Institute 193
Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)       

Off Site: Summer Studio

Summer Studio
The Elaine de Kooning House
June 25 - September 15, 2018

Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)       

Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)       

Summer Studio
The Elaine de Kooning House
June 25 – September 15, 2018

Over the past nine years, a community of artists, writers, and musicians has coalesced around Institute 193. The relationships formed therein have resulted in the creation of new bodies of work and collaborative projects that will be shown, many for the first time, at the Elaine de Kooning house in East Hampton, New York this summer. The works will be installed throughout the home’s various rooms and accompanied by a series of Institute 193 publications. De Kooning, a gifted painter, critic, inspirational teacher and member of the Eighth Street Club in Greenwich Village was an integral part of the vibrant artistic scene of her time. The exhibition will explore both local and universal notions of community and demonstrate the profound effects that even a modest space dedicated to the exchange of ideas can instill upon a group of individual talents. Summer Studio: Institute 193 at the Elaine de Kooning House will feature works by Robert Beatty, Jessie Dunahoo, Mike Goodlett, Lonnie Holley, Shara Hughes, Guy Mendes, Adam O’Neal, Aaron Skolnick, Lina Tharsing, and Mare Vaccaro.

In addition to the home exhibition, Institute 193 will install a large-scale environment by Jessie Dunahoo, an artist who passed away in May 2017, in the studio portion of the building. Deaf since birth, Dunahoo additionally lost his vision as a young man. Though no official record exists, it is thought that he attended the Kentucky School for the Blind for at least a couple of years later in life. Beyond this, the artist was largely left to his own devices. Living on a farm in the 30s and 40s did, however, have its advantages and afforded the artist opportunities to explore and manipulate outdoor space. Using dirt, brush, and other found debris, Dunahoo created various earth sculptures and paths on the land immediately surrounding the family’s house. Dunahoo also used various fences and trees to hang intersecting lines, ropes, and wires that could be grasped and threaded, creating a 3-D map he used to navigate outdoor space, a practice he has maintained throughout his life, despite becoming a client of social services and residing in state-operated group homes. In time, Dunahoo’s environments grew and evolved into complex sewn structures made of found materials, including grocery bags, fabric samples, pieces of old clothing and twine. Through an interpreter, Jessie described his works as shelters, and they were strung about his home and yard, covering the walls, floor, and ceiling. His work is in the collection of the American Folk Art Museum (NY).

Elaine de Kooning House

In 1975, Elaine de Kooning reconciled with Willem and purchased the house on Alewive Brook Road. She added the studio three years later and created her last important bodies of work — the Cave Walls and Cave Paintings (1985–88). She also painted the commissioned portrait of the Brazilian soccer player Pele and according to her assistant from that time, Barry Gordy’s portrait was completed in the studio as well as others. After her death, the sculptor John Chamberlain owned the house and studio, followed by the painter Richmond Burton. Since 2011, the Elaine de Kooning House has hosted exhibitions and informal residencies with the artists Charles Andresen, Aaron Aujla, Lizzi Bougatsos, Joe Bradley, Chris Duncan, Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe, Kim "Mudman" Jones, Laura and Rachel Lancaster, Sadie Laska, Jose Lerma, Liz Markus, Adam Marnie, Katherine McMahon, Scott and Tyson Reeder, John Riepenhoff, Celeste Dupy-Spencer, Jerry “The Marble Faun” Torre, Michael Williams, and Anke Weyer.

Press:
Elaine de Kooning’s Old House is Art’s New Home by Edward M. Gómez, Hyperallergic, September 8, 2018

Installation View (Adam O'Neal, left, Aaron Skolnick, right)

Installation View (Adam O'Neal, left, Aaron Skolnick, right)

Installation View (Institute 193 ephemera, left, Lonnie Holley, right)

Installation View (Institute 193 ephemera, left, Lonnie Holley, right)

Installation View (Lina Tharsing, left, Robert Beatty, right)

Installation View (Lina Tharsing, left, Robert Beatty, right)

Installation View (Shara Hughes)     

Installation View (Shara Hughes)     

Installation View (Lina Tharsing)

Installation View (Lina Tharsing)

Installation View (Robert Beatty)

Installation View (Robert Beatty)

Installation View (Mike Goodlett)

Installation View (Mike Goodlett)

Installation View (Mike Goodlett, left, Mare Vacarro, right)

Installation View (Mike Goodlett, left, Mare Vacarro, right)

Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)

Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)

Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)

Installation View (Jessie Dunahoo)

Guy Mendes, Marble Creek Nude, 1998, gelatin silver print, 16 X 20 in. 

Guy Mendes, Marble Creek Nude, 1998, gelatin silver print, 16 X 20 in. 

Adam O’Neal, VOL. 130, NO. 5 - VOL. 150, NO. 2, 2015, collaged paper, 19 x 14.5 in.

Adam O’Neal, VOL. 130, NO. 5 - VOL. 150, NO. 2, 2015, collaged paper, 19 x 14.5 in.