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Black
& White Project Space, Brooklyn, NY is very
pleased to present Secondary Occupants Collected
& Observed – site-specific installation
by Julian Montague. This exhibition continues
the artist’s exploration of the ecologies
of decay that began with his now famous The
Stray Shopping Cart Identification Project and
more recent To Know The Spiders Project.
Secondary
Occupants Collected & Observed installation
examines multiple aspects of animal/architecture
engagement and includes a rotten garden shed,
48 portrait banners, an invented intellectual
history of pest control, and an assemblage of
different specimens found and multiple photographs
taken in the process of researching wildlife
and architecture. The point of departure for
the new work is investigation of the way in
which animals (vertebrate and invertebrate)
play a part in physically and conceptually transforming
interior spaces into exterior ones. For this
project, Montague collected and analyzed the
types of insects and other pests that move into
abandoned properties. In documenting his findings,
the artist notes, “When investigating
a Decay Community it is important to make a
distinction between animals that have come to
an abandoned structure by accident and those
that spend a significant portion of their lifecycle
in or on the structure. It is also important
to note that not all members of a Decay Community
directly contribute to the structural weakening
of a building; they dismantle it by transforming
it from an interior space into an exterior one.”
Julian
Montague’s installation at Black &
White Project Space will occupy both the indoor
and outdoor spaces. It represents the new development
of the work exhibited at Black & White Gallery
/ Chelsea in the spring of 2008 and at the Artspace
in Buffalo, NY in the fall of 2009. A portion
of the installation will be included in Beyond/In
Western New York, 2010 at Burchfield-Penney
Art Center, Buffalo, New York in the fall of
2010.
Julian
Montague (b.1973) lives and works in Buffalo,
NY. Since his graduation from Hampshire College
in 1996 with a BA in Media Studies, Julian Montague’s
photographs and other works have been widely
exhibited in solo and group shows. In 2006 the
book version of his Stray Shopping Cart Identification
Project, The Stray Shopping Carts Of Eastern
North America: A Guide to Field Identification
was published by Harry Abrams and is available
in bookstores and on most online book sellers.
Julian Montague is the winner of the Diagram
Prize for the Oddest Title of 2006. Montague’s
work has been recently acquired by The Margulies
Collection in Miami, FL and Albright - Knox
Art Gallery in Buffalo, NY.
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