Barmaid

January 7 – February 13, 2016

Opening reception:
Thursday, January 7, 2016
6.00 to 8.00 pm

ClampArt is pleased to announce “Barmaid,” an exhibition of photographs by John Arsenault, the artist’s fifth solo show at the gallery. The exhibition coincides with the release of the artist’s first monograph, which was published by Daylight Books (Hardcover, 10.3 x 10.2 inches, 104 pages, $50).

The site of the leather bar the Eagle LA in the Silverlake neighborhood of Los Angeles has been home to many highly popular establishments over the decades—The Shed (1968-1972), The Outcast (1972-1983), and the famous Gauntlet II (1983-2005). The Eagle LA, opened in 2006, follows a long-standing tradition of leather, uniform, and fetish set forth by other Eagle bars around the country.

For nearly two years, artist John Arsenault worked as a bar-back at the Eagle LA (or as a “barmaid,” as he affectionately referred to his position). Over the course of that time, he shot thousands of photographs—largely with his iPhone. A visual diary of sorts, the collection of images includes customer and employee portraits, interior shots of the bar itself, and a wide array of self portraits.

In one of the two essays included in the monograph, Larry Collins writes: “Édouard Manet’s 1882 impressionist masterpiece ‘A Bar at the Folies-Bergère,’ in the Courtold Gallery in London, is the touchstone for John Arsenault’s ‘Barmaid.’ It is a painting featuring an expressionless young woman in heavy makeup, seen behind a white marble bar with sparkling glass and foil, bottles of red and green liqueurs and champagne, a bowl of tangerines and a vase of roses.”

He continues: “The key photograph in Arsenault’s ‘Barmaid’ is found somewhere in the middle of his group of fifty images. It re-creates Manet’s painting closely, casting Arsenault himself as the barmaid, but now at the Eagle LA, 133 years later. Arsenault stands impassively, just as Manet’s model does, with a bowl of limes instead of tangerines, an intense orange backlight as compensation. Behind Arsenault hangs a large painted mural of leathermen engaged in an erotic dance. The Folies-Bergère was like the Eagle in many respects: a place of entertainments and erotic negotiations. In Arsenault’s collection we also find a photograph of the pink rose, a nod to the pink rose in Manet’s painting. Arsenault has bared his furry chest to us, whereas the young woman has a floral posy at her décolletage. Manet’s painting represents a nightclub, a circus even, with a trapeze artist above the crowd, all reflected in the mirror behind the bar. A hallmark and strength of Manet’s greatest paintings is that much is left unexplained, not meant to be decoded.”

Raised in a small town in northern Massachusetts, John Arsenault moved to New York City in 1997 to pursue a degree in photography at the School of Visual Arts. He now resides in Los Angeles. Arsenault’s photographs are represented in the permanent collections of the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art in Overland Park, Kansas and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Several of his photographs are presently included in the exhibition “Art AIDS America” (curated by Jonathan David Katz and Rock Hushka) at the Tacoma Art Museum in Washington, and will travel to The Bronx Museum of the Arts in New York City in June 2016.

Steel Pier, Moonrise

2019

Signed and numbered, recto

Split toned and hand-tinted gelatin silver print, printed by artist, with 8-ply over-mat and mounted to archival, 8-ply museum board

26 x 32 inches, overall mat size
22 x 28 inches, paper size
(Edition of 20)

$4500.00

Please note that prices increase as editions sell.

ClampArt at SCOPE Miami Beach 2015

ClampArt at SCOPE Miami Beach 2015

Please visit ClampArt at SCOPE Miami Beach 2015, December 1st-6th, 2015.

SCOPE Miami Beach 2015 is conveniently located on the sand at 801 Ocean Drive:

801 Ocean Drive
Miami Beach, FL 33139
Click here for a map and ticket information

The gallery is in Booth B06 showing a selection of gallery artists including Aziz + Cucher, Adam Ekberg, Lori Nix, and Ion Zupcu.

Blog post by:
Brian Paul Clamp, Director

Marc Yankus | “The Space Between,” In the In-Between

Marc Yankus writes about his work for In the In-Between:

My latest photographs are hyperreal “building portraits” shown in my most recent solo exhibition at ClampArt, “The Space Between.” In this series, select historical buildings are portrayed in altered cityscapes and invented spaces that evoke the experience of memory, imagination and dream states playing out in a magical place. Strangely familiar, the buildings are elevated in a fictional composition that appears to tell a story or reflect a past history, but their power resides more in the realm of sensation than explicit narrative. The buildings seem to emerge from the landscape, shaped by the space around them or, in some cases, by the space between them. These surrealistic alterations of New York’s architectural skyline are a cross between imagination and documentation. As portraits, they are meant to reconstitute awareness and preserve the buildings through adjustments in reality and perception.

View the original post

Browse the series “The Space Between” at ClampArt
Browse all of Marc Yankus’ work at ClampArt

Frances F. Denny | “Let Virtue Be Your Guide,” Musée Magazine

From the Musée Magazine post concerning Frances F. Denny’s exhibition at ClampArt:

“Let Virtue Be Your Guide” examines the artist’s family and their deeply rooted history as early settlers of New England. One ancestor, John Howland, was a deckhand aboard The Mayflower. Unearthing the idea of feminine “virtue” from the confines of its historical meaning, the photographs of the women in the artist’s family have a watchful quality, as if the artist is defining for herself what it means to be a woman.

View the original article

Browse the exhibition “Let Virtue Be Your Guide” at ClampArt
Browse the exhibition “Pink Crush” at ClampArt
Browse all of Frances F. Denny’s work at ClampArt

Frances F. Denny | “Let Virtue Be Your Guide,” Lenscratch

From Aline Smithson’s article for Lenscratch:

Frances F. Denny’s trajectory has moved into new orbits. We’ve been on the sidelines cheering her on ever since her 2014 Lenscratch Student Award and 2014 Critical Mass Top 50 win–and lots of recognition in 2015, and today we are excited to celebrate her first solo exhibition opening tonight at ClampArt in New York City (plus gallery representation!) and the launch of her first monograph, “Let Virtue Be Your Guide,” published by Radius Books, to be released December 1st. “Let Virtue Be Your Guide” will be on view through December 19th at ClampArt and the exhibition will also include work from Frances’ latest series, “Pink Crush,” in ClampArt’s Project Room.

View the original article

Browse the exhibition “Let Virtue Be Your Guide” at ClampArt
Browse the exhibition “Pink Crush” at ClampArt
Browse all of Frances F. Denny’s work at ClampArt

Frances F. Denny | “Portrait Subjects,” PDN

From David Walker’s article for Photo District News:

In addition to her fine-art work, Frances F. Denny shoots editorial and commercial assignments, specializing in evocative and empowering portraits of women. As an undergraduate, Denny studied the representations of women in art and literature, and what she learned informs her depictions of women.

“I think of my subjects as individuals. I try not to push them into cookie-cutter poses, or ideas of how women are supposed to look, whether that be really skinny, or sexy in a contrived way,” Denny says. “I try to read the person’s energy before I take my camera out. I’m trying to watch them, take their temperature. Do they seem really shy? Or a little excited to have their picture taken? Or maybe a lot excited? I want to have fun with it.”

View the original article

Browse all of Frances F. Denny’s work at ClampArt

Frances F. Denny | “Dynamite Double-Header,” What Will You Remember?

From Elin Spring’s review of Frances F. Denny’s two solo shows for her blog What Will You Remember?:

Denny’s “Let Virtue Be Your Guide” offers an unblinking examination of feminine identity in the rarified context of affluent society by exploring the generations of women in her own New England family. In airy, softly lit scenarios, Denny frames a combination of female relatives and heirlooms in their stately surroundings, thereby contrasting their privileged heritage with today’s notions of class and morals. With poised asymmetries, peaceful palettes and a keen eye for telling details, Denny tiptoes through her own family history, visually searching for ways in which she and her cohort can both honor their legacy and embrace contemporary culture.

In “Pink Crush,” Denny scrutinizes the pop culture of her youth, recalling middle school paraphernalia teeming with rainbows, unicorns and hearts. By using adult models, Denny suggests that those girlish tastes play a critical role in shaping an emerging sense of self and that fragments of such pubescent crazes unwittingly persist into adulthood. Vibrant colors and punchy graphics bring the slick trappings of her cultural legacy into sharp relief. Catchy and fun, Denny nails the sensibilities of the 1980’s and 90’s with snappy appeal. This is the flip side to her pensive exploration of self from the vantage point of home.

Read the full review

Browse the exhibition “Let Virtue Be Your Guide” at ClampArt
Browse the exhibition “Pink Crush” at ClampArt
Browse all of Frances F. Denny’s work at ClampArt

Lane Coder | “100 Mile Radius project,” Huck

From Andrea Kurland and Sam Warner’s article for Huck:

As a practicing photographer, and die-hard photography fan, Stuart Pilkington’s insatiable enthusiasm and love for the creative process has led him to kickstart a long and varied stream of rewarding, pressure-free, fun scenarios for independent photographers looking to try new things, and reach new eyes.

This year, Stuart founded the Pilkington Prize, an annual competition for photographers from all backgrounds that will set a new brief each year. 2015’s installment, 100 Mile Radius, invited photographers to shoot a landscape within 100 miles of their home. And the response, as expected, was huge, with emerging shooters and established practitioners getting involved from all corners of the globe.

Lane Coder [one of the Top Ten prize winners] studied Fine Art at Parsons in NYC, but segued to photography after a friend lent him a Polaroid SX 70 camera. “The polaroids looked like little paintings and that’s all it took for me to redirect my focus to photography.”

View the original article

Browse all of Lane Coder’s work at ClampArt

Jesse Burke | “Goings On About Town,” The New Yorker

From Vince Aletti’s review for The New Yorker:

The freckle-faced girl seen sprawled in the grass cuddling with a baby raccoon is the photographer’s daughter Clover; for the past five years, Burke, who is based in Rhode Island, has been taking his child on road trips to acquaint her with the natural world. Pictures of Clover outdoors—perched on a big driftwood log at the seashore, crouched on the top of a mountain—are juxtaposed with domestic images of her tucked into bed. Photographs of a bloody nose and a little arm in a bright-pink cast underscore the absence of sentimentality, as well as a genuine tenderness.

Read the full review

Browse the exhibition “Wild & Precious” at ClampArt
Browse all of Jesse Burke’s work at ClampArt

Jesse Burke, “Photo of the Day,” PDN

From Photo District News:

The phrase “road trip” conjures an image of buddies seeking adventure, or a chance for self-exploration: Think Sal Paradise and Dean Moriarity in “On the Road,” or Thelma and Louise. In his new book “Wild & Precious,” photographer Jesse Burke documents a series of road trips he made with his young daughter Clover.

Read the full review

Browse the exhibition “Wild & Precious” at ClampArt
Browse all of Jesse Burke’s work at ClampArt

Lindsay Morris | “Faces to Reckon with,” World Photography Organisation

From World Photography Organisation’s interview with Lindsay Morris:

WPO: Talk to us more about your series “You Are You.”

LM: “You Are You” documents a weekend summer camp for gender-variant children and their families. I arrived at camp through a loved one, after discovering a web-based list-serve where the families of these children communicated their experiences. The camaraderie that evolved over time created a desire in all of us to meet face-to-face, which over a few summers in small groups, became the annual camp “You Are You” (a pseudonym).

This camp is unprecedented and this story is the most important and timely one I have had the honor of telling. The goal of the project is to give the outside world a glimpse into this very special place where children are celebrated for openly expressing themselves alongside family and more importantly, their siblings. At camp, family members contribute to the camp activities, and my role became camp photographer.

View the original article

Browse the exhibition “You Are You” at ClampArt
Browse all of Lindsay Morris’ work at ClampArt

Frances F. Denny | “At ClampArt,” F-Stop Magazine

From F-Stop Magazine’s coverage of Frances F. Denny’s exhibition “Pink Crush” at ClampArt:

“Pink Crush” describes the visual iconography of late 20th-century girlhood, reflecting the ways in which the aesthetics of an era shape a developing sense of self. The motifs and colors are reminiscent of Lisa Frank and other girlie-girl pop obsessions of the 80s and 90s. Despite a wariness of the saccharine, childlike qualities the subjects convey, the series as a whole betrays a longstanding attraction, and exposes how those girlish fixations can remain both outside and inside grown women.

View the original article

Browse the exhibition “Pink Crush” at ClampArt
Browse all of Frances F. Denny’s work at ClampArt

Jesse Burke | “Wild & Precious,” What Will You Remember?

From Elin Spring’s review of Jesse Burke’s solo exhibition for her blog What Will You Remember?:

If there is such a thing as a second chance at childhood, the birth of a baby is perhaps the most hopeful opportunity to re-write your own history. Photographer Jesse Burke documents his sense of rediscovery through a captivating journey with his daughter in “Wild & Precious”, a solo show and accompanying monograph at ClampArt in NYC through November 14, 2015.

Burke’s photographs are simultaneously an ode to childhood and mother nature, a visual celebration of our physical and psychological intertwinings with the environment. Created during a series of road trips with his young daughter Clover from 2010 to 2015, with the aim of nurturing her close and unafraid connection with flora and fauna, Burke grasps the arc of wonder through expansive vistas, gritty minutia and guileless gestures.

Read the original review in full

Browse the exhibition “Wild & Precious” at ClampArt
Browse all of Jesse Burke’s work at ClampArt

Silent Piano

(from the series “Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow”)
2013

Signed and numbered, verso

30 x 40 inches
Digital C-Print (Edition of 5)
$2500.00

20 x 24 inches
Chromogenic print (Edition of 7)
$1500.00

Please note that prices increase as editions sell.

Fallen Angel

2013

Signed and numbered, verso

30 x 40 inches
Digital C-Print (Edition of 5)
$2500.00

20 x 24 inches
Chromogenic print (Edition of 7)
$1500.00

Please note that prices increase as editions sell.

“Frances F. Denny: Let Virtue Be Your Guide”

ClampArt is pleased to present “Frances F. Denny: Let Virtue Be Your Guide”—an exhibition to coincide with the release of the artist’s monograph of the same title from Radius Books (Hardcover, 9.75 x 10.5 inches, 128 pages, 36 color plates, $45). This is Frances F. Denny’s first solo show.

View the exhibition photos and press release in full

PDF of the press release
“Frances F. Denny, Let Virtue Be Your Guide”

Browse all of Frances F. Denny’s work at ClampArt