September 2010 Archives


A video was made for the exhibition at Galerie West in Den Haag. It has a new instrumental track from the upcoming Former Ghosts album. The song is called "Trust."
The video can be seen here:
http://www.galeriewest.nl/site.php?idsub=exhibitions&single=10_09_David_Horvitz&show=more1

General Public Library
The General Public Library is a library/reading room project organized by Art in General Designer in Residence Mylinh Nguyen, in conjunction with the upcoming launch of six 2009-2010 New Commissions publications designed by Nguyen during her residency.
From September 16-November 13, 2010 the Storefront Project Space gallery will be made into a reading room, which will be accessible as an online resource as well. To start the library, Nguyen invited designers, publishers, curators, artists, galleries, and musicians to contribute publications to the project that reflect the donor’s practice, methodology, inspiration and interest. Visitors are encouraged to donate a favorite book to the library during the exhibition.
Contributing participants include Art Metropole, aaaarg.org, Ooga Booga, Fillip, Printed Matter, Nieves, 2nd Cannons Publications, Capricious, Hassla, Golden Age, Medium Rare, Oslo Editions, Gottlund Verlag, Eastside Projects, Bedford Press, Stripe SF, New Jerseyy, Matt Keegan, North Drive Press, Project Projects, split/fountain, STUPENDOUS, The Holster, Bart de Baets, Andreas Banderas, Christian Brandt, Task Newsletter, Robin Cameron, Dante Carlos, ETCAMA, For Further Information, Espen Friberg and Aslak Gurholt Rønsen, GRAPHIC, David Horvitz, Marie Jager, Kingsboro Press, Zak Kyes, Lucky Dragons, Manystuff, Jennilee Marigomen, Miniature Garden, Radim Pesko, Laurel Ptak, Rollo Press, Peter Sutherland, Swill Children, Vance Wellenstein and YOU.
A piece I made for the Wattis Institute in San Francisco earlier this year made it's way into the Mark Dion exhibition at the Oakland Museum. I've been told, it's at the "contemporary art curator's desk."
The original piece, consisted of initiating the giving of gifts (a framed photograph of a Brooklyn flower vendor's appropriated shopping cart full of flowers and a real flower from a street vendor in the Mission in San Francisco) from the Wattis Institute (not me) to various Bay Area art organizations and institutions.

I started a new monthly series of editions whose price is equal to the cost of my studio rent.
More info here:
http://davidhorvitz.com/studiorent
On the occasion of the Carry-On exhibition, Galerie West will publish a 16 page booklet with a text by Helga Just Christoffersen about the exhibition. (These will be printed on Arctic paper with metallic inks, nice...........).
This will be available from the gallery, and can be requested from the gallery for those who can't see the exhibition.
Here is a PDF of the text:
http://davidhorvitz.com/haag/Horvitz_David_text.pdf
Publication is available here:
http://www.galeriewest.nl/site.php?idsub=exhibitions&single=10_09_David_Horvitz&show=more4
Image from my bard summer photo blog!
http://bardsummer2010.tumblr.com/

The Carry-On project is a multi-artist project within the Carry-On exhibition.
It features work by:
Michael Bell-Smith, Paul Branca, Colleen Brown, Dylan Chatain, Joanne Cheung and Beau Sievers, Dexter Sinister, Marley Freeman, Marc Handelman, Tim Ridlen, Maxwell Simmer, Ed Steck, Penelope Umbrico
A brief explanation:
The works in this project were packed in a carry-on suitcase and carried from my house (Brooklyn, New York) to Galerie West (Den Haag, Holland) via Continental Airlines flight number CO 70 S from Newark-Liberty International to Schiphol Amsterdam at 6:35pm (delayed to 7:35pm) on Thursday August 19, 2010. Nothing was shipped or checked-in. All the works moved with my body, in proximity to my body. While in transit, the furthest away the suitcase ever got from my body was in the trunk of a car, an overhead compartment, and the airport's X-ray machine. Flying internationally, the works (and myself) were subjected to customs and security restrictions and checks.
A multi-page PDF was made, which contains artist texts, writings by Ed Steck and myself, some photographs of roses from Ecuador, and other things....
Download here:
http://davidhorvitz.com/haag/Carry-On.pdf

http://www.galeriewest.nl/site.php?idsub=exhibitions&single=10_09_David_Horvitz&show=press
‘Carry-On’
solo exhibition by David Horvitz
Exhibition: Saturday 04.09.2010 – Saturday 02.01.2010
Opening: Saturday September 4th, 19:00 — 23:00
With work by: Michael Bell-Smith, Paul Branca, Colleen Brown, Dylan Chatain, Joanne Cheung and Beau Sievers, Dexter Sinister, Marley Freeman, Marc Handelman, Tim Ridlen, Maxwell Simmer, Ed Steck, Penelope Umbrico
West is proud to present the first European solo exhibition of the young American artist David Horvitz. The exhibition is part of a serial of exhibitions which West is organizing that is dedicated to promising young artists from outside the Dutch borders.
Galerie West
Groenewegje 136
2515 LR, Den Haag
The Netherlands
NOTE: some last minute events may be happening in Den Haag - artist talk on the tuesday following the opening and maybe some other things.
(above photography taken by Joanne Cheung)


http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/429/free
Today, culture is more dispersed than ever before. The web has broadened both the quantity and kind of information freely available. It has distributed our collective experience across geographic locations; opened up a new set of creative possibilities; and, coextensively, produced a set of challenges. This fall, the New Museum will present “Free,” an exhibition including twenty-three artists working across mediums—including video, installation, sculpture, photography, the internet, and sound —that reflects artistic strategies that have emerged in a radically democratized landscape redefined by the impact of the web. The exhibition makes a case for a newly formed public art that responds to a vastly more connected society whose true openness is still being negotiated. The philosophy of free culture, and its advocacy for open sharing, informs the exhibition, but is not its subject. Instead, the title and featured works present a complex picture of the new freedoms and constraints that underlie our expanded public space. “Free” is curated by Lauren Cornell, Executive Director of Rhizome and New Museum Adjunct Curator.
“Free” is inspired in part by “Dispersion” (2001–), an essay by the artist Seth Price that is available as a free online booklet and will be featured within the exhibition as a large-scale sculptural installation composed of nine panels each imprinted with a page from the original booklet. The essay traces the increased dispersion of culture, by examining how its circulation and reception has changed across mediums from print, to video, and to the web. In light of the way we now experience political events and pop culture, Price questions the viability of public art as we understand it. Price writes: “We should recognize that collective experience is now based on simultaneous private experiences, distributed across the field of media culture, knit together by ongoing debate, publicity, promotion, and discussion. Publicness today has as much to do with sites of production and reproduction as it does with any supposed physical commons, so a popular album could be regarded as a more successful instance of public art than a monument tucked away in an urban plaza.” The works in “Free” alight from Price’s statements to demonstrate and explore the multiple ways artists utilize, appropriate, and reenact material sourced from a distributed public space.
Artists featured in “Free” include Liz Deschenes, Aleksandra Domanovic, Lizzie Fitch, Martijn Hendriks, Joel Holmberg, David Horvitz, Lars Laumann, Andrea Longacre-White, Kristin Lucas, Jill Magid, Hanne Mugaas, Takeshi Murata, Rashaad Newsome, Lisa Oppenheim, Trevor Paglen, Seth Price, Jon Rafman, Clunie Reid, Amanda Ross-Ho, Alexandre Singh, Ryan Trecartin & David Karp, and Harm Van Den Dorpel.
The exhibition catalogue will take the form of a frequently updated web site edited by Ceci Moss, Rhizome Senior Editor, with contributions by Lauren Cornell and guest essayists including author and critic Ed Halter; blogger Joanne McNeil; critic Brian Droitcour; and entrepreneur Caterina Fake, as well as related videos, articles, and artworks.