Studio 11 in the Distillery building (where I live and work) has a long and sometimes sordid history in the Boston art scene. Over the years it has been home to an ever changing crew of the most creative and interesting characters to ever pass through this city. With that in mind we have gathered as many Studio 11 residents (past and current) as possible to fill the Distillery Gallery with work.
There will be an opening reception April 29th, 6-9pm which is free & open to the public so come on down and enjoy some colorful company (and a free beer). If you can’t make that the show will hang until June 1st.
Read on for the official press release from curator, H. Boney and be sure to join the Facebook Event Page to help spread the word.
Opening Reception April 29th, 6-9pm
Distillery Gallery
516 East Second Street, South Boston
Given the tumultuous nature of the Distillery, Studio 11 – A Retrospective, aims to bring together a vast collection of artists who are or were, at one time or another, tenants of the raw and ready live/work space.
Expanding and sifting through a total of five floors, the studio over the past 20 years has become notorious for all-night parties that have induced neighbors to tears through late night drunken trumpet playing, unpractical games of Log, and monstrous recreations of a Van der Graaff Generator.
The artists themselves, in a declaration of the social nature of the space, have had to experience a range of situations that flutter between the normal and absurd, including themed dinner events, major floods, ping pong championships, and roommates that participate in loud, monotypic bouts of copulation, or physically decide to alter their appearance to look like that of a mountain zebra.
Recently the Studio was featured in Justin Timberlake’s MTV reality show The Phone, and in 2008 was graced with the presence of Pulitzer Prize winner poet James Tate.