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Are We Having Fun Yet?
Part of PROJECT DIVERSITY

John Monti - 'Green Smile,' part of 'Fancy' (2004) March 17, 2005 TO May 7, 2005

Admission is FREE

OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION:
Thursday, March 17 - 6pm-8pm


SPECIAL EVENT:
Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Join us for an evening of readings and performance featuring writer and performer Mike Albo (The Underminer), author Ben Greenman (Superworse), Coney Island sideshow star Heather Holiday, artist Marie Roberts and musician Everton Sylvester. Each performer will explore the themes of our Are We Having Fun Yet? exhibition.

Admission is free, but space is limited.
For reservations, please call 718.875.4047 x11.


Curatorial Statement
Exhibition Checklist
Gallery Location/Directions
Acknowledgements


Curatorial Statement

Are We Having Fun Yet? explores fun, a uniquely American pathology, from the unapologetically joyful surface to the dark, deadpan underbelly. Smiles take on frightening proportions, nuns enjoy cigarette breaks, and artists get hit in the head by flying objects. Straightforward and sublime, subversive and perverse, Are We Having Fun Yet? invites you to have the last laugh.

Project Diversity is a multi-venue exhibition of 200 Brooklyn artists to be held at 16 galleries in 10 Brooklyn neighborhoods in Spring 2005. The exhibition is meant to help unite audiences and artists across lines of race, gender, age and place. To feature works across all visual media as well as educational forums and family activities, the event will also celebrate Brooklyn's tremendous diversity, cultural vision and cutting-edge style. The majority of exhibitions will take place April 29-May 28, although some will open in md-March and early April. Free public shuttle bus service will provide easy access to all participating galleries on select weekends. Project Diversity was conceived by Rush Philanthropic cofounder/executive VP Danny Simmons, an accomplished artist and Brooklyn gallery owner, and creator of the award-winning Def Poetry Jam. The exhibition was developed with a coalition of the borough's key cultural leaders. Project Diversity is presented by Bloomberg LP. Generous support is provided by Target, Washington Mutual, Independence Community Foundation, Con Edison, Deutsche Bank, and Danny Simmons. For info, please visit www.rushphilanthropic.org.


Exhibition Checklist

Unless otherwise noted all works are from the collection of the artists; dimensions are given in inches (height x width x depth).

  Click on thumbnails
for larger image

Donna Alberico
Four Truckers at Bar, 2003
C-print
16 x 20 inches
$600

   
 

 
Mark Lee Blackshear
Gang of West Coast Nettle Jellyfish #1, 2004
C-print
24 x 24 inches
$ 1,250

 
 
Detail
 

 
Uli Brahmst
Vanitas, 2002
latex, cotton, nylon felt and polyester stuffing
11 x 15 x 7 inches
NFS

 
 
Detail
 

 
Amy Chan
Norwegian Wood, 2004
gouache on paper
30 x 44 inches
$ 1,000

 
 
Detail
 

 
Ernest Concepcion
The Line Wars, 2005
ink on paper
variable dimensions (9x12 inches each)
$150 each

 
 
Detail
 

 
Mira Asli Friedlaender
I Love My Classmates, 2004
single-channel DVD
1:00 minute loop
$ 1,000

   
 

 
Heather Klinkhamer
Turquoise Nun,, 2002
oil on canvas
6 x 10-1/2 inches
$ 1,200

 
 
Detail
 
Jolly Green Nun,, 2002
oil on canvas
6-1/4 x 10-1/4 inches
$ 1,200

 
 
Detail
 

 
Kristy Knight
Red Carpet/Weave, 2003
cardboard labels
480 x 60 inches
$ 3,200

   
 

 
Camille Laoang
Township, 2003
oil on canvas
48 x 36 inches
$ 2,500

 
 
Detail

 
Jason Lujan
American Indian Fansub Project: Super Busy Anime Karaoke, 2004
single-channel DVD
8:30 minutes
$ 500

   
 
 

 
John Monti
Fancy, 2004
cast rubber
variable dimensions
sold individually, please inquire

 
 
Detail
 

 
Christopher Moore
Five Dress Collages, 2003
photo prints with paper collage
12 x 36 inches
$ 700

 
 
Detail
 

 
Lori Nix
Parade, 2004
C-print
14 x 40 inches
$ 1,600

 
 
Detail
Bounty, 2004
C-print
40 x 23 inches
$ 2,300

 
 
Detail
Lover’s Leap, 2004
C-print
30 x 40 inches
$ 1,900

 
 
Detail
 

 
Chris Oh
Join, 2004
ink and acrylic on paper
48 x 68 inches
$ 800

 
 
Detail
 

 
Marie Roberts
Serpentina, 2003
acrylic on canvas
60 x 48 inches
$ 750

 
 
Detail
 

 
Ron Taylor
Brooklyn Bubblism, 2002
mixed media
11 x 14 inches
$ 800

   
 

 
Traci Tullius
Some People Never Learn, 2001
single-channel DVD
3:00 minutes
NFS

   
 

The purchase of artwork is an important way individuals can support contemporary artists and share their work with others. The Rotunda Gallery is a not-for-profit exhibition space and retains 20% of the proceeds of sales to help underwrite its exhibitions and educational programs. Please ask the gallery sitter if you would like additional information.

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Gallery Location/Directions

The Rotunda Gallery (33 Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights), housed in an award-winning space designed by Smith-Miller + Hawkinson, showcases the work of Brooklyn artists. The Rotunda Gallery's educational programs reach 6,000 students each year with gallery visits and in-school art making projects. Janet Riker is the Gallery Director; Meridith McNeal is Associate Director. The Rotunda Gallery is a project of the not-for-profit BRIC/Brooklyn Information & Culture, Inc.

Located in Brooklyn Heights, just over the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges, the Gallery is also easily accessible by public transportation. It is a short walk from the 2,3; 4,5; M; N or R trains at the Court Street/Borough Hall station; or the A, C trains at High Street.

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Acknowledgements

The Rotunda Gallery is grateful for the generous support of our exhibition and education programs from Astoria Federal, the Sally and Milton Avery Foundation, Bloomberg L.P., Con Edison, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, Forest City Ratner Companies, the William Randolph Hearst Foundations, the Independence Community Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the New York Community Trust, JP Morgan Chase, the Pepsi Cola/Hip-Hop Summit Partnership, the Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation, Verizon, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, as well as numerous individuals.

Programs are made possible in part by public funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs with support from Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz and the Brooklyn Delegation to the New York City Council, and the New York State Council on the Arts.

The Rotunda Gallery is a program of BRIC/Brooklyn Information & Culture

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