
Molly Crabapple’s “Shell Game” Exhibition of New Paintings That Document The Uprisings of 2011
To Be on View at Smart Clothes Gallery in April
Chris Hayes describes them as "Bracing, exuberant altarpieces for the revolution"
NEW YORK, NY –Molly Crabapple is pleased to announce “Shell Game,” an exhibition of new work.
The exhibition will be on view from April 14 - April 23, 2013, at Smart Clothes Gallery, located at 154 Stanton Street, between Houston and Suffolk, New York, 10002.
Shell Game is comprised of nine, 6'x4' paintings and one 3’x3’ painting about the revolutions and crises of 2011 (six of which have
already been sold to collectors) including the mortgage bubble, the Greek anti-austerity protests, and Occupy Wall Street, filtered them
through the artist’s distinctive lens of surrealism, satire, and symbolic animals and, for eight of nine paintings, informed by travel to the settings,
including Spain, Greece, and the United Kingdom, during which she interviewed activists for her reported illustrated journalism pieces and
participated in demonstrations.
For Tunisia, she interviewed members of Nawaat, the dissident blogger collective, via Skype.
Nine preliminary watercolors, all sold, will also be exhibited.
Molly Crabapple will host a public opening reception on Sunday, April 14, from 7-10pm.
Contact Lauren Cerand at correspondence@laurencerand.com for details on the press preview, which will
take place on April 12 and include a song performed by Kim Boekbinder, the magician Nelson Lugo performing a shell game,
and a tableau vivant featuring the actress and model Stoya styled as a post-revolutionary Marie Antoinette. Private showings
for journalists may also be arranged by appointment. Public viewing hours for the exhibition are Wednesday - Sunday, 12 - 6:30pm.
“It was the year when everyone sat down in the main squares of their cities and said the old machine is broken,” observes Crabapple.
“2011 freed me to do the best work of my career, and it was amazing to see my protest art wheat-pasted on walls and carried by activists around the world.”
Molly Crabapple is an artist living in New York. She learned to draw in a Parisian bookstore, and once sketched her way into a Turkish jail.
Her recent projects include “Week in Hell,” in which she locked herself in a hotel room, covered the walls in paper, and filled 270 square feet of wall with art;
“I Have Your Heart,” a stop-motion short film created with musician Kim Boekbinder and animator Jim Batt.
Her works are held in the permanent collections of the New York Historical Society, the Rubin Museum of Art, and the Groucho Club.
Her celebrity fans and collectors include Neil Gaiman, Moby, Chris Hayes, Margaret Cho, and Tom Watson, MP.
Crabapple has written personal essays about her Occupy Wall Street arrest for CNN, and has a monthly column for VICE.
Her published books include Discordia (with Laurie Penny; Random House, 2012), Devil in the Details (IDW, 2012), Week in Hell (IDW, 2012),
Puppet Makers (DC Comics, 2011), and the forthcoming Straw House (First Second Books, 2014).
Called “a downtown phenomenon” by the New York Times; “equal parts Hieronymus Bosch, William S. Burroughs and Cirque du Soleil,” by The Guardian; and
“a brilliant and principled artist” by BoingBoing, Crabapple has also hosted documentaries for France’s ARTE television channel.
At age 22, she founded Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School, a chain of alternative drawing classes that now has branches in 100+ cities, and has produced events
at venues including the Centre Pompidou, the Brooklyn Museum, and Hampton Court Palace in England.
She regularly speaks to audiences around the world, at institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, the London School of Economics, and Columbia University.
For more information, please visit www.mollycrabapple.com.
Sunday, April 14, 2013 from 7-10pm
April 10 - April 22 2013
Molly Crabapple
© 2013 154 SMART CLOTHES LLC AND/OR FEATURED ARTISTS
