Pratt Manhattan Gallery
144 West 14th Street, (at 7th Avenue), 212 647-7778
Chelsea
March 17 - April 20, 2006
Web Site
The American expression that ‘good things come in small packages’ has not always carried over into an art community that often favors extreme monumentalism. Nevertheless, work in small scale has a long legacy that extends to new media, as evidenced in ‘Media Miniature,’ an exhibition curated by the Guggenheim’s Christina Yang and on view at Pratt Manhattan Gallery through April 20. The show features seven artists ‘who create intentionally miniature work with monumental implications.’ Marc Lafia, Lev Manovich, Jane Philbrick, Charlene Rule, Dave Simonds, Grahame Weinbren, and the-phone-book Limited present microcinema, unique ring tones, a digital diary, and other pieces that manipulate or defy scale to create ultimately subjective listening and viewing experiences. Yang’s selections range from ‘classic’ internet movies of the 1990s to very recent work and are inspired by what she sees as an historical shift in the social experience of art. With art made for portable devices like MP3 players and cell phones, the ‘mass social experience’ of art once confined to theatres, museums, and cathedrals is now personal and mobile. New Yorkers can get personal with the work by visiting the exhibition, which is accompanied by a series of free events. – Marisa Olson
In Conversation, Saturday, April 1, 2 pm, in the gallery Artists Jane Philbrick, Charlene Rule, Dave Simonds and Grahame Weinbren engage in a lively dialogue about contemporary media art with Lauren Cornell, executive director of rhizome.org at the New Museum of Contemporary Art.