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NOTHNG OF THE MONTH CLUB

Kennedy wrote that Johnson worked “by choice and temperament outside the walls of power while possessing the skeleton key to the back gate, allowing him to slip inside at will and wander surreptitiously around.” In other words, he was an “Insider-outsider”, probably the first of this archetype. Since his death in 1995, many artists have followed in this vein.

 

The first three works as you enter the space are Ray Johnson pieces, the first a painting and following video works. The second work is a video taken of Ray Johnson by William S. Wilson in 1965. Johnson’s jester-like yet flirtatious energy radiates through the short clip.

 

As you continue, you are drawn to two brightly colored paintings. Marlon Mullen’s untitled work (2015), bright green with the words “IN ART” painted starkly in black capital letters across the center, continues with the playful tone that has already been set up by the Ray Johnson works. Next, you see a canvas covered in red and gold glitter, a lion on its hind legs in the center. Karen Kilimnik’s “My Judith Lieber bag, the royal house of Scotland” (2012) offers a campy continuation of the Johnson artistic vernacular.

 

 

Olivia DiVecchia, is not Aristotle's metaphysics, 2019-2020. 

 

 

Three Robert Hawkins paintings, all entitled “The Last Dodo”, follow, each one stranger than the last. They resemble something you might unearth in a humble thrift/antique store, the style earnest and subject matter clearly poking fun. On what Kennedy and Polaert told me was their “music wall” of the exhibition, there’s an abstract watercolor by legendary fingerstyle guitarist John Fahey, and a text heavy work by New York punk icon Richard Hell, entitled “Untitled (for a long time I used to go to bed)”.

 

While viewing this collection, which features thirteen different artists, in addition to Johnson, it's evident they’re each playing with the viewer in their own ways- you just hope you’re in on the joke. These artists’ visual language was a response to their being outsiders in the art world and finding the absurdities in the conventions imposed on them. Many of them have such a punk sensibility, an I-make-my-own-rules-but-there-are-no-rules kind of energy.

 

The group exhibition is open through the end of April, and is certainly one you’d regret to miss. You can also view the exhibit virtually here.

 

Some select works from NOTHNG OF THE MONTH CLUB below: 

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