Sep 6th 2019

Rival Exchange

@ ADDS DONNA

3252 W North Ave. Chicago, IL 60647

Opening Friday, September 6th, from 6PM - 9PM

On view through Saturday, October 12th

“Design organizes and enables; art subverts… art is bad design on purpose.”
— Alva Noë, Strange Tools.

ADDS DONNA is pleased to announce a group exhibition, Rival Exchange, with Whitney Colley and Anton Jeludkov, Kyle Green, Sara Hendren, Jo Hormuth, Laura Mackin and Hunter Stabler, David Robbins, and Nathaniel Robinson, opening Friday, September 6 from 6-9pm at 3252 W. North Avenue, Chicago IL.

Despite much talk around the dissolving boundaries between art and design, few opportunities arise for designers and artists to interact as peers. Rival Exchange attempts to draw a larger circle around the arts community by inviting practicing designers to collaborate on an exhibition in an artist-run venue. The show features self-initiated projects by artist-designers and work by artists (non-designers) involving some kind of investigation of the relation between these two contexts.

The juxtaposition of art and design exposes a slippery rhetoric, ingrained with long-held preconceptions about the special role of the artist. While organizing this event, we often found ourselves mediating peers’ reductionist attempts to draw distinctions—philosophy v. utility, hermetic insight v. collective brain-racking, non-commodities (gifts) v. commodities, saboteurs v. servants of the economic meritocracy, and deep v. shallow—strikingly similar to the bohemian value system which emerged in the US and Western Europe in the early 19th century. Will these ideals continue to persist, or will we develop new habits of mind as we engage with creative production by the growing number of makers caught between categories?

Judgements abound, but objective distinctions between art and design remain elusive, largely because of the great diversity within each field and the substantial overlap between them. Arguments aside, the biased elevation of art over design is real, leading eyes to glide over the efforts of designers, particularly within the walls of an art gallery. Has this bias also gotten in the way of understanding how art works on us? While this exhibition indulges the perhaps unreasonable hope of building bridges, it also demands we identify and assess assumptions about what art is like.

Exhibited: Whitney Colley and Anton Jeludkov, Kyle Green, Sara Hendren, Jo Hormuth, Laura Mackin and Hunter Stabler, David Robbins, and Nathaniel Robinson

Curated by Freddie Eschrich, Laura Mackin and Troy Pieper.

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