Recess Activities


Recess Activities is a publicly accessible nonprofit artist work and exhibition space located in a street-level storefront at 46 Washington Avenue in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, New York City.
Free of charge and open to the public, Recess facilitates everyday interactions between artists and the community in order to promote the productive space of the working artist as a site of valuable visual and intellectual interactions.

History

Recess was formed in May 2009 to address concerns that emerging artists cannot afford to live or work in proximity to exhibition communities.
Recess "functions neither exclusively as a gallery nor a studio space, but instead gives artists the ability to set the terms of their work in a store-front location that is open to the public. The nature of this setting creates a shared space for artists, viewers, and the work."

Artists in Session

Twice a year, Recess has an open call for applications for artists interested in Recess's artist in residence program, Session. Session artists receive a materials stipend and two to three months to use Recess as a work and exhibition space.
In an interview with Fractured Atlas, Recess's founding director, Allison Weisberg said, "Recess resident can take risks and experiment in our non-traditional space while gaining visibility in SoHo’s “traditional” exhibition community. Recess artists are given ample space, within which they can choose to create large-scale, process-based and/or site-specific work, and a stipend with which to purchase project materials."
The next open call for applications will be January 2020.

''Session'' Artists

Leila Hekmat
FCKLNZ
galería perdida
Jonathan Durham
Larry Bob Phillips
Jeff Williams
Lior Shvil


Abigail DeVille
Deville Cohen



Be Black Baby at Recess

Be Black Baby: A House Party Presents is a series organized by Simone Leigh. Recess hosted the inaugural Be Black Baby: A House Party Presents on March 13, 2010. This first evening of performance responded to Brian DePalma’s film “Hi Mom”. Taking the film as a point of departure, the series continues to challenge traditional identity politics and question modes of cultural appropriation.
The second event in the Be Black Baby series took place on September 10, 2010 and was co-organized by Uri McMillan. The evening featured performances and live tableaux will reinterpreting the inaugural Michael Jackson academic conference McMillan organized for Yale University in 2004. McMillan invited artists, intellectuals and performers to respond to Michael Jackson's larger than life persona.