gowanus ballroom
neighborhood: gowanus | space type: art & events | active since: 2010 | links: website, facebook
Gowanus Ballrooom is one of my very favorite spaces, one I can’t help updating and re-writing about again and again. (In fact, check out my article from their Fall 2011 show “Paint Works” on Gowanus Your Face Off!) The space, most of the time, is home to Serett Metalworks, but three or four times a year it gets transformed into a massive art spectacle. They’re doing so much to make a home for emerging and underground artists in New York, and every one of their shows is spectacular—and necessarily ambitious, given the sheer scope: the Ballroom is 16,000 square feet on two levels, with 50-foot ceilings. You have to slink down a super-sketchy dark alley on the canal to get to it, but oh, man, is it worth it.
The group shows feature outrageously great art from up to fifty artists at a time, including huge metal sculptures, lush photographs, hyperreal paintings, abstract assemblages, quirky dioramas, stained-glass windows, woven cloth streamers, giant wooden installations you can climb around in, collages you can run your fingers through, intricate ink drawings, shifting projections, and more. Plus live entertainment! Aerialists like Seanna Sharpe (in her first performance since her stunt on the Williamsburg Bridge), fire dancers like Lady C and Flambeaux Fire, and of course bands, including Crooks & Perverts, Les Bicyclettes Blanches, Apocalypse Five and Dime, Yula and the eXtended Family (from Hive NYC), and Morgan O’Kane, the absolute most phenomenal banjo player you’ve probably never heard (unless you ride the L train a lot). At the 2011 Art & Architecture Show, he played past 2 a.m., almost two hours of just the best music ever, and I haven’t seen so much foot-stomping, arm-flailing, whooping joy since… well, since the last time I saw Morgan play, I guess.
Q&A with Josh, the Ballroom’s founder, and Ursula, art show curator
brooklyn spaces: Give me a quick history of
                                        the space.
                                        Josh: I run Serett Metalworks, and I moved
                                        the shop here a year ago from Nostrand Avenue. This is twice the space I need,
                                        but it was the bottom of the economy crash, and when I saw the space I knew that
                                        I would use it for other things besides metalwork. It’s a fucking beautiful shit
                                        hole, I love it. It doesn’t make sense for me to run a metal shop here, because
                                        you can’t heat it in the winter, there’s always water leaks, and it gets too hot
                                        in the summer. But we deal with it. We build weird art and architectures
                                        structures, so the people who work here, it kind of inspires them to do better
                                        work, to be happier about their job. That’s a big part of it, just the beauty of
                                        this insane old place. It used to be a steel mill, a boatyard, a cannonball
                                        factory, a chemical factory. The history here is ridiculous.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: In the metal shop, is it
                                        all your projects? Do other people do their projects here too?
                                        Josh: It’s mainly our shop where we
                                        fabricate our stuff, but I also work with all these different groups. Someone
                                        comes and says, “Hey man, I need lockdowns for this WTO protest, can you help me build them?” Or like Swimming
                                            Cities, a bunch of fucking hippies who are building pontoon boats they
                                        can collapse, ship to India, and sail five hundred miles down the Ganges River.
                                        How fucking cool is that? I want to support those fucking maniacs, because that
                                        is awesome.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: What made you start doing
                                        art shows?
                                        Josh: I always wanted the space to be
                                        dedicated to art and architecture and engineering, mostly because architects and
                                        engineers, their social life is so fucking boring. But it’s a really interesting
                                        group of people doing really interesting work, and I like the idea of art and
                                        architecture and engineering together, because there’s a lot of aspects of
                                        engineering and architecture that are art. So the idea was to have a
                                        space for all three. We did the first Art & Architecture show in early 2010. The whole
                                        thing was thrown together in two weeks, and it went real well. Then we did
                                        another one about six months later that was really successful and really fun.
                                        But I learned it’s a lot of fucking work putting on a show, it’s an insane
                                        amount of coordination, and the person who’s doing the coordination loses their
                                        mind not at the end, but halfway through.
                                        Ursula: I stayed pretty sane.
                                    
Josh: Yeah, I’m getting there. I’m just
                                        finishing the story. Anyway, it blew my mind how much work it was. So I was
                                        like, all right, if our next show is going to be twice as big, it’s going to be
                                        a major ordeal. So I asked Ursula to get involved, and she came in and took the
                                        steering wheel, coordinating, organizing, categorizing, social working, all this
                                        stuff that has to come with an intense art show. And it was a great move, she
                                        really handled the stress well. There’s a lot of fucking stress involved. We
                                        pick people who do great art, but when you do that, you’re going to be dealing
                                        with some characters. That’s where the social-working aspect comes in.
                                        Ursula: I’m actually training to become a
                                        social worker, so it worked out well. I think my background is just the right
                                        balance of art and psychology. It was a challenge and it was fun. I like doing
                                        really difficult things. If I see something that looks like you can’t do it, I’m
                                        like, “Okay, let’s figure it out!” I met a lot of really great people, and it
                                        was pretty inspiring for me as an artist.
                                    
                                        Morgan O'Kane, photo by me
brooklyn spaces: What happens to the metal
                                        shop during a show?
                                        Josh: Believe it or not, moving the whole
                                        shop out of the way only takes three or four hours. And while the art show is
                                        up, we’re still fucking welding and grinding. All my guys love it. Setting up
                                        for this show, every single one of them came and worked fifteen, twenty hours
                                        for free, just because they loved it.
                                        Ursula: Of course, they snuck their own
                                        artwork in as well. I’d come in and be like, “Where did that come
                                        from?”
                                    
brooklyn spaces: How do you think Brooklyn
                                        affect a space like this, or how does a space like this affect the future of art
                                        in Brooklyn?
                                        Josh: The beauty of the Gowanus Canal is
                                        that it’s now a Superfund site, and that means that 2,000 feet from the
                                        edge of the water, in any direction, you can’t build housing or food
                                        service of any type. So this area is going to be a great place for about ninety
                                        years. There’s always going to be this nice mix of industrial industry and art
                                        studios. It’s not going to be McKibben
                                            Street—puke my brains out.
                                        Ursula: There’s also an artistic community
                                        here that’s a little bit hidden, so it’s a really nice spot to have a new
                                        exhibition space, because we’re not competing with what’s going on in
                                        Williamsburg or Chelsea. It’s a place for emerging artists to do what they want,
                                        and it’s huge. I mean, to be able to invite people who do the kind of
                                        large-scale installations that we had, and to tell them, literally: “You’ve got
                                        two weeks. Build something.” Not many places can do that. Especially when you’re
                                        dealing with artists who don’t have a name, and you’re just trusting them. So I
                                        think that’s something that we can offer to the neighborhood, and to the art
                                        community in general.
                                        Josh: I started off working for Cooper Union, working with
                                        a lot of pretty big-name artists, and I was really turned off by the art world,
                                        how nasty it was, the money, everything was just politics and crap. This space
                                        is great because we can do it our way. We just fill it full of cool shit, and
                                        people fucking love it.
                                    
 brooklyn
                                            spaces: Do you have any advice for other people who want to take on a
                                        project like this?
                                        Josh: Just call us. You got something
                                        crazy? You think you have schizophrenia? That’s beautiful. Call us. We like
                                        that.
                                    
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Like this? Read about more art & events spaces: Monster Island, Big Sky Works, Red Lotus Room, Gemini & Scorpio loft, House of Yes, Cave, Rubulad, Vaudeville Park, 12-turn-13, Werdink / Ninja Pyrate







