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Mandle - Chalk Shoes to the Higline May 15 - 21, 2008 |
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Leo
Kesting Gallery in Assocation with The Friends Of The Highline Presents: Last April 30 students created a drawing by scuffing the chalk shoes along the paths they will take to the High Line, New York's elevated park built on a former freight rail viaduct, set to open later this year. Mandle's performance, a commission by Friends of the High Line, highlighted the future public access points of the High Line, and drew connections between the neighborhood and the new park. The exhibition of chalk shoes will run from May 15-21 at Leo Kesting Gallery, 812 Washington Street in the Meatpacking District. Shoes used in the performance, and a video documenting the project, will be on view. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Sunday, from 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM. The exhibition will coincide with Meatpacking District Design Week. "We're excited to involve school kids from the Lab School in Chelsea, where Friends of the High Line has had an education program for the past two years," said Robert Hammond, co-founder of Friends of the High Line. "In their performance, the kids literally lead the way to the High Line, marking their path through the neighborhood with eye-catching color." "In my work, I seek to create moments that allow audiences to pause and heighten their perception of everyday environments," said Julia Mandle, the commissioned artist. "Just as the park promises to reveal a new perspective of the city. My slow-paced drawing will similarly intervene in the fast urban pace and draw the public's attention to the future entrances to their park." "Chalk Shoes to the High Line" is part of Friends of the High Line's education program, now in its sixth year. Friends of the High Line is working with the Lab School for Collaborative Studies, using the High Line as a learning tool for multiple subjects including math, science and art. ABOUT THE ARTIST: Julia Mandle has exhibited performance/installation pieces with The New Museum, The Queens Museum, White Columns Gallery. She is the recent recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Performance Art and numerous awards, including her earliest grant from Franklin Furnace Fund for Performance Art, and later from the New York State Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts. She has also been awarded recent artist's residencies at Baryshnikov Arts Center, Yaddo, and Weir Farm Trust. She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts at Williams College and a Master of Arts at the Gallatin School of New York University. ABOUT THE HIGH LINE: The High Line is a 1.45-mile-long elevated rail structure on Manhattan's West Side. Built in the 1930's, the High Line was originally a rail trestle for freight trains into and out of lower Manhattan until it went out of use in 1980. Friends of the High Line is a community-based 501(c)(3) non-profit group that was formed in 1999 to protect the historic structure, then under threat of demolition. Friends of the High Line's mission is to preserve the structure for reuse as an elevated public open space. Friends of the High Line gained the City's support in 2002. The High Line south of 30th Street was donated to the City by CSX Transportation Inc. in 2005. The team of Field Operations and Diller Scofidio + Renfro is now at work on a design for the High Line's public landscape. Construction began in spring 2006. The first section of the park (Gansevoort to 20th Streets) is projected to open by the end of 2008. More information is available at www.thehighline.org . ABOUT LEO KESTING: Founded in October 2007 by John Leo and David Kesting, Leo Kesting is the sister gallery of Capla Kesting Fine Art, which opened its doors 4 years earlier in the gallery hub of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Leo Kesting offers the public an opportunity to see forthcoming talents in an intimate setting. The gallery constantly seeks new undiscovered artists with a cutting edge to their craft that would be otherwise overlooked by the contemporary art scene. In this way, Leo Kesting presents its collectors with an off-the-beaten-path approach to acquiring artwork that shines in our minds and culture. The gallery is located at 812 Washington Street at the corner of Gansevoort in the Meatpacking District. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Sunday from 11: 00 AM until 7:00 PM.
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Leo
Kesting Gallery
gallery
is located at 812 Washington St New York NY 10014
phone: 917-650-3760
at the corner of Ganesvoort
St
8th Ave 14th st A,C, E and L train Stop
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