Scott Reeder (born 1970, Battle Creek, MI) is a multi-disciplinary artist in Chicago, IL.[1] He is currently represented by Canada in New York, NY and Kavi Gupta in Chicago, IL.
Biography
Reeder is currently an associate professor of painting and drawing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[2] Reeder is best known for his irreverent take on modernism and memorable titles like 'Money in Bed' and 'Symmetrical Pirate.' A book of his Reeder's work, Scott Reeder: Ideas (cont.) was published by Mousse Publishing in 2019.
In 2002, with his brother Tyson Reeder, they established the storefront gallery General Store in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[3] General Store curated the exhibitions Drunk vs. Stoned (2004) and Drunk vs. Stoned 2 (2005) at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, New York, and The Early Show (2005) at White Columns, New York.[4][5][6] The Reeders also organized the Dark Fair, an art fair operated in a black-walled space lit only with candlelight, at the Swiss Institute Contemporary Art New York in 2008 and as part of Art Cologne in 2009.[7] Scott and Tyson Reeder additionally operate Club Nutz, billed as the world’s smallest comedy club. First established in a small 8’ x 8’ room adjacent to the Green Gallery in Milwaukee, Club Nutz has traveled to the Frieze Art Fair in London, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and Salon 94 in New York to host open-mics, dance parties, screenings, and lectures.[8]
Exhibitions
Reeder currently has a solo exhibition, Didactic Sunsets, on view at Canada in New York, NY. In 2014, he debuted his first feature-length film, Moon Dust, shot over the span of eleven years.[9] Set 100 years in the future, Moon Dust tells the absurd and sometimes heartbreaking story of a failing resort on the moon. Moon Dust has screened at Anthology Film Archives, NY, Whitney Museum of American Art, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago and Kunsthall Stavanger, Norway. In March 2019, Reeder opened an exhibition titled “B-Side of the Moon” at the John Michael Kohler Art Center in Sheboygan, Wi. This exhibition facilitated the production of a feature length film; a sequel to Reeder’s first feature Moon Dust. Reeder’s paintings and projects have been reviewed in Artforum, Art & Text, Art Review, FlashArt, Frieze, The New York Times, Art News, Art In America, TimeOut, The Village Voice and The New Yorker.
Select Solo and Two-Person Shows:
2020 Didactic Sunsets, Canada, New York, NY
2019 B-Side of the Moon, Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI
2015 Context Burger, Retrospective, Hudson, NY
Put The Cat On The Phone, Kavi Gupta, Chicago
More Work, Natalia Hug, Cologne
It Gets Beta, Marlborough Chelsea, NY (with Andrew Kuo)
2014 Moon Dust, 356 Mission Road, Los Angeles, California
2013 People Call Me Scott, Lisa Cooley, New York
The Future is Stupid, Green Gallery, Milwaukee, (with Ken Kagami)
Paintings of Things, Kavi Gupta, Berlin, Germany
Scott Reeder, Kavi Gupta, Chicago, Illinois
2011 Scott Reeder, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois
Scott Reeder, Gavlak Gallery, Palm Beach, FL
2010 Scott Reeder, Luce Gallery, Torino, Italy
2008 Didactic Sunset, Gavlak Gallery, Palm Beach, Florida
Scott Reeder and Tyson Reeder, Daniel Reich Gallery, New York
Nohl Fellowshio Exhibition, Inova at the Peck School of the Arts, Milwaukee
2006 Scott Reeder: New Works, Daniel Reich Gallery, New York
Scott Reeder: French Thoughts, Jack Hanley, San Francisco, California
2005 Scott Reeder – Moon Museum (Scene 51: Shots 1-2), Midway Contemporary Art,
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Intelligent Design, Gavin Brown’s enterprise 620A, New York (with Tyson Reeder)
2003 Moon Dust, Gallery 400, Chicago, Illinois
2002 Scott Reeder: Flowers, Daniel Reich Gallery, New York
The Suburban, Oak Park (with Tyson Reeder)
Deluxe Projects, Chicago (with Milhaus)
2001 Bronwyn Keenan Gallery, New York (in association with Daniel Reich Gallery)
Pretty Funny: Scott Reeder and David Robbins, Allston Skirt Gallery, Boston
2000 China Art Objects, Los Angeles (with Laura Owens)
Angstrom Gallery, Dallas, Texas (with Cameron Martin curated by David Quadrini)
1999 Pat Hearn Gallery, New York
L.A.C.E., Los Angeles (with Michelle Lopez)
1998 Hermetic Gallery, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
References
- ↑ "sreede". School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 2020-07-05.
- ↑ "the School of the Art Institute of Chicago".
- ↑ "Lisa Cooley".
- ↑ "artnet".
- ↑ Smith, Roberta (26 August 2005). "The New York Times".
- ↑ "White Columns".
- ↑ "Fecal Face".
- ↑ "Performa Magazine". November 2011.
- ↑ "Kavi Gupta".