
Berlin-based Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset are the team who provided an animatronic sparrow in its death throes at Tate Modern in 2004, a re-created New York Metro station at the Bohen Foundation last Spring, and most recently, a Prada boutique in the middle of the Texan desert. Their brand of clever structural critique fused with an exploration of issues around public and private space and socio-economic systems prompts a second look at everything from left luggage in an airport to gay bars to the possible permutations of the white cube. Elmgreen & Dragset’s touring exhibition, The Welfare Show, is currently at the Serpentine Gallery (till 26/02).
nyt here


As coined and defined by Ryan Watkins-Hughes in 2004 (documentation)
SHOPDROPPING is an ongoing project in which I alter the packaging of canned goods and then shopdrop the items back onto grocery store shelves. I replace the packaging with labels created using my photographs. The shopdropped works act as a series of art objects that people can purchase from the grocery store. Because the barcodes and price tags are left intact purchasing the cans before they are discovered and removed is possible. In one instance the shopdropped cans were even restocked to a new aisle based on the barcode information.

Rirkrit Tiravanija’s Untitled 1992 (Free), was originally exhibited at 89 Greene Street in the former 303
Gallery space in 1992. 303 Gallery was on the second floor at 89 Greene Street, just a few feet from Matta- Clark’s Open House site. In that exhibition, Tiravanija took the contents of the entire gallery – kitchen, storeroom, bathroom and office – and publicly deposited/displayed them in the main gallery space. In what had been the gallery office, he set up a provisional kitchen where Thai curry was cooked and served to visitors. Taking his historical cues not only from distinctly non-Western Thai traditions, but also from Alan Kaprow, Michael Asher, and Matta-Clark, Tiravanija’s seminal exhibition helped create a pivitol moment of rupture from the wealth and abundance of the previous decade. For this exhibition, Tiravanija will make a ghost of the 89 Greene Street space in plywood. The kitchen – which will include the same stools, tables, cookers, pots, pans, and refrigerator, along with the same 15-year old food waste – will be used and shown in what will be the “office.” Untitled 1992 (Free) will be exhibited for the first time in New York since 1992.

The a-z smockshop generates income for artists who’s work is either non-commercial, or not yet self sustaining. The smocks are designed by Andrea Zittel and produced by a group of smockers who reinterpret the design based on their own individual skill sets, tastes and interests. And of course as we craft the smocks we are also working on a “guide for better working”.
more here
Filed under: precedent

The Paul Piers Collection was born from piles of clothing left behind in a warehouse terminal market abandoned in the mid 1980s. In 1999, a squatter named RA discovered the endless piles of clothing and began refurbishing and selling wholesale to vintage clothing stores around Williamsburg and the East Village under the auspices of Paul Pierce Vintage. It is this reality that Riley spins into a poignant and humorous multi-layered commentary on the art and fashion worlds, gentrification and the changing topography of New York City. Inspired by the true story of RA’s entrepreneurial efforts, the installation becomes an embellished realization of unwrought potential. By 2004 Paul Pierce had grown into an operation that employed and housed 16 other non-domicile people. They eventually occupied a retail store in Williamsburg and began expanding and merchandizing their inventory.
The warehouse (located in Greenpoint, Brooklyn) was recently destroyed by massive fires of undetermined causes, displacing a group of squatters that occupied the space. Playing on the questionable investigation into the fires, absurdity of motives such as designer Paul Piers intentionally setting fire to clothes to launch a new, trendy burnt look abound. This burnt look will be modeled at WHITE BOX during the opening reception. [VIDEO BOX], a division of WHITE BOX, will include a mock video mimicking the style of celebrity newsreels. All of the actors are former squatters from the warehouse building that burnt down.Duke Riley presents Paul Piers for Chanel, curated by Juan Puntes and Judith Souriau, is the last and final chapter ending a six-year long WHITE BOX Summer Series under the umbrella title Six Feet Under. more
Filed under: precedent
Peter Paul Chocolates, Edibles By Paul McCarthy: chocolate factory

Conceived by artist Paul McCarthy, and done in collaboration with his gallery Hauser & Wirth, the gallery has been divided into four sections: retail store, chocolate manufacturing, packaging and storage. The factory will then produce 1,000 ‘Santa With Tree And Bell’ chocolate figurines – complete with signature Paul McCarthy phallic innuendo – on a daily basis to be on sale to the public until 24th December, when the show closes.
Filed under: precedent

NANCY SHAVER: Retail, sculpture and objects from Henry
Nancy Shaver is a sculptor and runs a store in Hudson, NY named Henry.
The following excerpts from a text by Ann Lauterbach for an upcoming catalog on the artist and shopkeeper, refers to both.
We, Nancy and I, share a love of necessary objects; objects that were made of necessity, in need.
With a purpose in mind.
With, sometimes, limited material means.
We believe, also, that art is necessary.
The necessity of art is somehow implicated in the relationship between materials and purpose.
There is a fine line between purpose and use.
Nancy and I share a pleasure in these fine lines.
…
Worn objects are the material equivalent of wise. This thought has been with me since the first flea market.
It has nothing to do with the frippery of antiques, nothing to do with the advancement of investment, nothing to do with Roadshow inheritance.
…
Well if nothing else, art has given me a way to live, she said one day as I was leaving Henry’s inventory of foundlings.
…
A Minimalist instruction: material and process revelatory of each other. Making as content.
Filed under: precedent

“Stealing Beauty” was shot without permission at numerous IKEA stores around New York, Berlin and Tel Aviv. In the movie the Ben-Ners quite naturally inhabit idealized showroom interiors with price tags dangling from furniture, and shoppers occasionally interrupting the family’s daily routines. Because of the hit-and-run filming, the traditional cinematic continuity is abandoned and the changing sets are stand-ins for their home. The narrative, however, remains linear as the father offers life lessons on the subjects of economic exchange, meaning of private property, ethics, and family love eventually leading to the children’s rebellious manifesto.
Filed under: precedent



Art in General
Tribeca / Downtown
Invited to reconsider Claes Oldenburg’s The Store (1961), a shop in
downtown New York furnished with an array of consumer goods the artist
fashioned out of everyday materials to reference food, clothing and
other consumable goods, Fawn Krieger proposed COMPANY (2007).
Conceptually structured as a social and economic project, COMPANY is
an installation and unfolding sculpture in Art in General’s
storefront, street-level exhibition space that will operate as a store
showcasing homemade renditions of recognizable items, with prices
marked from two to two thousand dollars. Gallery visitors will have
the opportunity to buy sculptural objects including ceramic Xanax; a
foam mother tree sloth; a papier-mâché TV; a wooden computer; plaster
enriched uranium; a concrete Baked Alaska; faux dinosaur eggs, ersatz
glacier chunks, cardboard passports, knitted nervous systems, leather
band-aids, and tin foil eye glasses. see more products here
Filed under: precedent

Oldenburg’s environment called The Store—a storefront display on New York’s Lower East Side, shown from December 1961 to January 1962—epitomized the artist’s mingling of art, commodity, and commerce. At The Store, he sold painted plaster-and-wire constructions of familiar foodstuffs, clothing, and merchandise, elevating the status of these objects to art. To advertise his endeavor, Oldenburg created numerous printed works, such as business cards, stationery, and posters, including this hand-colored lithograph. Characterized by both a spontaneity of artistic gesture and the desire to self-promote, this print combines the tendencies of 1950s Abstract Expressionists with art’s new embrace of consumer culture. The title of the enterprise, The Store, appears at the top, its address of 107 East 2nd Street at the bottom, and the artist’s signature in reverse below the title. Oldenburg’s array of objects, including a shirt and tie and a piece of cake, capture the humor and irony of this seminal event in contemporary American art. from MoMA
Filed under: precedent

Patriotic or not — and whether done on impulse, for recreation or for basic survival needs — shopping is usually a social activity, a point duly emphasized in Mr. Hollein’s show, which he organized with Christoph Grunenberg, the director of Tate Liverpool.
With this in mind, the Belgian artist Guillaume Bijl’s installation ”New Supermarket” (2002) makes the point in ”Shopping” that perhaps no place is as inclusive or as democratic as a supermarket. It can make everything from salami to fruit cocktail more desirable. But Mr. Bijl’s work also calls attention to the psychological and emotional distance that the slick presentation of goods can put between longing and gratification. In Frankfurt, Mr. Bijl’s full-scale, walk-through replica of a Tengelmann store (a German chain) was complete with stacked shelves, a dairy case, check-out counters and printed posters that help make food buying cheerful (as well as lucrative for a store’s owners). In Liverpool, Mr. Bijl will recreate a British supermarket.
His life-as-art exercise is Duchampian in the extreme. Still, it has historical antecedents, and ”Shopping” features some of them. One is a re-creation of ”The American Supermarket,” a 1964 Pop Art show-as-event to which Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist, Robert Watts and others contributed. Drawing from photographs of its original installation at the now-defunct Bianchini Gallery in Manhattan, this version of the supermarket reassembles its foods that were made of wax or chrome. Porterhouse steaks, cheeses, eggs, apples and bananas are displayed in fruit crates and on white shelves. Warhol’s paintings of Campbell’s soup cans, Lichtenstein’s picture of a turkey and ”real” supermarket signs make the setup feel theatrical. Viewed in a museum today, though, the exhibit’s piped-in Muzak of the 60’s tempers its humor with a strange chill. (This art ”environment” feels as airless as Jeff Koons’s pristine Hoover vacuum cleaners from the 1980’s, which are on view elsewhere in the show in dust-free, clear-acrylic boxes.) from nyt
more here

Beginning in October, our storefront on Ludlow Street will temporarily become a pawnshop dedicated to the pawning of artworks. PAWNSHOP will open at noon on Monday, October 1st and will have regular business hours of Tuesday through Saturday, 12-6 pm. It will remain in operation through early 2008
Structurally, a pawnshop is a short-term loan business, which retains a collateral object in exchange for cash — a small fraction of the object’s value that must be repaid with interest for the item is to be re-claimed by its original owner. If, after 30 days, the item has not been claimed, the pawnbroker earns the right to sell it, and the pawned object remains on display until it is picked up or purchased by
someone else.
PAWNSHOP’s initial inventory is comprised of over 60 pawned works from a group of artists invited to participate in the project. After PAWNSHOP opens for business on October 1st, artists may walk in with a work they want to pawn — we will happily look at all submissions and, if we find any of interest, we may add them to our inventory. After the initial 30 days, on November 1st, the artworks that have not been retrieved by their original owners may become available for sale.
“All department stores will become museums, and all museums will become department stores.” Warhol
Shopping: A Century of Art and Consumer Culture is the first exhibition to examine in-depth the pervasive relationship between the display, distribution and consumption of commodities and modern and contemporary art. Located on two floors of the gallery, Shopping, a co-production with the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, will be one of the most ambitious and spectacular exhibitions ever staged at Tate Liverpool.

Shopping: A Century of Art and Consumer Culture examines the relationship between the display, distribution and consumption of commodities and modern and contemporary art, and includes works that blur the distinction between the shop environment and the gallery environment. The exhibition begins with Your Supermarket 2002 by Guillaume Bijl, a ‘real’ supermarket in the gallery, with shelves of fresh food, drinks and household products, as well as checkout tills. Bijl presents us with a familiar place but because nothing is for sale our desire to buy is frustrated.
Photographers Eugène Atget, Berenice Abbott and Walker Evans chronicled the disappearing world of small shops and specialist stores in Paris, New York and beyond. Their work can be seen alongside Stewart Bale’s photographs of shops such as Woolworths, Lewis’s and Marks & Spencer in Liverpool.
more here

This is the catalog for a special exhibition curated by Murray Moss at the MAK museum in Frankfurt, Germany in August 2002. We will visit this site (one of the only non-chains to survive in SoHo). in new york times write up here
Hosted by J. Morgan Puett
Guest Artists and Presenters:
June 17- Alexander Gray, Gallerist (in NYC)
June 18- J. Morgan Puett, Artist (in NYC)
June 20- Mark Dion, Artist (in Philadelphia)
June 21-Barbara DeVries, Writer, Designer,
Christy Gast . Artist
June 23/24- Hope Ginsburg, Artist
June 27- Jeffrey Jenkins, artist
Rebecca Purcell, artist/art director
June 28- Natalie Jeremijenko, Artist
Dalton Conley, Sociologist
July 2- J. Walker Tufts, Artist , Businessman
July 3- Allison Smith, Artist
Other Guest involvements To Be Announced:
Dr. Marie ‘Bridget’ Shurkus, Contemporary Art Theorist
Brian Tolle, artist
Brian Clyne, Digital Designer
Christine Hill: Skyping from Berlin
Amy Yoes, Artist
Jorge Colombo, Artist
Kathryn Taylor, Stitcher, Patternmaker
Robin Richman, Artist/ Retailer
William Bryan Purcell, Artist
With
Research assistant, Caroline Woolard
Food mentor, Athena Kokoronis
Project Manager, Monique Milleson
Artist –in– residence, Boris Richter, Germany.

Session 2 2008: June 16-July 3, 2008
As new forms of global capital evolve and new forms of subjectivity emerge we propose to critically explore and experiment with these new spaces of cultural production. This session will involve the research and development of a new experimental retail system. This retail development will be focused on The Mildred’s Lane Historical Society and Museum Store —- branding, product development and critical interventions into spaces of product placement and advertising. There will be visiting lectures by conceptual artists, economists, philosophers, retailers, sociologists and others. Also as part of the research phase of this project there will be various field trips in addition to the weekly events, dinners, presentations. [This is a seed project and think tank for a new retail environment and collaboration, NYC 2010, to be announced.]
J Morgan Puett
and Others