YVON LAMBERT NEW YORK: Michael Brown The People!s Playground | The Strangers - 19 June 2008 to 31 July 2008

Current Exhibition


19 June 2008 to 31 July 2008
Hours : Tuesday-Saturday 10-6pm
YVON LAMBERT NEW YORK
550 West 21st Street,
NY 10011
New York, NY
New York
North America
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Artists in this exhibition: MICHAEL BROWN, BERLINDE DE BRUYCKERE, RICHARD JACKSON, ANSELM KIEFER, KOO JEONG-A, PATRICIA PICCININI, GEORGE SEGAL, SHINIQUE SMITH


Michael Brown The People!s Playground
June 19- July 31, 2008

Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
Summer hours from July 7 - July 31: Mon - Fri, 10am – 6pm

Reception for the artist Thursday, June 19, from 6 to 8 pm


New York, NY, May 17th, 2008 - Yvon Lambert New York is pleased to announce its first exhibition of New York based artist Michael Brown (born 1982, Poughkeepsie, New York). The People!s Playground will be installed in the front gallery at 550 West 21st Street.

The title of the piece, The People!s Playground, is the name by which Coney Island, since it!s inception in the early 1800!s, has been known. Coney Island is the small peninsula that hangs from the southern most edge of Brooklyn. Its history has been intrinsically shaped by the immigrants and urban Americans who gathered there, creating their own forms of enjoyment and spectacle, developing into a tourist destination after the civil war.

In The People!s Playground, Michael Brown will present a large aluminum cast of a portion of the beach from Coney Island. Brown has been drawn to reproducing simple objects and gestures in minimal, distilled form throughout his artistic practice. His work is often engaged with political subjects represented by everyday objects.

The People!s Playground captures a community in flux. The utopian promise of Coney Island, a public space where many people of different means mix, is threatened. Brown!s minimal sculpture signals the encroaching displacement of the diverse, lively culture, a public space soon to be eradicated by private interests. The piece preserves a transient impression in time in its physiological entirety, the dint of fading footprints and debris in the sand. A simple, banal, repetitive moment is stripped of its cyclical function and value, frozen in the moment. Replicating the human passage through time, intrinsic to this preserved moment is our understanding that the possibility of future impressions does not exist. We will not have the option to partake in the rich history of the People!s Playground. In revealing a history that the onlooker may never be a part of, Brown!s work unveils more generally the existence of socio-economic tensions between
public and private interest.



The Stranger
June 19 - July 31, 2008

Gallery hours: Tues – Sat, 10am – 6pm
Summer hours from July 7 – July 31: Mon - Fri, 10am – 6pm
Reception for the artists Thursday, June 19, from 6 to 8 pm


New York, May 28th, 2008: Yvon Lambert New York is pleased to announce the exhibition The Stranger including sculptures by:

BERLINDE DE BRUYCKERE
RICHARD JACKSON
ANSELM KIEFER
KOO JEONG-A
PATRICIA PICCININI
GEORGE SEGAL
SHINIQUE SMITH

“As if that blind rage had washed me clean, rid me of hope; for the first time, in that night alive with signs and stars, I opened myself to the gentle indifference of the world. Finding it so much like myself – so like a brother, really – I felt that I had been happy and that I was happy again. For everything to be consummated, for me to feel less alone, I had only to wish that there be a large crowd of spectators the day of my execution and that they greet me with the cries of hate.”

Albert Camus, The Stranger