neighborhood: boerum hill | space type: art & events | active since: 2009 | link: website, facebook, twitter
I’ve been hearing about Invisible Dog—a multi-floor interdisciplinary arts
center, filled with art studios, galleries, and event space—for a while, and I
was really excited when Ian Trask, the center’s first artist-in-residence,
invited me out to the opening for the group show Work/Space, to meet with him and see the place.

Named for the toy this repurposed factory used to produce, Invisible
Dog was started by Lucien Zayan, who saw the abandoned factory and fell in love
with it. “When I saw the building,” he told me, “the idea of
creating an art center with studios and event space came to me.” So he met
the owner and convinced him to go along with the idea. “And he was crazy
enough to follow me!”

Lucien’s
main goal is to support emerging artists from all over the world, and he says
there’s always a link from one show to the next. “One artist usually inspires me
for the next show. They give me an idea that makes me meet other artists.”
Invisible Dog has studio space for thirty artists, a rotating series of exhibits,
plenty of events, a theater residency program, and a store full
of weird and wonderful things.
Ian Trask
Ian’s art is often interactive, and we sat on one of his pieces while we
did our interview.
brooklyn spaces: How did you get involved
with Invisible Dog?
Ian: I was part of a group show here run
by Recession Art. I
met Lucien that weekend, and he liked my art, and he kind of let me start
hanging out in the basement. At the time it was filled with decades worth of old
factory stuff, like floor-to-ceiling stacks of spools of colored elastic,
buckets of belt buckles, all these materials that could generate inspiration for
the right people.
brooklyn spaces: You’re the space’s first
artist-in-residence, right? Did they make the program just for you?
Ian: Yeah, it hadn’t really been figured
out. There were really no terms, except that, if he let me use the found
materials, I would make a piece to give back to the space.

brooklyn spaces: What was the experience of
being the artist-in-residence like?
Ian: It was incredible, right from the
very first day. Lucien and I had been talking about how I might start using the
materials in the basement, and then I just came one day and he was like “Here’s
a key.” I figured I might as well show that I wanted to be here, so I went down
to the basement and started working. I came back upstairs after a while, and
there was a girl giving a cello performance, which was great. I went back
downstairs for an hour, came back up, and there was a bar set up and people
partying. Every time I came up there was something else going on. I was like,
“How’s this even happening? What is this place?”

brooklyn spaces: Do you have a particular fond memory from your
experience here?
Ian: The people have been a lot of fun.
I’ve had access to a wealth of information. And the exposure the residency has
offered me is amazing. I met a guy this weekend who runs a group called Figment, and he said
he could get me into that show. Plus I’ve done fun things, like Lucien asked me
to create something for a kids’ art fair, which was run by the bilingual
elementary school down the street. They wanted to have art-making sessions where
the kids could go home with a project, so I made pieces for them to make small
caterpillars out of cardboard, yarn, and shredded paper. It was pretty fun.
brooklyn spaces: Has the residency given you
the opportunity to explore your art in new ways?
Ian: Oh yeah. This piece we’re sitting on,
it’s the first time I’ve done anything interactive with cardboard, and I got a
really great response.

brooklyn spaces: Did people sit and stomp on
the art?
Ian: All day long. I have pictures of
people of every age stomping on it, lying on it, little kids were running and
jumping on it. I had originally wanted to create the piece standing upright, and
at like midnight two days ago, I tried to stand it up and it all just exploded.
I had to do it all over. And as kind of a second option I decided to let people
walk on it, and it turned out to be a much better idea. So, you know, small
discoveries like that. It was just a really nice fellowship. Plus I’ve developed
a really nice friendship with Lucien. He continues to push me, tries to get me
involved in other projects. So obviously it’s gone beyond just my twelve-month
term. It’s propelled me along my artistic journey.
***
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