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Salon 94

Coordinates:40°47′10.2″N73°57′21.69″W / 40.786167°N 73.9560250°W /40.786167; -73.9560250
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Art gallery in Manhattan, New York

Salon 94 is a New York-based contemporaryart gallery owned byJeanne Greenberg Rohatyn.[1]

History

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East 94th Street

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The gallery opened in 2003 in theCarnegie Hill neighborhood on New York City’sUpper East Side as an integral part of Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn’s home. Designed by architectRafael Viñoly, the gallery features a dedicated exhibition space on the first floor and a combination living/gallery space on the second. The inaugural exhibition presented a video work by gallery artistAïda Ruilova.Subsequent exhibitions have featured work byBetty Woodman,Maya Lin,Wangechi Mutu, Hanna Liden andNate Lowman.

Salon 94 Freemans

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In 2007,[2] the gallery opened an additional location on New York’sLower East Side at Freemans Alley as a dedicated exhibition space. The first exhibition featured work by gallery artistHuma Bhabha and subsequent shows have featuredLorna Simpson,Carter,Barry X Ball, Kara Hamilton andLynda Benglis.

Salon 94 Bowery

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In October 2010, the gallery opened a third location on theBowery[3] on New York’sLower East Side. Located two doors down from theNew Museum, the space was also designed by architectRafael Viñoly as a dedicated exhibition venue. A prominent feature of the gallery is a 20-foot (6.1 m) LCD video screen on the outside wall broadcasting video art content to the street.

The inaugural show presented work gallery artistLiz Cohen. Subsequent shows featuredMarilyn Minter,Laurie Simmons,Jon Kessler,Francesca Dimattio,Lisa Brice[4] andDavid Benjamin Sherry. During the construction phase, the gallery presented T-shirt paintings byRichard Prince.[5]

Salon 94 Design

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In 2015, Salon 94 started producing exhibitions that challenged the traditions of and boundaries between fine art, functional objects, and the decorative arts. The space ran parallel to Salon 94 and is called Salon 94 Design. Artists and designers in the program's roster includeJay Sae Jung Oh,Thomas Barger,Donald Judd,Max Lab, Kueng Caputo,Rick Owens,Kate Millet,Gaetano Pesce,Gloria Kisch,Tom Sachs, amongst others.[6][7]

East 89th Street

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In 2019, Greenberg Rohatyn acquired three buildings that made up the former National Academy Museum on East 89th Street – a 14,000 sq ft (1,300 m2) property – which will be Salon 94's new headquarters.[8]

Artists

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Artists that were represented by Salon 94 included:

References

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  1. ^Guy Trebay (November 29, 2013),From Behind the CanvasNew York Times.
  2. ^"The Woman Behind Salon 94's Move Downtown".
  3. ^"Lower East Side art scene: Art & Design: Wmagazine.com". Archived fromthe original on December 26, 2010.
  4. ^Compton, Nick."Out of the blue with Lisa Brice".Cultured Magazine. RetrievedOctober 6, 2018.
  5. ^"Richard Prince, "T-Shirt Paintings: Hippie Punk" | Art | reviews, guides, things to do, film - Time Out New York". Archived fromthe original on March 9, 2016.
  6. ^"Salon 94 Design - New York - Design Miami/".www.designmiami.com. RetrievedMarch 31, 2023.
  7. ^updated, Stephanie Murg last (April 20, 2017)."Filmic furniture: four designers inspired creations fill Salon 94 in New York".wallpaper.com. RetrievedMarch 31, 2023.{{cite web}}:|last= has generic name (help)
  8. ^Valeria Ricciulli (Feb 12, 2020),Rafael Viñoly will revamp former National Academy of Design building into art gallery Curbed: New York.
  9. ^Robin Pogrebin (May 5, 2016),Judy Chicago Does TVNew York Times.
  10. ^Alex Greenberger (July 18, 2016),Jessica Silverman Gallery Now Represents Judy ChicagoARTnews.
  11. ^Claire Selvin (March 28, 2019),Salon 94 Now Represents Natalie Frank ARTnews.
  12. ^Alex Greenberger (November 14, 2017),Salon 94 Now Represents Lyle Ashton HarrisARTnews.
  13. ^Guy Trebay (November 29, 2013),From Behind the CanvasNew York Times.
  14. ^Maximilíano Durón (November 20, 2018),Salon 94 Adds Ruby Neri to RosterARTnews.

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40°47′10.2″N73°57′21.69″W / 40.786167°N 73.9560250°W /40.786167; -73.9560250

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