Clayton Patterson Outside In
Clayton Patterson: an artist and gallery owner, editor and publisher, organizer, promoter, provocateur, and, over the last few years, historian and eulogizer.
Clayton Patterson: an artist and gallery owner, editor and publisher, organizer, promoter, provocateur, and, over the last few years, historian and eulogizer.
Shocking and playful and messy and scary, Scooter LaForge’s new paintings and three-dimensional objects are madly over the top: anarchic yet composed, pretty yet provocative, they embody pleasure, discernment, and the spirit of play.
Did you know that New York City is planning to build or preserve 200,000 units of affordable housing over the next ten years? This two-hour seminar for performing-arts and entertainment professionals provides an overview of government-subsidized housing in New York City, which is available for both low- and middle-income households. This seminar will be offered again on October 20, November 24, and December 15.
More than a reunion, a retrospective, or a forced march through niche history, this exhibition and its related events showcase the club as a cultural laboratory that continues to resonate today. The club will be recreated in performances including "Cafe Iguana", featuring an all-star cast of characters from then and now; the infamous Pyramid bar a stage for myriad legendary performances; and archival artwork, posters and other arcane ephemera.
Opening Night: Cafe Iguana, Saturday October 17th, 8 PM Part Weimar-era Cabaret, part Great White Way, with a dash of the Merry Pranksters and Happenings thrown in, Cafe Iguana blended […]
Moderated by Hattie Hathaway. Panelists include Victor Mendolia (Anonymous? Productions), Kevin Malony (TWEED TheaterWorks), Hapi Phace, Kesutis Nakas, Paula Now, John Jeserun, Iris Rose, and of course more!
Did you know that New York City is planning to build or preserve 200,000 units of affordable housing over the next ten years? This two-hour seminar for performing-arts and entertainment […]
Conceived as a response to the gentrification and pasteurization of New York in 1984, Whispers was billed as “The Complete Suburban Gay Experience†and as a party for “hairdressers, display queens, theatre folk, fashionistas, florists, and sensitive straight people.â€
Including works by: Disturbed Form Theater, Tennevision, Tom Rubnitz, Mark Oates, Nelson Sullivan, Tabboo!, Blacklips, Flloyd, Marjan Moghaddam, TWEED TheaterWorks & more.
We transform HOWL! Happening Gallery into the artist’s studio, with Scot, his models (in various stages of undress,) and gallery-goers alike, invoking the spirits of those dear and departed.
Despite a demanding career in publishing, Minnesota native Les Simpson found time to create the iconic Wednesday night bacchanal Channel 69 which featured DJ Dany Johnson and lasted into the […]
Join photographer Marcia Resnick and writer Victor Bockris at a book signing slideshow and reading from their new book. Featuring rockers Joey Ramone, David Byrne, Iggy Pop and Mick Jagger; […]
Alone at Last was conceived in 1981 as a video installation that explores issues of gender and fantasy at a time when traditional views of sexuality were not just being challenged but overturned. Created by artists Pat Ivers and Emily Armstrong, both pro-sex feminists when pornography was a hot-button issue in the women’s movement, Alone at Last invites the viewer to initiate an encounter with a stranger in the dark and be seduced, in the process becoming part of the artwork.
Did you know that New York City is planning to build or preserve 200,000 units of affordable housing over the next ten years? This two-hour seminar for performing-arts and entertainment professionals provides an overview of government-subsidized housing in New York City, which is available for both low- and middle-income households. This seminar will be offered again on November 24 and December 15.
Did you know that New York City is planning to build or preserve 200,000 units of affordable housing over the next ten years? This two-hour seminar for performing-arts and entertainment professionals provides an overview of government-subsidized housing in New York City, which is available for both low- and middle-income households. This seminar will be offered again on December 15.
Threat Assessment by Tim Clifford, an exhibition of works that transform the visuals of American gun culture into meticulously rendered indictments of violence and death.
Did you know that New York City is planning to build or preserve 200,000 units of affordable housing over the next ten years? This two-hour seminar for performing-arts and entertainment professionals provides an overview of government-subsidized housing in New York City, which is available for both low- and middle-income households.