The Bong Show
December 9, 2006- January 20, 2007
535 W 22nd St
The artist
Beverly Semmes wondered what would happen when serious artists contemplated a
culturally-marginal object (a bong, for example) and decided to invite a group of her peers to
do just that. This show is about testing the limits of art and craft, public and private, high and
low, and going with the flow. It features many pieces made specifically for the exhibition as
well as existing works, chosen by the artists themselves.
Among the works on view are
Elaine Reichek’s embroidered reinterpretation of a famous
painting by Magritte; a pipe created by Ann Chu, inspired by the “lucky cat,” whose raised
beckoning paw brings good fortune and customers, and
Michael Joo’s Double-Barreled MSG
Inhaler, consisting of two seven-foot polycarbonate tubes, connected by a crudely-fashioned
oxygen mask that protrude from fifty-pound containers of monosodium glutamate. With a
needle, a glass, and a copy of J.D. Salinger's novel The Catcher in the Rye,
Byron Kim
commemorates a significant moment from his past and the necessity of improvising while on
the road.
Aura Rosenberg pays homage to the literary history of intoxication with a “stash
box” made from a hollowed out edition of Walter Benjamin’s book On Hashish (concealing an
exquisitely tiny pipe).
John Miller’s altered covers of What Color is Your Parachute, A Separate
Peace, Sensible Self-Help, and books by Rush Limbaugh and John Dewey feature images of
bongs.
Allen Ruppersberg presents books from his Remainders series including 1966 Was a
Good Year, 1967 Was Fabulous.
Liz Larner contributes “an impeccably stoned smile” of cast
porcelain. Arlene Schechet’s piece is inspired by a puff of smoke.
Also included are works by
Curtis Mitchell made by pouring household chemicals onto
photosensitive paper;
Ann Agee’s ashtray inspired by a sex education manual; a huge roughly
hewn wooden “bowl” by
Ursula von Rydingsvard;
Beverly Semmes’s Icicle Pipe, made of handsculptured
crystal; ceramic pieces by
Nicole Cherubini,
Arnie Zimmerman, and
Charles Long,
and other works in a variety of mediums.
Beverly Semmes’s artistic career has included solo and group exhibitions at museums and
galleries throughout the world. The Bong Show is her first curatorial project.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show
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