Agathe Snow

Agathe Snow (French pronunciation: [aɡatə snɔ:]; née Aparru)[1] (born 1976) is an artist based in New York City.

Biography

Snow was born in Corsica and moved to New York at age 11.[2][3] She works in a variety of media and has collaborated with artists including Alex Arcadia, Rita Ackermann, Michael Portnoy and Emily Sunblad.[4] One of her best known endeavours was No Need To Worry, The Apocalypse Has Already Happened… at James Fuentes Gallery in 2007, in which Snow took the starting point of a recently flooded Manhattan[5] as a conceit on which to base a five-week performance and gallery-wide installation, including a sculpture of the belly of a beached whale.[4]

Snow married artist Dash Snow when he was 18 and she was 23 in 2000.[6] Before Dash Snow died on July 13, 2009, according to his obituary in The New York Times, their marriage had ended in divorce.[1]

Snow's entry to the 2008 Whitney Biennial, held March 9-March 16 at the Park Avenue Armory annex of the biennial, was "Stamina: Gloria Et Patria," a week-long dance-a-thon.[7]

Selected exhibitions

2015

Continuum [solo exhibition], Journal Gallery, Brooklyn, New York[8]

Stamina [color video installation; with sound, 24hrs], Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City, New York[9]

2012

Tout Dit (2D), OHWOW, Los Angeles, California (solo exhibition)[10]

I like it here. Don't you?, Maccarone, New York, New York (solo exhibition)[11]

gollark: much_of_the_education_system_irl
gollark: I mean, if someone is making an ICBM, are they going to use a random commercial GPS module?
gollark: It's very bizarre. You can get around them with one of the SDR-based GPS implementations, but it's annoying for many people.
gollark: I'm immune to that due to repeated exposure, actually.
gollark: How something of this "neo dintchly".

References

  1. Roberta Smith,"Dash Snow, East Village Artistic Rebel, Dies at 27", The New York Times, July 15, 2009.
  2. "Collection online: Agathe Snow". Solomon F. Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  3. "Agathe Snow on How 9/11 Shaped Her Career, and Why She Left Downtown New York Behind". Artspace. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  4. Mary Rinebold, After the Deluge, ArtNet.com
  5. press release, JamesFuentes.com Archived July 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  6. Chasing Dash Snow, NYMag.com
  7. The Facebook Biennial, NYMag.com
  8. "Agathe Snow". www.thejournalinc.com. Retrieved 2017-11-25.
  9. "Agathe Snow: Stamina". 2015-10-16. Archived from the original on 2015-10-16. Retrieved 2017-11-25.
  10. Nys Dambrot, Shana Whitehot Magazine, January, 2013.
  11. Soto, Paul. Archived 2012-12-03 at the Wayback MachineArt in America, November 19, 2012.
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