatriate Parade serving as a celebration of his “exile”.

“Once upon a time, there was an enchanted amusement park, hidden on the edge of a ragged city. For one night every year, this secret kingdom made itself known and sprang to life with fire and music and dance. – until the day it was exposed – and cast out.

The Expatriate Parade began as a single sketch of a scapegoat with a ferris wheel on its back. It bore my burden as it was driven from its home by an unfeeling and unseen power. This sketch led to many more, and the resulting parade of drawings – with its ceaseless forward motion in spite of the ever changing circumstances of the moment – led me to reflect on my own life. In the face of disintegrating relationships and a riot of personal challenges, I continue on. As we do. Each in our own exile from where we imagined we would be. This piece is a celebration of that exile.

My work grows from a variety of obsessions and fascinations; natural history museums, dioramas, Halloween, souvenir postcards, the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch, roadside attractions, reliquaries and religious iconography, traveling carnivals, ghost stories, children’s books, the Grand Guignol, John Singer-Sargent’s work, tribal rituals, folk and fairy tales, paper-toy theaters, secret societies, Dr. Suess, New Orleans funerals, wax museums, medical illustrations, P.T. Barnum and death. I paint the beautiful and the grotesque as a metaphor for both my internal struggles and the general state of mankind.  I paint life as seen through a lens of papier-mâché, poster paint and wax edifice.  I paint the characters that fill my life and my dreams and ultimately, tell my story.”

– John Dunivant, 2013

Theatre Bizarre now operates legally at the Detroit Masonic Temple where it will hold its 13th edition on October 19, 2013 and and is the subject of an upcoming documentary. Macabre in their imagery and sitting across numerous pop cultural narratives, the joy Dunivant takes from the subject matter inThe Expatriate Parade is evident, and fitting for an artist working far from the art world capitals in Detroit, facing its own existential crisis, with the attendant anxiety of loss, displacement, and fantasy of an unknown, perhaps better, future.

John Dunivant; In Conversation at The Lodge Gallery

Saturday Oct. 5th, 2pm

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Dunivant, an artist, visionary and founder of Detroit’s “Theatre Bizarre,” discusses his current exhibition, “The Expatriate Parade,” and the nationally renown immersive theatre he has created over the last decade. The paintings on view at The Lodge Gallery explore the world of “Theatre Bizarre” by depicting its inhabitants celebrating and embracing a dark and glorious march toward the unknown. Dunivant is a Kresge Fellow and was recently named as recipient of a Knight Foundation award.

Since the turn of the century, Theatre Bizarre has been rollicking in the darkness. First, by creating a phantasmagorical (and entirely illegal) theme park in the shadows of one of Detroit’s most dangerous neighborhoods. Providing an event worthy of its legendary status, built by an army of volunteers, it emerged for only one indescribable night a year. Each year it grew in scope and in detail, The New York Times exclaimed Over-The-Top! and Bizarre Magazine (UK) called it One of the greatest Halloween parties in the world! Until the city was forced to shut it down in 2010. Not to be dissuaded, Theatre Bizarre birthed a new world and revealed a new path in 2011. Lifting a veil on their own carnivalesque secret society and inviting the revelers to join them on a journey once more.

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Noah Becker, November 2013 – The Lodge Gallery

November 8 – December 1, 2013

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http://artefuse.com/picture-this-noah-beckers-sense-of-self-the-lodge-gallery/

This November the Lodge Gallery is excited to present the work of renowned artist Noah Becker with a solo exhibition of his portraiture and collage-like reconsiderations of art history.

Noah Becker’s interest in masterworks from different art historical periods is the foundation upon which he has built bold and ordered compositions. In his self portrait “photo bombing” series which references pop art or his audacious remix paintings made from renaissance and 19th century sources Becker surprises us with his daring subjective interpretations. When he appropriates Warhol and Basquiat, Becker injects his own image front and center. There is an immediacy in Becker’s work that serves to underline the “selfie” generation we have come to embrace as an inherent visual component of life in the twenty-first century. In this era, anyone with a smart phone or digital camera can take a photograph. The mass produced self images of artists as varied as Cezanne, Warhol and Caravaggio adorn both the walls of the worlds greatest museums and the cheapest of tote bags and refrigerator magnets. What purpose then do figurative paintings and self portraits continue to serve?

Even when appropriating and integrating the most expressive artistic styles such as Jasper Johns or Dash Snow into his work, Becker’s rendering of each stroke remains calculated. While Becker makes every effort to place himself into the cannon of master painters from history we are reminded in works such as Hamburger, 2013, that Becker’s head is firmly in the here and now. Advertisements for contemporary beer and soft drinks appear in the composition of Becker’s Caravaggio remix creating a hip hop and sports bar atmosphere within an art historical context.

Juxtaposed against these new works are a more recognizable series of beautifully rendered portraits that at first may seem to be fairly straightforward, however a deeper exploration of this earlier work reveals many of the same uniquely provocative suggestions that challenge the temporal parameters that define any artistic movement. Historical mash-ups of recurring celebrity themes in works such as Phillip IV in the costume of Tim Tebow, 2012 question how much the purpose and practice of portraiture has ever really changed.

Noah Becker is an acclaimed oil painter with exhibitions at numerous international museums and galleries. Becker is a jazz saxophonist and the founding editor of Whitehot Magazine. Noah Becker is also a contributing writer for Art in America, Interview Magazine, Canadian Art, the Huffington Post and ARTVOICES. Becker lives and works in New York City.

Curated by Jason Patrick Voegele and Keith Schweitzer. On view from November 8 – December 1, 2013

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Die Wunderkammer, March 2013 – The Lodge Gallery

March 21 – May 1, 2013

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Open to the public from March 21st through May 1st, 2013, Republic Worldwide deconstructs and reimagines the traditional Wunderkammer through works by over a dozen New York based contemporary artists that will stoke your sense of wonder and odd delight. Artists include Paul Brainard, Kate Clark, Lori Field, Aaron Johnson, Melora Kuhn, Dennis McNett, Hayley McCulloch, Pop Mortem, Lucia Pedi, Mac Premo, Graham Preston, Christy Rupp, Tom Sanford, Sigrid Sarda and Madeline Von Foerster. Curated by Keith Schweitzer and Jason Patrick Voegele.

The Wunderkammer, or “Cabinet of Curiosities,” evokes the encyclopedic wonder and spirit of discovery that was the glory of the European enlightenment. Historically, room sized displays of exotic oddities and artifacts were unceremoniously presented in salon style to fascinated general audiences who were hungry for natural science, culture and entertainment at the dawn of the age of reason. It could be described stylistically as a turned out junk drawer of the sublime.

“Die Wunderkammer; Objects of Virtue” celebrates our inherent fascination with the foreign and strange through an exhibition of paintings, sculpture, drawings, mixed-media assemblage, woodblock printmaking, multimedia works and interactive participatory installation. A series of performances, artist salons and additive artwork installations are scheduled throughout the run of the exhibition.

VIP Preview Reception March 20th (RSVP required):

Sponsored by Hendrick’s Gin, Hosted by Fig. 19

Produced in partnership with RIOT Development

Artinfo – 

http://blogs.artinfo.com/artintheair/2013/03/21/peeking-inside-die-wunderkammer-the-inaugural-exhibition-at-the-lodge/

The Lo-Down

http://www.thelodownny.com/leslog/2013/03/the-lodge-gallery-opens-with-group-show-die-wunderkammer.html

Quiet Lunch Magazine

http://quietlunch.com/die-wunderkammer-the-lodge/

Creep Machine

http://www.creepmachine.com/previews/die-wunderkammer-objects-of-virtue.html

NYC Art Scene

http://nycartscene.info/post/45384807836/die-wunderkammer-objects-of-virtue-the-lodge-gallery-nyc

Video

Quiet Lunch

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqmlBKkEDZ8

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For Which It Stands, June 2013 – The Lodge Gallery

June 28 – July 28, 2013

17 Artists from 13 countries around the world

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America has always been an amalgamation of immigrants who arrived here either yearning for a new life or thrust by circumstance into providence. For hundreds of years immigrants from every reach of the globe have passed through New York harbor to settle into new lives far from home. From wherever it is in the world they come, it is the shared experience of braving a new world together that has strengthened foreign-born New Yorkers to carry on together under the weight of constant irreversible change.

Along these generations have come the standard bearers of culture. These are the artists and musicians and poets from every continent putting into words and images their personal re-conceptualizations of what is home and what is foreign, what is progress and what is tradition. It is though their work that the grand and dynamic America experiment becomes illuminated.

So, what does the voice of this generation have to say for itself? What is it about the contemporary American experience that captures the imagination of today’s foreign-born and first generation artists? This summer Republic Worldwide picks up the flag in search of answers through the work of seventeen contemporary artists from around the globe.

Featured artists include Orlando Arocena, Raul Ayala, Chong Gon Byun, Liset Castillo, Alexis Duque, Alessandra Exposito, Kira Nam Greene (Courtesy of Accola Griefen Gallery), Jung S. Kim, Fay Ku, Annu Palakunnathu Matthew (Courtesy of Sepia Eye Gallery), Esperanza Mayobre, Levan Mindiashvili, Sirikul Pattachote, Shahpour M. Pouyan, Francesco Simeti, Saya Woolfalk and Siebren Versteeg.

Curated by Keith Schweitzer and Jason Patrick Voegele, “For Which It Stands” is open to the public from June 28 through July 28 at The Lodge Gallery, 131 Christie Street, NYC. For more information please call 917. 478. 7513 or visit thelodgegallery.com.

http://nycartscene.info/post/54110131026/for-which-it-stands-the-lodge-gallery-nyc

http://quietlunch.com/for-which-it-stands/

http://blog.artsinbushwick.org/post/55011741581/for-which-it-stands-shows-range-of-international

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Wolfbat Wave w/ Dennis McNett, June 2013 – Lodge Gallery

“WOLFBAT WAVE  – Anti Art”
Art & Skateboards with artist Dennis McNett 

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Presented by VANS
in The Pit @ Sara D. Roosevelt Park (at Broome St., NYC)
Saturday, June 22nd, 1pm – 6pm

an outdoor afternoon of art, skateboards & songs on the Lower East Side.

Gallery Reception across the street at The Lodge Gallery, 131 Chrystie Street from 6 to 8pm.guest appearances by skateboarders Andrew Allen, Julien Stanger & Tony Trujillo

Kids 17 and under are invited to “trick out” blank skateboard decks through an art workshop led by Dennis McNett.

Attendees of all ages will be treated to live music and exhibitions.

Skatedecks and art supplies will be provided free of charge, while supplies last, to those participating in the workshop.

1pm-2pm art workshop participants arrive
2pm-4pm art workshop led by Dennis McNett and fellow artists
4pm-6pm musical performances by Tony & Trixie Trujillo and more
6pm-8pm indoor reception of Dennis McNett’s artwork at The Lodge Gallery

http://www.thelodownny.com/leslog/2013/06/wolfbat-wave-and-summer-jam-featuring-dennis-mcnett.html

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