Jennifer Greenburg was invited by Australia’s Head On Foundation to exhibit and give an Artist’s talk for their photography festival. Established in 2008, the Foundation’s photo-festival, The Head On Photo Festival, bridges Sidney, Australia and the world; it has strong ties to the USA, Europe, China, India, and New Zealand.
Read morejdc in SD Voyager
Enjoy this lovely Q&A with jdc Fine Art gallery director, Jennifer DeCarlo in SD Voyager:
Excerpt:
Overall, has it been relatively smooth? If not, what were some of the struggles along the way?
Being an Art Dealer and Gallerist is as amazing as uncertain. Art is a fickle business, and there is a lot of misconception about what art is or what it can do. Ultimately, the hardest part of my job is finding a critical mass of Patrons to support our Artists. I define Patrons as collectors and viewers- not just those who buy, but those who come to see exhibitions, though the former keep the lights on.
Things are changing a lot in the field of Art. Due to many factors, Patrons view art remotely and not in-person. If they do view works in person, they do so by appointment at galleries, studios, etc., or spontaneously at Art Fairs. While I’ve crossed paths with nearly all our Patrons at some point (in the Gallery or at an Art Fair), I do as much remotely/online as physically to share work and sell it. The road to being an Art Dealer is emerging as more deeply tread than Gallerist and also less rigid, especially today.
I’m trying to find a balance that makes the most of these realities- a strategy that works for the Artists, our Patrons, and myself. I’ll say its easier on my personal life to work remotely, but a little bit of the thrill is lost when you aren’t sharing work in person with the viewer or collector. To remedy this, we have begun to schedule more tailored and intimate events with Artists & Patrons, for example, private artists talks for those who have expressed specific interest in a particular Artists, or have known interests in a certain type of work or visual content.
jdc Fine Art – what should we know? What do you guys do best? What sets you apart from the competition?
jdc specializes in content-driven contemporary art by established and emerging artists who specialize in photography. We champion those making art to serve a higher purpose.
We represent work that marks our time, repositions us so as to see from another vantage, calls for a re-evaluation of accepted norms, and overall inspires reflection and dialog. Aesthetically, we gravitate towards narrative, figurative work. Overarching themes include the portrait; beauty and the poetics of the world; every day; the image as document, memorial, snapshot, even lie; alternative or plural realities; and socio-political or international issues.
What is “success” or “successful” for you?
Good art can change the world. We are more interested in the power of art than the money that may be earned by its sale. We are in this for the long game.
Note* DeCarlo has since moved with her partner from San Diego to the Oregon Coast, but the dialog still reflects the intentions behind who and what we are.
READ THE INTERVIEW:
Matt Eich in the New Yorker
This foreshadows the mission of the greater oeuvre, and renders each chapter (there will be four) more potent and contextual. This is the American condition and the country we share: “A common aspect of the experience of poverty in America, Eich’s two books suggest, is the role of family and community as sources of hope.”
Read moreReview: Matt Eich in Photograph Magazine
As a storyteller, Eich has tight command of setting, character, and composition, and openness otherwise, as to how these lives in this particular place play out. His work is earnest and avoids any kind of sociological overdetermination. If Eich has an agenda, it’s an irrefutable one – to gently stretch our capacity for empathy. - Leah Ollman
Read moreLets Talk Soon: "Access to Excess" at Photo LA
A discussion centered around the internet & the art market and its impact on patterns of collecting.
Photo LA Programming | Panel Discussion
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2019 | 2PM
One Last Look: 2018 in Review
Our Artists had a banner year: Ian van Coller was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for his ongoing work Naturalists of the Long Now, Matt Eich released the second volume of The Invisible Yoke: Sin & Salvation in Baptist Town, Jennifer Greenburg exhibited Revising History in Italy, and Paul Turounet’s Estamos Buscando A was included in the 5th Transborder Biennale, which occurred simultaneously in El Paso Museum of Art (EPMA) and the Museo de Arte de Ciudad Juárez.
Read morejdc Fine Art in Keep the Channel Open
Director, Jennifer DeCarlo in conversation with Mike Sakasegawa for his evolving podcast, Keep the Channel Open. Listen to Episode 45.
Sin & Salvation in Baptist Town by Matt Eich
The Invisible Yoke | Vol. II
Sin & Salvation in Baptist Town
by Matt Eich
Limited Run : 800
Printed and Embossed Linen Hardcover
24.5 x 25 cm | 9.6 x 9.8 in.
136 pages | 127 plates with 16-page Addendum
Signed by the Artist
ISBN 978-3-906822-22-8
$60 | $70 with US Media Mail Shipping
Read morePaul Turounet in The Architecture of Four Ecologies At La Jolla Historical Society
on view through January 20, 2019
This exhibition was curated by Rebecca Webb and takes British architectural historian Reyner Banham’s treatise Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies, a tribute to LA as a “mobile city"as its inspiration. San Diego: The Architecture of Four Ecologies similarly pays homage to San Diego as a city of change and possibility, with a focus on the car as the current and predominant means to access and experience four of its own ecologies: Beaches, Freeways, Sub/urban and Border. Espera y Maravilla | Wait and Wonder is a selection of images tailored to this exhibition but drawn from Turounet’s larger body of work, Tierra Brava.
Read moreArtists Now: Ian van Coller at UW-Milwaukee
Peck School of the Arts
October 10 | 7:30 - 9:00 pm
Ian van Coller will discuss his past and current work in a free public lecture at the Peck School of the Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Read more