MelanieFloodProjects
- MelanieFloodProjects joined Artlog 11 months ago
- Categories: Gallerist
- Last updated on 26 May. '09
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associated with Mikael Kennedy "The Wine Dark Sea" Photographs by Mikael Kennedy
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MelanieFloodProjects posted "The Wine Dark Sea" Photographs by Mikael Kennedy about 1 month ago
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MelanieFloodProjects posted March Madness March 9th
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associated with Home Theater
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Cool Hunting
by MelanieFloodProjects / January 30th / Source: www.coolhunting.com
Bradley Peters is a recent graduate of Yale University’s renowned MFA program in Photography and one of photo curator Amani Olu’s rising stars. Olu teams up this month with Brooklyn gallerist Melanie Flood to present Peters’ images of family and strangers in mundane situations.
Peters explains that he arranges his subjects in a scene and then “waits for something to happen”—in effect, capturing the idiosyncrasies and unplanned moments of everyday life. The result is full of both humor and discomfort, and likely to induce recollections of adolescent tension. Influenced by the method of Henri Cartier-Bresson and the saturated color photography of Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Peters’ first solo show consists of select works from his thesis project at Yale.
Amani Olu is co-founder of Humble Arts Foundation, as well as director of Bond Street Gallery in Brooklyn. Melanie Flood Projects, a new gallery in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, is hosting “Home Theater” as its third exhibition, from 28 January to 28 February 2009.

MelanieFloodProjects recommended Notice to Artlog Artists January 29th
MelanieFloodProjects posted Home Theater- Photographs by Bradley Peters January 27th

MelanieFloodProjects recommended The New Talent Show: Pot-Luck Culture January 13th
Untitled (boys playing with lightbulb)
associated with Home Theater Home Theater- Photographs by Bradley Peters
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2008 24×30 in. Archival Pigment Print Edition of 10 + 2 aps
Untitled (woman at gas station)
associated with Home Theater Home Theater- Photographs by Bradley Peters
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2008 24×30 in. Archival Pigment Print Edition of 10 + 2 aps
Untitled (girl with blue dress)
associated with Home Theater Home Theater- Photographs by Bradley Peters
posted by MelanieFloodProjects / Meta-data
2008 24×30 in. Archival Pigment Print Edition of 10 + 2 aps
The New Talent Show: Pot-Luck Culture
by MelanieFloodProjects / January 12th / Source: nymag.com
Last month, Porter Fox and Derek Loosvelt invited 75 people into Loosvelt’s Fort Greene brownstone. The party, a regular event called Salon Adelphi, included lots of booze, of course—but also an art installation by Jason Weatherspoon, a reading by writer Fiona Maazel, and a musical performance by indie singer Essie Jain. Guests went from room to room to watch the different acts, and at the end of the evening, the crowd (which at that point had swelled to over 200) spilled into the street, some lingering until 5 a.m. “Not since the days of the Beat Generation has there been a real personalization of the arts,” says Fox. “Sure, we’re idealizing that. But we also wanted to host this thing with people drinking, screaming, and having this rowdy great old time.”
A growing number of culturally restless New Yorkers are cutting out the middleman and curating parties in their own apartments. Brian Jacobs, a 27-year-old musician living in Williamsburg, hosts small, invite-only salons that looks like a high-end Generation-Y talent show. “A little while ago,” he explains, “my roommate and I said to each other, ‘Look how many cool people we know.’ And it didn’t seem like everyone was aware of what everyone else was doing.” Melanie Flood, a photographer who periodically puts up art installations in her Clinton Hill apartment, researches artists online, sends invites over Facebook, then stocks her apartment with alcohol.
Literary critic Michael Warner hosts what could be thought of as the grown-up version of these Brooklyn affairs at his Chelsea apartment. His salons borrow from an impressive circle of friends, including the novelists Michael Cunningham and Stacey D’Erasmo and Once musician Glen Hansard. “We like to keep it informal and organic,” says Warner, who notes that another friend, John Cameron Mitchell, based his movie Shortbus partly on Warner’s salon (“though not the sex-salon parts”). “There was a feeling that a lot of the downtown Manhattan artist life and club life had been dying out,” he says. “So we were consciously trying to counteract the changing conditions.”
Fox thinks there will be even more salons popping up as the economy gets worse. “Everybody that comes always says, ‘I wish there was more of this.’ ”




















