Artist-run space
An artist-run space is a gallery facility operated by creators such as painters or sculptors, thus circumventing the structures of public and private galleries. Artist-run spaces have become as an important factor in urban regeneration, for example in Glasgow, Scotland.
Argentina
The two main artist-run spaces from Buenos Aires were Belleza y Felicidad and APPETITE, both set the standards for emerging art in Argentina. APPETITE was a gallery was the first Argentinian gallery to be accepted at Frieze, London, and encouraged a lot of galleries to its San Telmo barrio.Australia
Many artist-run spaces exist in Australia. These spaces are often provided with funding assistance by government and state funding bodies. Notable examples of current or recent artist-run projects and spaces include:- Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Collective in Sydney,
- Platform artists group in Melbourne,
- freerange in Perth
- Newcastle ArtSpace in Newcastle, which has operated for more than 35 years.
Canada
The primary source of funding for artist-run centres is the Canada Council which has a specific program of two-year operating support for artist-run centres. Most centres also receive funding from the Provincial governments, most of which have an arts council to financially assist individual artists and arts organizations. Centres may also receive funding from their local municipal or city governments. Centres sometimes will secure funding for specific projects from corporations that manage lottery earnings or public and private foundations. Centres have tended not to pursue individual sponsors or patrons, neither corporations nor individuals, in part because they are in a critical relationship with the traditional and established art system of museums which have the resources to pursue that type of support.
France
Immanence is an artist-run space located in Paris Montparnasse. It was founded in 1998 by two artists, Cannelle Tanc and Frédéric Vincent. Since its opening on January 25, 2000, this artist-run space has organized more than 100 exhibitions. In particular the first Edouard Levé's Exhibition, "Rêves Reconstitué" in 2000, a carte blanche to Jean-Marc Bustamante a solo show of Eric Corne, "Le plus plus grand piano du monde " Goran Vejvoda, "readonlymemories" Grégory Chatonsky, "men crying" Gulsun Karamustafa, "Au-tour de Robert Filliou, Cover record. In 2008, The center of research and documentation around artist book, Archive Station open with a big exhibition of artists books since this opening, Immanence have made lot of exhibition with artists book in particular something else press and around in 2010.New Zealand
A number of artist-run spaces have flourished throughout New Zealand since the 1990s. Some have been short-lived, whereas others have secured long-term funding and been operating for more than a decade.- The Blue Oyster Art Project Space was established in Dunedin in 1999; its founding members were Emily Barr, Steve Carr, Wallace Chapman, Douglas Kelaher and Kate Plaisted. The gallery is currently located on Dowling Street in Dunedin's CBD and is funded by Creative New Zealand and Dunedin City Council. It is overseen by a board of Dunedin artists and arts professionals.
- Enjoy Public Art Gallery was established by a group of Wellington artists in June 2001 and is still in operation on Wellington's Cuba Street. It receives operational funding from Creative New Zealand and Wellington City Council. It is managed by a trust board of Wellington artists; the current chair is Ann Shelton.
- Gloria Knight is located in Auckland's Wynyard Quarter, Gloria Knight opened in March 2012. The gallery mounted exhibitions for nearly two years, and also presented work at art fairs, including the 2013 Auckland Art Fair. The gallery closed in December 2014.
- The Physics Room in Christchurch emerged from South Island Art Projects, an organisation that in 1992 began presenting temporary and public art events without a formal location. In 1996 The Physics Room was established in a gallery space in the Christchurch Arts Centre. The gallery is now located in the CBD on Tuam Street and receives operational funding from Creative New Zealand.
- RM is based on Karangahape Road in Auckland, RM is New Zealand's longest running artist-run space. Previous incarnations of the gallery include rm3, rm212, rm401 and rm103.
- Teststrip was an Auckland artist-run space, operating first in Vulcan Lane and then on Karanghape Road from 1992 to 1997. It was established by a group of artists and secured Creative New Zealand funding to establish a two-room gallery space. Co-founder and gallery administrator for two years Daniel Malone noted:
"Teststrip has always been about us pursuing and creating a context for our own work. I guess we were interested in creating things-not like most galleries which act as a conduit or filter. We didn't go out and look for stuff for the gallery-we just each had our own practices and interests which we brought to it. Of course, that meant we had to keep in touch with what was going on."
The Teststrip archives are held by Auckland Art Gallery. A history of the organisation was published in 2008.
United Kingdom
Artist-run spaces had a particularly strong effect on urban regeneration in Glasgow, where the city won the accolade 'European Capital of Culture' in 1990 largely due to the large number of artist-run exhibition spaces and galleries, such as Transmission Gallery. Curator Hans Ulrich Obrist coined the term "The Glasgow Miracle" to describe this.FIVE YEARS was founded by a group of artist in 1998, based in 40 Underwood St., Shoreditch. London. It was a neighbour to BANK's space, Poo Poo Gallery and 30 Underwood St. In 2002, Five Years, Mellow Birds had to leave the old Victorian Industrial premises to give way to gentrification new Loft Style housing. After a few years of only virtual and site specific existence, FIVE YEARS members found a space in Hackney from which they continue to work since 2007 with an expanded membership.
East London has continued to house a number of artist-run spaces. In Shoreditch, London Charles Thomson founded the Stuckism International Gallery in 2002 warehouse. The last show there was in 2004. The Transition Gallery was founded in October 2002 in a converted garage close to Victoria Park, Hackney, London, and is run by artists Cathy Lomax and Alex Michon to show work by established and new contemporary artists. In 2016, the artist-run project Auto Italia South East relocated to Bethnal Green after programming and producing artists work nomadically in donated or squatted buildings since 2007.
studio1.1 was founded as a co-operative in 2003 and is run by artists Michael Keenan and Keran James. The gallery is an artist-run, not-for-profit space, located in a former sex shop in Redchurch Street, Shoreditch, East London.
Hartslane is experimental art project space, in New Cross Gate, South East London, founded in 2012. It is based in a derelict garage which was an eyesore and a wasted resource owned by Lewisham Council and occupied by People Before Profit as part of their struggle for affordable housing in Lewisham.
United States
Chicago
Chicago has a long tradition of artist-run spaces and projects dating back to the late 1800s. In 1876 artist D. Knight Carter founded Vincennes Gallery of Fine Arts which was reorganized in 1880, by Frank C. Bromley, Henry Arthur Elkins along with other artist to establish a permanent gallery and residency for studio artists. In 1930, artist Increase Robinson ran a studio gallery in her Dianna Court Studio where she exhibited both her own work and the work of others. The Hyde Park Art Center was established in 1939 and still produces programming. And the Contemporary Art Workshop established in 1950 by Jack and Lynn Kearney, Leon Golub, Cosmo Campoli, Ray Fink, Al Kwitz and held programming through 2009.In 1984, the exhibition Alternative Spaces curated by Lynne Warren at the Museum of Contemporary Art catalogued the scores of artists and artists' spaces to emerge in Chicago including a wave of alternative spaces that emerged from 1960s through 1984 including Artemisia Gallery, ARC Gallery, Gallery Bugs Bunny, N.A.M.E. Gallery, NAB Gallery, Randolph Street Gallery, 1019 W. Lake St./Noise Factory, W.P.A. Gallery and Axe Street Arena. One the factors contributing to the demise of the artist run spaces in Chicago in the late 1980s, was the reduction of public funding for artists and for the arts.
In 2009, Artist-run Chicago was mounted by the Hyde Park Art Center and featured notable artist-run spaces operating between the late 1990s an 2009 including 1/Quarterly, artLedge, Butchershop, Co-Prosperity Sphere, devening projects + editions, Deluxe Projects, Dogmatic, joymore, Julius Caesar, Law Office, Margin Gallery, mini dutch, Modest Contemporary Art Projects, NFA Space, Normal Projects, Old Gold, Polvo, Roots & Culture, Standard, Suitable, Teti, The Suburban and VONZWECK.
Current and recent artist run projects in Chicago include:
- DFBRL8R performance gallery founded by artist Joseph Ravens;
- Edra Soto's The Franklin;
- LVL3 founded by artist Vincent Uribe;
- Heaven Gallery founded by artist David Dobie;
- Oh!klahomo founded by artist Mark Jeffery;
- table founded by artist Kyle Bellucci Johanson;
- Baby Blue Gallery founded by artist Caleb Beck;
- Beauty Breaks founded by artist Amina Ross;
- gallery no one founded by artist Guanyu Xu;
- Slow founded by artist Paul Melvin Hopkin and Jeffrey Grauel;
- 65GRAND founded by artist Bill Gross;
- Julius Caesar founded by artists Molly Zuckerman-Hartung, Dana DeGiulio, and Diego Leclery — currently directed by Josh Dihle, Tony Lewis, and Kate Sierzputowski;
- Apparatus Projects founded by artists Julian Van Der Moere and Gareth Kaye;
- Prairie Chicago founded by artists Tim Mann and Jack Schneider; and
- Clutch Gallery founded by artist Meg Duguid.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles has a tradition of artist run spaces dating back to at least the 1950s. Chris Burden's Shoot piece took place in a space run by artist Barbara T. Smith. Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions was founded by several individuals including two artists. , known for innovative, non-traditional approaches to exhibition making, was founded in Echo Park, Los Angeles by artist in 2012.Currently Los Angeles has a vibrant artist-run scene, as evidenced by an artist-run fair called Other Places Art Fair, consisting of almost entirely artist-run spaces and initiatives. 2010, ART2102 of Los Angeles published the book and an online directory, Dispatches and Directions: On Artist-Run Organizations in Los Angeles, which documents these initiatives from 2005–present.
New York
During the 1950s in Manhattan, artist-run co-ops became the alternative to the uptown Madison Avenue galleries that catered mostly to wealthy blue-chip and European art-oriented collectors. From the early 1950s to the early 1960s the Tenth Street galleries located mostly in the East Village in lower Manhattan became the proving ground for much of the contemporary art that achieved popularity and commercial success in the decades that followed. During the 1960s, the Park Place Gallery became the first important contemporary gallery in SoHo. Park Place gallery was an artist-run cooperative that featured cutting-edge Geometric abstraction. Eventually, by the 1970s, SoHo became the new center for the New York art world as hundreds of commercial galleries opened in a sudden wave of artistic prosperity.Contemporary artist-run galleries include:
- Pierogi 2000, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, is run by artist Joe Amrhein. The gallery puts on traditional exhibitions and also presents works on paper in an extensive system of flat files. Viewers can look through hundreds of individual artists’ portfolios of works on paper contained within the flat file drawers. These files travel for exhibition at other venues in the United States and abroad.
- Momenta Art is an artist-run nonprofit institution also in Williamsburg. Momenta Art shows work by emerging artists that are not well represented in commercial galleries. It has an annual fundraiser which is a benefit group exhibition and raffle. The fundraiser has been hosted regularly by White Columns, another non-profit organization dedicated to supporting emerging artists.
- MINUS SPACE is an artist-run curatorial project devoted to reductive art. Minus Space maintains an exhibition space in Brooklyn and curates exhibitions at other venues nationally and internationally. Minus Space also has a location on the Internet enabling it to collaborate with other institutions. The website has a running log of related exhibitions and a chronology documenting the development of reductive and concept-based art.
- Manhattan Graphics Center, located in the West Village, is run by artist volunteers and offers artists printmaking studios and classes. In a cooperative system artists can also use the facility in exchange for administrative work. Manhattan Graphics Center also exhibits the work of artists who have used the facility.
San Francisco
- The Kitsch Gallery is an artist-run space located in San Francisco's Mission District. It was founded in 2009 by three students, Nikki Mirsaeid, Taj Robinson, and Myrina Tunberg at the San Francisco Art Institute and University of San Francisco. Kitsch was voted Best New Warehouse Space of 2010 by SF Weekly. Artists who have been presented or exhibited at Kitsch include Tania De Rozario.
- Savernack Street is an artist-run micro-gallery located in San Francisco's Mission District created and curated by artist Carrie Sinclair Katz. The gallery interior is inaccessible to visitors and artwork can only be viewed by looking through a reverse peephole located on the storefront. The exhibitions usually feature a single piece of miniature artwork that appears larger or life sized when viewed through the peephole.
Philadelphia
- Painted Bride Art Center
- OIC
- Nexus Gallery
- Bricolage
- ETAGE; Environmental Theater and Gallery)
- Old City Arts
- 3rd Street Gallery
- Muse Gallery
- HEAT
- Opens Friday
- Recherche
- MEAT
- Momenta Art
- Highwire Gallery
- Zone O
Footnotes