Skip to content

Smokehouse Associates

Eric Booker
Barcode 9780300267204
Book

Sold out
Original price £45.74 - Original price £45.74
Original price
£45.74
£45.74 - £45.74
Current price £45.74

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 22/11/2022

Genre: Arts & Photography
Sub-Genre: Society & Culture
Label: Yale University Press
Contributors: Charles Davis (Contributions by), Ashley James (Contributions by), James Trainor (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: Yale University Press
Pages: 258

A groundbreaking study of the public art collective Smokehouse Associates, whose abstract works transformed New York's Harlem community in the late 1960s. A New York Times best art book of 2022

A groundbreaking study of the public art collective Smokehouse Associates, whose abstract works transformed New York’s Harlem community in the late 1960s
 
Between 1968 and 1970, the artist collective Smokehouse Associates transformed Harlem with vibrant, community-oriented abstract murals and sculptures. Established by William T. Williams and including Melvin Edwards, Guy Ciarcia, and Billy Rose, Smokehouse grew to encompass a range of creative practitioners united around the revolutionary potential of public art. Though relatively unknown today, Smokehouse was ambitious in its scale, community engagement, and interaction with the built environment.
 
Published over fifty years after the collective’s founding, Smokehouse Associates offers the first critical examination of the group’s work. Eric Booker provides a historical overview of the collective; Charles Davis II and James Trainor delve into contextual histories of public art, urban design, and architecture; and an artist roundtable moderated by Ashley James presents critical reflections. With previously unpublished images and ephemera and a rich chronology, Smokehouse Associates serves as a sourcebook that expands the narrative of public art and social practice in the United States to include the contributions of artists of African descent.
 
Distributed for The Studio Museum in Harlem