Artists’ Choice Museum in New York City was started in 1976 by many of the same younger artists who were active in the Alliance of Figurative Artists and the Figurative Coops. First exhibition, a survey of 146 contemporary figurative artists was selected and organized by the artists of the Green Mountain, Bowery, Prince Street and First Street Galleries - although it was a broad survey and did not exhibit just artists from those galleries. After the first show older artists were brought into its structure. Other group shows followed in clusters of galleries on 57th street and in museums: “Benefit Exhibit” in 1979, “Younger Artists: Benefit Exhibit” in 1980,“Intimate Visions” in 1982, “Narrative Sculpture” in 1982, “Painted Light” in 1983 and “Bodies and Souls” in 1983 to name some. By 1980 The Museum was publishing a bimonthly newsletter and by 1982 a magazine. By 1984 the Museum finally had a home; a building on West Broadway. This space only lasted until 1986 when the organization ceased to exist.
Artists’ Choice Museum Publications
ACM Newsletter April 1980 to December 1981
Journal of the Artists’ Choice Museum Spring 1982 to Winter 1986
Artists’ Choice Museum Younger Artists: Benefit Exhibition
Painted Light
Narrative Sculpture
Bodies and Souls
The First Eight Years
Richard McDermott Miller—The Nude in Bronze: Twenty Years of Sculpture
Art and Friendship
George McNeil—Expressionism 1954-1984
Paul Resika
Aristodimos Kaldis
Robert Barnes: Retrospective 1956-1984
The Figure in the Landscape
Artists Choosing Artists
Rueben Kadish: Survey 1935-1985
Foundation Members
Board of Artists:Paul Georges, William Bailey, Jack Beal, Joseph Giordano, Stephen Grillo, Howard Kalish, Marjorie Kramer, Tomar Levine, Richard Mc Dermott Miller, Donald Perlis, Marjorie Portnow, Paul Resika, Janet Schneider, Bill Sullivan, Sam Thurston. Board of Trustees: Hans van den Houten, Franz Skyranz, Steven W. Wolfe, Patricia J. Murphy, Ann Leven, and Janet Schneider. Museum Director: Robert Godfrey The whole idea was Paul Georges' but, as you know and has been stated, it was given the necessary spark by the 1976 exhibit organized by the co-op galleries. The boards were established in 1979, and in that year an inaugural exhibit featuring leading figurative artists was staged in six major New York Galleries. By then, the CCF had become the museum's fiscal manager and through the CCF the ACM began functioning as a tax-exempt, not-for-profit organization. In 1980 the Board of Regents of the State of New York granted Museum Status to the organization.
The Manifesto
In the Spring of 1979 director Robert Godfrey and the Board of Artists drafted the first mission statement of the newly structured museum.
Articles and Reviews 1976 to 1988
Ashbery, John. “Two Worlds and Their Way.” New York Magazine, Sept. 24, 1979.
Bass, Ruth. “Artists’ Choose: Figurative/Realist Art, A Benefit Exhibition for the Artists’ Choice Museum.” Art News Magazine 78.10 .
Berlind, Robert. “Recent Realism and the Artists’ Choice Museum.” Art Journal of the College Art Association 41.2 : 176-180.
Brenson, Michael. “Art: Expressionism and George McNeil at Artists’ Choice Museum.” The New York Times, Oct. 5, 1984.
--- "Aristodimos Kaldis at Artists’ Choice Museum.” The New York Times, Feb. 1, 1985.
Godfrey, Robert. “Have Museums Slighted Certain Types of Art, Particularly Figurative Art?”
American Artist Magazine 14.
Haggerty, Gerard. “Art and Friendship--Artists’ Choice Museum.”
Art News Magazine 83.9.
Harnett, Lila. “Realists’ Choice.”
New York Cue Magazine, Sept. 22, 1979.
Iovine, Julie. “Old Fashioned Art.”
Connoisseur .
Kramer, Hilton. “Soho: Figures at an Exhibition.”
The New York Times, Dec. 10, 1976.--- “Six Gallery Show.” The New York Times, Sept. 14, 1979. --- “Art: Five-Gallery Realist Show.” The New York Times, Sept. 12, 1980.