This new inter-disciplinary creative project space is located in the Presbyterian Building, a French Gothic
chateaux-inspired building on lower Fifth Avenue. In this architectural jewel with its diverse history, the organization is programming events and exhibitions in which young artists and seasoned curators have the chance to meet, engage and promote new collaborative projects.
Please contact Aaron Zulpo at 308at156@gmail.com to subscribe to our mailing list or for more information.
Gallery is located at 156 Fifth Avenue, Suite 308 NY
When creating
a garden, first be aware of a basic tenet. That water will take the shape of
any vessel into which it is put, and according to that shape, become good or bad.
Capital, like
water, tends to flow around obstacles. Dam its movement at one point, and it
will reshape itself to find its way around.
And so a
channel must be dug in such a way as to create a stream that flows in a
captivating manner. This flow can be
directed in part by different stones: Bottom Stones, Water-Splitting Stones,
Foundation Stones, Crosswise Stones, and Spillway stones. Stone groupings to
use for this purpose include Multilayered Shape, Crown Shape, Writing Desk
Shape, the Bucket Type, and so on.
No matter
how things flow, they should not be
made to appear contrived, but rather flow this way and that, without a
seemingly singular objective, from one edge of the hill to the other. With minimal regulation, freer
movement can open an area and expand it dramatically.
In an exhibition space dug out of the third floor of an office building,
the work of Sterling Wells, Anne Libby, Colin Oulighan, and Andrew Francis
is set in motion through the native angles of the site’s topography.