ugly art room
space type: art gallery | neighborhood: greenpoint | active since: 2010 | links: website, facebook, twitter
Ugly Art Room is a lovely little contradiction. They don’t have an art room, and the art they’ve got is certainly not ugly. They’re a group of four—Jen, Scott, Julie, and Martin—that make up a roving curatorial art project, putting on site-specific shows in nontraditional venues, including the Parlour Brooklyn hair salon, Brouwerji Lanes, The Gutter, Dandelion Wine, and Paulie Gee’s pizzaria, among others. Their aim is to explore the relationship between the artwork presented and the venue in which it’s displayed.
Ugly Art Room has their headquarters in the Terminal Building in industrial Greenpoint, along with the Fowler Arts Collective. They’re incredibly busy, having put on eleven shows and featured over a hundred Brooklyn artists in the year they’ve been active. In addition, Jen runs the popular neighborhood blog Greenpointers, and Scott is the director of the Distillery Gallery in Boston. For the incredible Bring to Light New York festival, Ugly Art Room contributed “Peep Show,” essentially a walk-up set of View-Masters, where several photographic works were displayed stereoscopically. Next up they have a collage show called “All That Remains” opening at Picture Farm on October 21st and running through November 19th. Definitely check it out! But first check out my interview with Jen and Scott.
Scott: We actually want to start by saying
that we’re really excited to be on Brooklyn Spaces, because we pride ourselves
on the fact that Ugly Art Room doesn’t have a space. We only put on shows in
venues that aren’t typically art-designated. I think showing art in alternative
venues is absolutely a legitimate way of exhibiting these days. We’re able to
expose so many more people to art.
brooklyn spaces: Okay, so tell me about
doing “Peep Show” at Bring to Light. What was that experience like?
Jen: It was unbelievably great. The light
show is a big outward display, so I wanted to bring it inward and make our piece
a more intimate experience. I’m a photographer myself, which means I’m a very
harsh judge of photography, so I like that we presented it in a really unique
but also weirdly traditional old-school way.
brooklyn spaces: How was the audience
response?
Scott: It was awesome. There was always a
crowd of people waiting to see what it was. Curiosity for us is key. People
couldn’t just see something projected on the side of a building and then keep on
walking. They had to want to see what everyone else was seeing.
Jen: That was another idea behind it, that
the viewer would become part of the show, because while you’re viewing, you’re
being viewed. That’s what we were doing too, standing off to the side watching,
listening to people’s reactions. We got such a kick out of it.
brooklyn spaces: Tell me about some other
shows you guys have done.
Jen: We did one called “Opening Rejection,” which was a 6 x 6 x 6 white
cube with all the art bolted to the walls inside. Scott built that, It was its
own piece of artwork with artwork inside. He’s basically a wizard; he
built “Peep Show” too.
Scott: “Opening Rejection” was
cool because we got to put it on in two different places. First it was part of
Northside Open
Studios. They closed Bedford Ave for Williamsburg
Walks, and we put the cube on the street and watched hundreds of people
walk by, kind of wonder “What’s going on here?” and then go in and figure it
out. That was super. And then we put it on Governor’s Island for the 4Heads Fair, which was a blast.
Another cool show was “B Is for Bear,” which we put on in a daycare
center as party of Bushwick Beta Spaces. That was another event we were so
lucky to be a part of, because it was so well put together and so well
attended.
Jen: Another show we did was “Landing Jam,” which Martin curated. It was in
Greenpoint, in the skylit hallway of a third-floor walk-up, and all the work was
abstract painting. It was art I didn’t initially relate to, but the way he put
the show together and the feeling of it inside the space was terrific. I think
it was one of the best examples of what Ugly Art Room does.
Scott: There’s a new show that Martin is
working on, it’s a two-person show, with one painting from each person, and
we’re going to reuse the 6 x 6 x 6 cube, but it’s going to be in a boxing ring,
so you’ll actually climb up into the ring, into the mini-gallery, to view these
two paintings facing each other. He describes the work as very ego, very
self-involved.
brooklyn spaces: What are your thoughts on
being artists and curators in Greenpoint?
Jen: We love Greenpoint! Ugly Art Room
started during Greenpoint Open Studios. The sense of community and the
support for the arts here, not only among artists and art enthusiasts but also
among local businesses, is phenomenal. Fowler had a big opening and where twenty
local businesses donated hundreds of dollars worth of gift certificates and
merchandise for raffle.
brooklyn spaces: Are you inspired by living
in Brooklyn?
Jen: Oh yeah, Brooklyn’s awesome. It’s
always been a place that has identified itself outside of Manhattan. It has its
own identity and its own grit and feel.
Scott: There’s so much talent here, the bar
is set so high. You really have to give it so much more than your all in order
to pull it off here, and that’s great. People respect it, people acknowledge it,
people come out and support it. When you do put out the effort, it’s recognized,
it’s not just lost in the shuffle.
Jen: It’s also a place where you can build
your own community, your own scene. Ugly Art Room is building a community of art
appreciators who look for art outside of traditional galleries, and I think
Brooklyn is the perfect place to do that. A lot of people are here because
they’re not into the art scene in Chelsea and they want to do something
different.
brooklyn spaces: What are your goals for the
future?
Jen: We want Ugly Art Room to continue to
put shows in unique locations and be able to sustain itself doing that. I want
to continue to show Brooklyn artists, but at the same time, I think it would be
cool for Ugly Art Room to expand. New York’s awesome, Brooklyn’s awesome, but
there’s an entire world of weird places out there.
***
Like this? Read about more art galleries: Wondering Around Wandering, 950 Hart, Concrete Utopia, Central Booking, Invisible Dog, Micro Museum, See.Me