Interior/Exterior

Interior/Exterior

Museum of Craft and Design

Macon Reed, Eulogy for the Dyke Bar (detail), 2015/16. Wood, cardboard, paper clay, cast plaster, joint compound. Courtesy of the artist.

July 1, 2019
Interior/Exterior
July 27–December 1, 2019
Opening curator walkthrough: July 27, 12–1:30pm, Ariel Zaccheo in conversation with artists
Museum of Craft and Design
2569 3rd St
San Francisco, CA 94107
United States
Hours: Wednesday–Saturday 10am–5pm,
Sunday 12–5pm
sfmcd.org
Facebook / Twitter / Instagram

Julie Alpert, Benjamin Armas and Ori Carino, Macon Reed, Kathy Sirico, and Kaori Yamashita

The Museum of Craft and Design is pleased to present Interior/Exterior opening on July 27, 2019, an exhibition that examines structures, “rooms” and objects, which are neither fully interior nor fully exterior. This exhibition exposes the permeability between the categories of public and private space. Looking beyond the neat closure of four walls, Interior/Exterior will feature site-specific installations, temporary structures and sculptures by Julie Alpert, Benjamin Armas and Ori Carino, Macon Reed, Kathy Sirico, and Kaori Yamashita.

Curator, Ariel Zaccheo, notes “This exhibition sheds light on the already punctured nature of privacy and interiority in built structures, and aims to show how identity and community shape (and are shaped by) our built environment.”

Interior/Exterior becomes a portal that invites people to question their relationship to the spaces they inhabit, and positions structures and shelters as permeable, active bodies. Objects of the home–no longer just containers–become active shapers of our social space. San Francisco-based Kathy Sirico’s work seeks to build radical empathy, weaving narratives of memory, desire and loss in a world threatened by climate catastrophe through experimental collage-based practices, while Julie Alpert’s installations address nostalgia, decoration and our ideas of memory and experience by distorting the interior of a room using craft materials and hardware store supplies.

New York-based artists Benjamin Armas’ and Ori Carino’s work lays bare the bones of a wall in a minimized scale. Hinting at demolition, the wood is ragged and unfinished, and in some cases, burned. The hollowness and destruction of the object signals the end of its intended use as a social space, but also implies a new beginning, either in its abandonment or in its potential demolition. Armas’ and Carino’s work serves as a haunting visual emblem of gentrification, felt deeply in their home-state of New York and in San Francisco, as many rent-controlled buildings have burned, creating space for new development. San Francisco-based Kaori Yamashita follows on this theme with an installation using mortar, wood, and plaster that undermines the physical imposition of a brick wall.

Additionally, created from simple materials, cardboard, plaster and wood, Massachusetts-based Macon Reed’s Eulogy for the Dyke Bar is an immersive installation questioning why once-thriving queer female spaces are in decline, and the necessity of public gathering spaces in community formation. During the exhibition run her work will be aligned with programming that highlights the loss of queer female spaces in the Bay Area.

“MCD values creatives who are risk-takers driven to inspire the world. Interior/Exterior artists pose questions around public and private spaces, gentrification, memory and climate control supporting MCD’s mission to be a welcoming place for spirited conversation and an experiential understanding of creative expression,” states Executive Director, JoAnn Edwards.

About Ariel Zaccheo
Ariel Zaccheo received an MA in Exhibition and Museum Studies from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2013 and a BA in Art History from the University of Utah in 2011. She currently works as the Assistant Curator at the Museum of Craft and Design. Ariel also is the co-curator of ATA Window Gallery, a volunteer-run exhibition space in the busy Mission district of San Francisco. Her research is focused on queer and transgressive visual art strategies, with a specific emphasis on craft and video as media for radical activism.

About the Museum of Craft and Design
Celebrating 15 years with DESIGN15, the Museum of Craft and Design is the only museum in San Francisco devoted to craft and design. Founded in 2004, the MCD showcases designers, makers and artists through an exciting and distinctive series of craft and design-focused exhibitions and public programs. As a non-collecting institution, the museum actively collaborates with artists, designers, museums and universities, as well as design venues and practitioners to create inspirational experiences in the world of craft and design for visitors of all ages.

Media Contact
Sarah Beth Rosales, Marketing and Communication Director
sbrosales [​at​] sfmcd.org or T 415 773 0303

Advertisement
Map
RSVP
RSVP for Interior/Exterior
Museum of Craft and Design
July 1, 2019

Thank you for your RSVP.

Museum of Craft and Design will be in touch.

Subscribe

e-flux announcements are emailed press releases for art exhibitions from all over the world.

Agenda delivers news from galleries, art spaces, and publications, while Criticism publishes reviews of exhibitions and books.

Architecture announcements cover current architecture and design projects, symposia, exhibitions, and publications from all over the world.

Film announcements are newsletters about screenings, film festivals, and exhibitions of moving image.

Education announces academic employment opportunities, calls for applications, symposia, publications, exhibitions, and educational programs.

Sign up to receive information about events organized by e-flux at e-flux Screening Room, Bar Laika, or elsewhere.

I have read e-flux’s privacy policy and agree that e-flux may send me announcements to the email address entered above and that my data will be processed for this purpose in accordance with e-flux’s privacy policy*

Thank you for your interest in e-flux. Check your inbox to confirm your subscription.