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Seeking alternatives to the gallery and the museum, whose doors were often closed to the most experimental art, many artists embraced their immediate environment as a place to make and display their work. By the mid-1970s, New York City was essentially bankrupt, in disarray, and left to fend for itself—as telegraphed in the infamous 1975 New York Daily News headline “Ford to City: Drop Dead.” Yet Lower Manhattan’s desolate industrial landscape yielded spaces for Downtown artists to establish not-for-profit alternative venues. In these factory lofts (where many artists also lived) and in the gritty streets, they created art that directly engaged the urban scene: Gordon Matta-Clark carved a parabolic aperture into the wall of an abandoned Hudson River pier, and Scott Burton cast a discarded Queen Anne chair in bronze and displayed it on the sidewalk. David Wojnarowicz photographed a friend wandering Downtown wearing a mask of French poet Arthur Rimbaud, while Adam Purple built a floral paradise on a rubble-strewn lot on the Lower East Side.

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Vito Acconci, Where We Are Now
(Who Are We Anyway?), 1976. Photodocumentation of installation at Sonnabend Gallery, 420 West Broadway, New York (color photographs with sound, detail). Courtesy the artist
This photograph documents Vito Acconci’s installation of a conference table and chairs in the Sonnabend Gallery in SoHo. Extending the table eight feet out the window, he suspended it over passersby. The accompanying audio track chronicles a democracy disintegrating: a meeting begins as a communal discussion and quickly devolves into a series of demands and commands. |
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