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Albeit
Tim Greathouse Sur Rodney Sur, 1983

Tim Greathouse »

Albeit

drawings, paintings and photographs

Exhibition: 9 Jan – 29 Feb 2020

Thu 9 Jan 18:00

Daniel Cooney Fine Art

508 West 26th Street, Suite 9C
10001 New York

+1-212-2558158


www.danielcooneyfineart.com

Tue-Sat 10-18

Daniel Cooney Fine Art is honored to present a solo exhibition of drawings, paintings and photographs by Tim Greathouse. Greathouse was a celebrated figure in the East Village art scene of the 1980’s as both an artist and gallerist.

Greathouse studied art at West Liberty State College in West Virginia, and maintained a studio at the Boston Center for the Arts before moving to New York in 1977. Greathouse first showed his photographs of his friends on the Lower East Side in an exhibition titled “Work Prints” at Gracie Mansion Gallery, Loo Division in 1982. That exhibition, held in the tiny water closet of Mansion’s East Village apartment garnered him a review in the Village Voice. The review was the very first bit of press for the storied Gracie Mansion Gallery.

He opened his own gallery dedicated to photography, Oggi Domani, in a storefront on East 11th Street in 1983. In 1984 he moved to a larger space on the north side of Tompkins Square Park, renamed the gallery Greathouse and showed sculpture in addition to photography. He then moved the gallery to the northeast corner of the park and continued to expand his oeuvre to painting and drawing.

Artists to whom he gave first or early shows include Kathe Burkhart, Anne Messner, Andrew Masullo, Zoe Leonard, Ken Schless, Jimmy de Sana. Paul Smith and Hope Sandrow. Greathouse closed his gallery in 1988 when the East Village boom ended and worked as an art consultant and graphic designer. Greathouse died on October 18, 1998 at the age of 48 from complications of AIDS.

While many people knew Greathouse as an art dealer and later as a graphic designer even some of his closest confidants did not know he continued to make photographs. Since Greathouse’s death his artwork has been archived with great care with the hope that it would one day be exhibited. Almost all of the work in this exhibition has never been seen publicly. This will be the most inclusive exhibition of Greathouse’s work to date.

As Greathouse seems to have been ignored in most historical reconciling of the East Village’s art scene during the 1980’s this exhibition hopes to correct that omission and share the important contributions of one of the most prolific figures of that time.