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Discussions
19 Oct 2020

Collector’s Choice: For Folk’s Sake! Contemporary Artists x AFAM

Join an evening conversation with Paul Laster, Renée Riccardo, and Karley Klopfenstein, who collaborated to organize For Folk’s Sake! Contemporary Artists x the American Folk Art Museum, now on view at artsy.net/folkartmuseum. Panelists will share their favorite pieces,  new discoveries, and place the works in a larger context of their relationship to self-taught art and the work of the museum.

Please note; registrants will receive an email reminder with the Zoom link for joining the event via computer or mobile device.

Questions? Please email: kklopfenstein@folkartmuseum.org

Paul Laster is a writer, editor, curator, artist, and lecturer. He’s a contributing editor at ArtAsiaPacific and Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art, and writer for Time Out New York, Harper’s Bazaar Arabia, Galerie Magazine, Sculpture, Art & Object, Cultured, Architectural Digest, Garage, Surface, Ocula, Observer, ArtPulse, Conceptual Fine Arts and Glasstire. He was the founding editor of Artkrush, started The Daily Beast’s art section, and was art editor of Russell Simmons’ OneWorld Magazine, as well as a curator at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, now MoMA PS1.

Renée Riccardo began her career as an independent curator, organizing shows of contemporary art in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles from 1985 to 1990. During that time she was an Adjunct Curator for Photography at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center (now MoMA PS1) in Long Island City, NY. In 1991 Riccardo founded ARENA, a contemporary gallery for emerging artists, at 128 Wooster Street in Soho. Two years later ARENA moved to a brownstone apartment on Clinton Street in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, where it functioned as a salon-style gallery space for six years. There, ARENA presented the first solo shows of Ann Agee, Joanne Greenbaum, Rachel Harrison and Jason Middlebrook among many others. While exhibiting art in Brooklyn, she co-organized (with John Good) The Art Exchange Show, a contemporary art fair utilizing nine floors of abandoned office space in Lower Manhattan that combined art galleries with live performances in 1996 and 1997. After being featured on the cover of The New York Times Magazine for the article “Neo-Dealers” and on City Arts, a PBS cultural magazine on television, ARENA moved to Williamsburg to join forces with Feed Gallery and became ARENA@Feed. In 2002 ARENA relocated to Manhattan to the renowned Chelsea Arts Building at 526 West 26 Street where she presented the work of acclaimed artists Marilyn Minter and Wangechi Mutu among many others. In late 2004 Riccardo established ARENA Projects as a nomadic gallery, continuing to promote the work of emerging artists by organizing independent exhibitions for galleries and institutions nationally. Currently Riccardo curates exhibitions entitled, Wrap Around at ARENA@Suite 806, the current incarnation of ARENA in her therapist’s office on Fifth Avenue, NYC.

Karley Klopfenstein is the Deputy Director and Chief Development Officer at the American Folk Art Museum. She has been at the museum since 2012 and overseen many aspects of fundraising, galas, and special events. Before her tenure at AFAM, she was Director of Development for NURTUREart, an artist space dedicated to emerging artists in Brooklyn; and the Director of Sculpture Key West an annual outdoor sculpture festival in Key West, Florida.

6:00 pm–7:00 pm

Online; free with registration

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