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Posting Notices and Strange Spam Tips Forwarded to AFC

by Art Fag City on May 18, 2007

Photograph Neil Rough I’m out of town so there won’t be any posts today. We will issue a reminder though that tomorrow is the NADA Art Book Swap in Chelsea, so don’t forget to bring your old books out to exchange for new ones. Also as luck would have it, a tipster sent our offices […]

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Posting Notice

by Art Fag City on April 13, 2007

Image copyright Neil Rough I’m out of town today so a full gallery report will have to wait until Monday. I will note however that the Dana Schutz show is worth seeing, and Zach Feuer has even opened up an additional room for viewing. Also, I removed a delicious link to blacktown.net with flash animation […]

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Posting Notice

by Art Fag City on March 8, 2007

Photo copyright Neil Rough I think God is punishing Christians by keeping the technical knowledge from their faith that would allow them to create embeddable videos without an automatic start function. I’ve removed the video from the post below because having it run every time I loaded my web page it annoyed the fuck out […]

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Posting Notice

by Art Fag City on February 12, 2007

Photo copyright Neil Rough I’m traveling for the next couple days, so updates will be a little thinner than usual around here. Look forward to a few posts full of great links in my absence.

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Posting Notice: Art Fag City Runs Around

by Art Fag City on January 25, 2007

Image copyright Neil Rough Admittedly we are running a little low on content this week, but unfortunately there are times when unbloggy business dominates what you do. It’s not like we don’t have stuff to talk about but most of it will probably have to wait until next week. Until then, enjoy the now standard […]

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Posting Notice: We Return After the Weekend

by Art Fag City on January 12, 2007

Image copyright Neil Rough And here I thought I’d be able to whip off the last portion of the web lists for you by the end of the week. No such luck. I’m out of town today, and unfortunately feeling slightly ill.

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Posting Notice: Darth Vader Vrs. Santa Claus Edition

by Art Fag City on December 22, 2006

Photograph by Neil Rough We’re signing out for the holidays until the 27th new year when we will return for our 2006 wrap up. Yes, that’s right, in only a few days Art Fag City will become solely dedictated to the publishing of incomplete lists and seriously flawed hierarchical systems of evaluation.

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Posting Notice

by Art Fag City on November 20, 2006

Image copyright Neil Rough I will be out of town today selling my soul to corporate America. Posting will resume Tuesday.

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This Week’s Must-See Events: Queer Power Edition

by Paddy Johnson and Michael Anthony Farley on June 13, 2016
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Monday’s been a rough day for us here at AFC as I’m sure it has for many readers. We’re still processing the horrific news of Orlando’s mass killing Sunday morning and it’s made writing much of anything difficult. Is there anything that can be said on the subject of guns, prayers, Islam, hate crimes and ISIS that social media hasn’t covered?

Probably not, that doesn’t diminish our need to mourn. One way we’ve decided to do this is to  focus on queer events in this week’s must see events. It’s a small gesture to be sure—we’re not saving any lives. But it’s what we can do to say to the families, friends and lovers of those lost that, “you’re not alone.”  

So, let’s talk all things homo-tastic: Monday night, Neil Goldberg revisits the David Lynch classic ERASERHEAD with a queer perspective. Tuesday, the unsung godfather of glam illustration Antonio Lopez gets his long-overdue retrospective at El Museo del Barrio, and two events at BRIC and Mitchell Innes & Nash bring queer/feminist perspectives to the city’s affordability crisis. Wednesday night, dyke icon K8 Hardy opens a mysterious solo show at Stap-On Projects while Thursday offers a one-night-only performance/installation from Scottish duo Ruby Pester and Nadia Rossi, who will be tackling sexuality, gender, and more at Bannerette. Friday night, head to Bushwick, where the Hot Summer Nights gallery crawl has some queer-tastic highlights in time for Pride month—be sure to catch Los Ojos’s all-LGBTQ group show and Vincent Tiley’s solo project at Christopher Stout Gallery. Also in Brooklyn Friday night: solo shows from AFC favs Björn Meyer-Ebrecht and Rachel Stern at Studio 10 and Black & White Projects, respectively, both located in the same building.

If you’re not politically/emotionally exhausted by the weekend, we recommend checking out the massive group show Of the people on Saturday at Smack Mellon. It’s all about the issues involved in this fucked, fucked election cycle. So when you’re feeling thoroughly anti-establishment, check out the Queens Museum’s Sunday panel on the visual legacy of punk.

It’s too late to wish everyone a happy Pride Month, but hopefully we can at least have a thoughtful one.

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Housing Costs Too Much: A Responsive Series of Awkward Dinner Conversations

by Chris Green on May 23, 2016
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“How can you say that affordable housing should go towards artist studios rather than homeless domestic violence victims?”

The question, asked on Monday evening by the Village Voice’s Neil deMause during dinner at a luxurious Chelsea apartment, sent some hands reaching for wine glasses. It was a moment in William Powhida and Jennifer Dalton’s MONTH2MONTH, the public art project running in private residences around the city throughout May, that made the stakes of such a project’s engagement housing uncomfortably clear. The guests at the dinner, a varied mix of artists, patrons and the curious, were faced with a paradox of the liberal sensibility whereby supporting the arts might be tantamount to taking housing away from the truly needy. At least until Powhida announced that he, an artist, didn’t think artists should be given studio space over anyone.The problem is one of affordability. The discussion moved on, drinks were refilled.

In the age of poor doors and museum-sanctioned real estate summits, MONTH2MONTH, produced by MoreArt, asks what role the art community, which is so often viewed as an agent of gentrification, can play in the debate around NYC housing.

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