May 10 – June 7, 2014
Opening Reception
Saturday, May 10, 7:00 – 10:00 PM
Public Program during Bushwick Open Studios Weekend
Saturday, May 31, 3:30-5:00 PM
Is St. Claude Avenue Louisiana’s answer to Bushwick?
An open discussion moderated by Laura Blereau about creating new spaces for art and ideas in the New Orleans
community. Featuring artist’s talks by Dan Tague and Christopher Saucedo, two founding members of Good
Children Gallery; a screening of the video “Posing Process” by Lala Raščić; and a presentation on artist-run spaces
by Amy Mackie, an independent curator and writer based in New Orleans.
Gallery Hours
Saturday and Sunday: 3:00 – 7:00 PM and By Appointment
Mon – Fri: By Appointment
Part manifesto, part showcase, “Takeover!!” presents work by fourteen members of Good Children Gallery, a curatorial
space in New Orleans founded in 2008. Rooted in the city’s recent climate of radical transformation, the exhibition
chronicles a movement entirely organized by artists.
“About five years ago, artists started curating shows regularly in New Orleans,” explains Christopher Saucedo, a founding
member of Good Children. “As curators it was not just our own artwork we were pushing to a dealer, but suddenly we could
define the broader aesthetic possibilities using the artwork of others. This was a big shift in the ego driven 'my artwork is
better than yours' status-quo. Now we all had both the opportunity and the responsibility to see the bigger picture, which
has made a world of a difference.”
The collective Good Children is a forerunner of the many artist residency programs, pop-up exhibitions, studios and co-op
galleries that have since flourished in the Bywater neighborhood. Privately run and open freely to the public, the gallery
strategically generates exhibitions that widen the frame of reference for artists who have studios and homes in the Upper
Ninth Ward. Located in a zone frequently cited for its post-Katrina revitalization, the gallery is culturally positioned in an
area of the city that has long been a stronghold of grassroots activism.
Following an unprecedented influx of visual artists and the emergence of Prospect New Orleans, an international arts
biennial, the regional demand for contemporary exhibition spaces has boomed. Now, all year round, whether recognized
by the biennial or not, artists who have the means to do so are writing their own curatorial agenda. In this environment,
Good Children has led a surge in local exhibitions at artist-run spaces, which serve the community by closing gaps left
open by underfunded museums, non-profits and commercial galleries.
The salon-style hanging of “Takeover!!” invokes the tradition of artist-organized group displays, such as the first
Impressionism exhibition in Paris and those of the Salon des Indépendants. Featuring nearly fifty artworks, the exhibition
also includes a selection of artists’ writings and letters of protest addressed to the New Orleans Contemporary Art Center.
An institution founded in 1976 by an earlier generation of artists, the CAC symbolizes an established system, even if it is
somewhat dysfunctional. The letters explain a series of controversial staff resignations in 2012 at the museum, which was
prompted by the CAC’s bungled exhibition “Spaces: Antenna, The Front, Good Children Gallery”. These texts not only
illuminate the artists’ frustration with the museum, but they also reaffirm the general objectives of self-run art galleries in the
Bywater.
The energy of Bushwick is easily comparable to scene on St. Claude Avenue in New Orleans. The voices of younger
artists are amplified, along with that of newcomers. Yet in recent years, the level of accessibility and professionalism in the
Bywater has risen to the point of rivaling the local offerings at arts institutions with public funding. The idea of such an
eclipse has stirred a new generation of debate on the role museums play in the regional support of contemporary art
practice.
Among the co-op structure’s many advantages are the global and national perspectives of its members, and the network of
exchange fostered in off-site exhibitions hosted by like-minded artist collectives. For example, the exhibition of Good
Children Gallery artists at Secret Project Robot is one such reciprocal arrangement. In March 2011, Good Children
organized a show in New Orleans curated by the collective Live With Animals. That exhibition, “Be Love: Happily Ever
After, A Glimpse of the Post-Apocalyptic Future”, included the work of three New York artists: Raul de Nieves, Erik
Zajeceskowski and Rachel Nelson.
A fully illustrated guide accompanies “Takeover!!”, and will be available May 10 at the gallery and online. A panel
discussion featuring guests from New Orleans will take place at 3:30 PM, May 31, during Bushwick Open Studios
weekend.
For images and more information, please visit
www.secretprojectrobot.org
www.goodchildrengallery.com
Directions to Secret Project Robot
Nearest subway is the L to Morgan Ave or Jefferson St in Bushwick, Brooklyn
389 Melrose Street is located between Knickerbocker and Flushing/Irving
Secret Project Robot is a 501c3 non-for-profit artist run exhibition space that was founded in 2004. It an experimental
space gravitating around the idea that art should be experienced and lived daily