Skip to main content

Anna Mikhailovskaia & John Schacht

By
Knockdown Center presents sculptural work by Anna Mikhailovskaia alongside works on paper by John Schacht. The pairing starts an unlikely dialogue where shared sensibilities and visual energies become apparent despite contrasts in the artists’ backgrounds.
 
This exhibition is the posthumous debut of John Schacht, a relatively unknown self-taught artist working primarily in Chicago until 1981 when he relocated to rural Iowa until his death in 2009. Schacht participated in the Chicago art scene during the 60’s and 70’s alongside the Chicago Imagists and the Hairy Who. On the periphery of that scene, Schacht’s work is similarly committed to a fantastical, vibrant, vulgar, and personal aesthetic. Like many of the Chicago Imagists, Schacht’s work was inspired by a home filled with trinkets and antiques.
 
Mikhailovskaia was born in Kiev, Ukraine, raised in Brooklyn, and has been working in Brooklyn since her 2007 MFA at RISD. In a different era of art-making than Schacht, Mikhailovskaia investigates sculpture and its relationship to installation, performance, painting and architecture. Her work is inspired by the sculptural work of Cy Twombly, the artist James Lee Byers, the Japanese movement Mono-ha as well as Brutalist Architecture. An artist, writer and curator, Mikhailovskaia has produced public sculpture at Fidelity Investment’s Certified Wildlife Habitat in Smithfield, RI and exhibits regularly around New York City.
 
Where Schacht’s intimate works on paper are flowing and organic, rawly emotional and indulgent, Mikhailovskaia’s sculptural works are concise and geometric, exuding efficiency and restraint. Schacht’s works are diaristic and explore sexuality. Mikhailovskaia’s works appear as architectural fragments or found objects, but reveal themselves as carefully crafted to challenge the viewer’s perception of weight and surface.
 
Both artists manifest a similar mystical quality through pattern and contrast. Schacht mixes abstract and representational imagery using decorative patterns and rich, saturated colors in a stream­-of­-consciousness style. Mikhailovskaia’s minimal color relationships are paired with intense and uneven textures, bold patterns, and extreme material experimentations.
 
This exhibition is a rare chance to see work by two under-recognized artists, one from a few decades ago and the other contemporary. In this odd juxtaposition, the viewer can wander between intimate and large-scale works to find unexpected similarities between two artists making sincere work.

Suspended Forest

By

Artist Michael Neff brings Suspended Forest, a forest-filled room of discarded Christmas trees collected from the streets of Brooklyn, to Knockdown Center for the month of January.

Suspended Forest has been shown twice previously shown in an unauthorized, unused space under the BQE along Metropolitan Avenue in Williamsburg. Those installations were removed by the city within days. The exhibition at Knockdown Center, on view for a month and configured in a grid, allows for a much different experience, most importantly time for the trees to shed their needles into halos on the smooth concrete floor below. The subtle pine fragrance of the trees and the changing nature of the exhibition over time gives visitors an opportunity for quiet contemplation throughout the month.

 

Threaded Trajectory

By

Artist and architectural designer Katie Shima brings Threaded Trajectory to J McDonald’s mobile art project A Way From Home. This installation is a model of an urban machine – a sprawling mechanical landscape laced together with networks of transportation. Made from interwoven layers of packing materials, the piece is inspired by the traces and trajectories of urbanization in the Anthropocene Era.

extended through January 10, weekends 2-6pm

Bloch Show

By

Join us for the opening of the final stage in BLOCH‘s residency at Knockdown Center. This exhibition will open on Dec 12 (2-7:30pm) and 13 (2-5pm) with performances, and a conference as well as collected ephemera from it journey and video documents made along the way. The exhibition will remain on view Saturdays and Sundays from 2-6pm through January 10.

Saturday Dec 12: Exhibition opening & Performance
Works and collaborations by Ueli Alder, Sarah Cameron Sunde, Com&Com (Johannes M. Hedinger, Marcus Gossolt), Joshua Dumas, Brendan B. Gaffney, Bruno Jakob, Dan and Owen Jerome, Tom Koehler, Mark Patsfall, Guy Paulson, Lorelei Ramirez, Packet Biweekly, Marc Trachsler, Yangzi with Zhang Da, Marvin Youngman. Videos by Com&Com, Fabian Kaiser, Alex Reeves, Mehmet Salih Yildirim

Sound bath by Sarah Cameron Sunde and Joshua Dumas, 2 to 6pm
Qian with Yi Zhou and YiMin Miao, 6:30 to 7:30pm

 

Sunday, December 13: Conference & Performance
Panelists: Johannes M. Hedinger, Tom Koehler, Anne Luther, Sarah Cameron Sunde, Kay Turner, Claire Wood, and more to be announced. 2 to 4pm

This conference will discuss Bloch as a symbol of the possibility of, and invitation to, a participatory project. It is also a reflection on the concepts of social sculpture, postproduction and Open Work. Johannes Hedinger has invited speakers specialized in cultural studies, anthropology, folklore studies and various aspects of art and cultural production to debate the Bloch at the middle of its ten-year-journey.

The conference’s closing event will be the performance “In here and out there” by Bruno Jakob (Invisible Paintings) and Hans Witschi (Piano: Dontforgets 1983-2015). 4 to 5pm

 

More information about the project: http://bloch23781.com

Private Nationalism

By

Private Nationalism: Pressing Issues in Central European Contemporary Video Art

Video screening and panel discussion
Co-presented by Edit András, Ilona Németh, Viera Levitt, the Clakula-Gauthier Art production and Magdalena Moskalewicz

Including the work of Tibor Horváth, László Nagyvári Nosek, Csaba Nemes, Bálint Szombathy (Hungary) /András Cséfalvay, Matej Kaminský, Ilona Németh, Martin Piaček, Tomáš Rafa, Mark Ther, Matej Vakula (Czech Republic and Slovakia /C.T Jasper. And Joanna Malinowska (Polish Pavilion of the Venice Biennial, 2015)

Private Nationalism Project initiated by Approach Art Association, Pécs (project leader (Rita Varga) took place as an exhibition series at arts venues throughout Central Europe and beyond. Using visual artworks, discussions, and publications, the project directed attention to the urgency of totalizing nationalist developments of the former Soviet bloc by shedding light on overlooked issues of the daily life, and the subtle processes by which ideologies infiltrate and are absorbed into the citizenry.

Knockdown Center hosts a screening and discussion generated from this expansive project that involved the work of many curators and artists as it traveled and changed shape in each city: Budapest, Bratislava, Dresden, Krakow, Košice, Prague.

The presentation is divided into 3 parts focusing on Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Poland. Each screening section will be followed by a 15min discussion.

  • Hungarian part will be presented by Edit András (Hungary/USA, art historian)
  • Czech and Slovak part will be presented by Ilona Németh (Slovakia, artist), Matej Vakula (Slovakia/USA, artist) and Viera Levitt (Slovakia/USA, UMass Dartmouth Gallery Director)
  • Polish part will be presented by Magdalena Moskalewicz (Poland/USA, art historian and curator)

Supported by Trust of Mutual Understanding, NY

Pollinis

By

Evelyn C. Lewis presents Pollinis in J McDonald’s A Way From Home trailer. Thinking of honeybees as art makers and artists as beekeepers, she exhibits “one woman’s collaboration with her Brooklyn bees.”

Around Flat

By

A new exhibition curated by William Staples brings together visual art works in two and three dimensions to reflect on how those two formal approaches engage the viewer. The properties that define each medium and the demands they make are distinct, whether flat or in the round. In the case of painting or other two-dimensional work, the beholder stands in front of the surface, encountering the composition vis à vis their position before a solid vertical plane. By contrast, three-dimensional art works occupy the same space as the viewer, who must circle the object to consider its various angles and surfaces. Ultimately, both formats are unified by their visual generosity toward a thoughtful viewer.

Contemporary Temporary Sound Sessions

By

Lectures: Presentations: Workshops: Experiments: Studies: Concerts: Exchanges: 

Under the guidance of Daniel Neumann, CT-SWaM founder and accomplished sound engineer, this 3 day workshop is catered to sound artists, noise producers, composers of electronic and electro-acoustic music, as well as experimental musicians and sound designers, interested in deepening their practice and exploring spatialization as a creative element.

The workshop will give a historical overview on the subject with some technical background and explored aesthetics and techniques for spatialization. One objective is to practice listening as a phenomenological activity: the listener immersed in inner spaces / distance and continuity / sound as intersubjective space.

For more information on attending the workshop click here.

The workshop itself is now closed to the public but participants and guest performers will present work at Knockdown Center on the following days:

Sat, Nov 14
4p-6p: performances by participants
6p-8p: Pedro Lopes (Berlin), lecture and performance

Sun, Nov 15
2p-6p: performances by participants

Tue, Nov 17, $7 suggested donation

Kamron Saniee
Michael Hammond
Gus Callahan
Matthew Gantt
&
Gabe Raines

7pm Gabe Raines will present “Sun Castle – Room of a Thousand Doors – Door Two”. His sound project describes various spaces inside an imaginary castle. The spaces can be together into a functional audio map of the cavernous circular room.

8:30pm Jenn Grossman: multi-channel pieces

9pm Woody Sullender’s “Variations on Furniture Music” is a series of multi-channel electronic music performances utilizing arrangements of modular cardboard forms outfitted with audio transducers. His work encompass a variety of media including music, sculpture, performance, theater, installation, architecture, origami, and even sonic weaponry. Among other activities, he is founding co-editor (will Bill Dietz) of the sonic arts publication Ear | Wave | Event (earwaveevent.org).

All performances are open to the public.

::::::::

Follow the activities:
Blog: https://ctswam.wordpress.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CT_SWaM
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/ctswam

Things with Claws

By

Things with claws don’t just scratch us but get deep inside of us.  They cling to our bodies and we walk around simultaneously burdened and accompanied by them, never alone, always with this thing attached to us. J McDonald presents some of these things as Part II of the A Way From Home project.

 

 

Herman Kolgen and Nicolas Bernier

By

As part of Quebec Digital, New York (October 22 – 25), Elektra and FuturePerfect co-present two audiovisual masters from Montreal — Herman Kolgen and Nicolas Bernier. Kolgen performs his acclaimed Dust, an audiovisual masterpiece inspired by Man Ray’s photograph “Elevage de Poussiere.” Concerned with giving form to what the eye cannot capture, Kolgen creates a spectacular world from mere dust particles, revealing their fibrous networks, deep structures and hypnotic complexities. At the threshold between the invisible and the visible, Dust becomes intoxicating and the video surface a veritable accumulation of x-rays. Simultaneously emotional and conceptual, audiences will never see or hear dust again in the same way.

Nicolas Bernier’s Frequencies (synthetic variations) is a part of an ongoing process that draws upon basic generative systems. Performed in real-time, this is Bernier’s first laptop performance, a dialogue between sound, light and material. Frequencies consists of pre-written sequences of synthetic sounds with light synchronized within small acrylic structures; a digital work visually translated into physical elements. With incredible precision and minimal means, Bernier creates a mesmerizing work where audiences can either hear the light or see the sound.

 Click here for more info.

Skip to content