Globe Institute of Technology
Globe Institute Gallery
291 Broadway at Reade Street,
New York, NY 10007
Tel. 212.349.4330 ext. 130 Fax 212.227.5920 |
Globe Institute Gallery is devoted to promoting the art-historical,
theoretical, and critical understanding and informed experience of
contemporary visual works of art, focusing on painting, drawing, photography,
sculpture, architecture, video, installation art and other innovative
mediums.
Founded in August 2002, it has transformed the entrance hall of an
educational building located a block north of City Hall into a visual
space. The works on display are both glanced while in motion and examined
more closely at other times.
The Gallery’s greatest strengths have so far been in paintings
by contemporary artists residing in the United States and Europe.
Photography has also taken an important place either on its own
or as an indirect counterpart to both abstract and partially photorealist
paintings.
One major role of the Gallery to Globe Institute of Technology is
its link to the various art history courses the college offers. As
a way of learning and research, students have selected specific works,
submitting them to a formal analysis and examining their links to specific
works within art-historical contexts.
What gives Globe Institute Gallery an edge is a contextual one. As
a “local,” “small,” and “alternative” space,
it “is beautiful, or at least appropriate. Perhaps it
is better to serve a local community well than to pretend to
embrace the world.”1
1 Stuart Morgan, “Bobbies and Buddhists and Boone,
Oh My!” Artforum (September 1993), p. 180. Within this same
issue of Artforum, Rosalind Krauss likewise addresses the
issue of contextualization through the postscript of an essay on
the works of Cindy Sherman, writing: “Even if I am calling for nothing more
than a certain level of competence in reading works of art, that very
call marginalizes readers whose lack of access to the cultural center
has deprived them of such competence.” Rosalind Krauss, “Cindy
Sherman’s Gravity: A Critical Fable,” Artforum (September
1993), p. 206.
Artists who are interested in exhibiting a coherent body of work
must submit slides, biographies, and statements to the attention
of Norene Leddy.
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