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Artist in Residence Open Studio
Emily Spivack’s WHY DID THE JALAPEÑO PUT ON A SWEATER?
November 26, 2019
6–8 pm
Bard Graduate Center Gallery, 18 West 86th Street

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Come visit one of Bard Graduate Center Gallery’s 2019 pop up exhibition’s WHY DID THE JALAPEÑO PUT ON A SWEATER? by artist Emily Spivack. WHY DID THE JALAPEÑO PUT ON A SWEATER? is a compendium of clothing-related jokes that references the classic joke-a-day desktop calendar. Every day during the exhibition, a new joke will be revealed. For the past year, Spivack has been building an archive of these jokes as an antidote to the seriousness of fashion.

About Emily Spivack
Emily Spivack is an artist, writer, and editor whose work draws from contemporary culture, clothing, history, and our relationship to everyday objects. Spivack is the author of Worn in New York (2017), a contemporary cultural history of New York told through clothing, which is a follow-up to her New York Times best seller, Worn Stories (2014), and wornstories.com (2010), collections of stories about clothing and memory. In her column for T: The New York Times Style Magazine, “The Story of a Thing,” Spivack interviews cultural figures about objects in their homes that provide insight into their interests and quirks. As artist in residence at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York (2017–2018), Ms. Spivack invited visitors to contribute to “An archive of everything worn to MoMA from November 1, 2017, to January 28, 2018,” a project that is now a permanent part of MoMA’s Archives. Her 2017 off-site installation for the Honolulu Museum of Art, “Medium White Tee,” was a fulfillment of President Obama’s stated fantasy to run a T-shirt shack that sold only medium-sized white tees as a respite from his nonstop decision-making.

About Artist in Residence Programs
Bard Graduate Center’s Artist in Residence (AiR) programs are designed to bring artists into conversation with the Bard Graduate Center Gallery’s current exhibition, French Fashion, Women, and the First World War. The work of these artists animates the BGC Gallery as a living space and draws connections between the exhibitions on view and contemporary art making. Fall 2019 AiR programs include a pop-up exhibition, maker workshops, and performance lectures, as well as a runway show exploring the history of counter-fashion.

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On View in the Gallery
French Fashion, Women, and the First World War
September 5, 2019–January 5, 2020 Learn More Button
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