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Postmasters Gallery

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Postmasters opened in the East Village in December 1984, moved to Soho in 1989 and in September 1998 the gallery relocated again to a large ground floor space in Chelsea. Postmasters is the primary gallery for all the artists we represent.

The gallery has a history of exhibiting work in media that is challenging for a commercial art gallery, including the work of several Net.artists and political activists. For example, Maciej Wisniewski's media-rich e-mail software Netomat was exhibited as an artwork at the gallery in 1999 before being exhibited at the Whitney Museum in 2000. The gallery's decision to exhibit software as an art form engages the Marshall McLuhan-coined concept "The medium is the message" by updating it with Wisnieski's belief that 'the artist's role is to challenge the existing notion of software development and distribution.'[1] In 2007, Hong Kong-based artist and Internet activist Kenneth Tin-Kin Hung exhibited a video critical of the George W. Bush Administration titled "Because Washington Is Hollywood for Ugly People".[2]

On September 6th, 2001, German-born artist Wolfgang Staehle, installed three live-feed video projections in the gallery, one of which was a panoramic view of Lower Manhattan, which would remain on view for the rest of the month. In a strange coincidence, the feed captured the terrorist attacks of September 11th, transforming a fixed image of the city into what the art critic Roberta Smith of the New York Times called "a live history painting."[3]

On occasion, Sawon has allowed artists to direct the public's attention to her own role as an art dealer. In 1992 the gallery hosted an exhibition of work by Silvia Kolbowski, featuring posters of the gallery itself.[4] In an event called "Ask the Dealer," during the month-long hashtagclass series at Winkleman Gallery in 2010, Sawon promised to truthfully answer any question asked of her regarding her experience as a gallerist.[5]

References

  1. ^ Mirapaul, Matthew. "A Drawing Board for Multimedia E-mail". The New York Times. July 31, 2003.
  2. ^ Smith, Roberta. "Battle Rages on the Cultural Front". The New York Times. December 30, 2007.
  3. ^ Smith, Roberta. "In New York's Galleries, a New Context Seems to Remake the Art". The New York Times. September 19, 2001.
  4. ^ Smith, Roberta. "The Gallery Is the Message". The New York Times. October 4th, 1992.
  5. ^ Goldstein, Andrew M. "In New York: Opening this Weekend". Artinfo.com. February 17, 2010.