Jump to content

C-Pop (gallery)

Coordinates: 42°21′05.9″N 83°03′37.1″W / 42.351639°N 83.060306°W / 42.351639; -83.060306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Image of the rear outside wall of the former site of C-Pop Gallery at 4160 Woodward, Detroit, Michigan as of April 20, 2016

C-Pop Gallery (sometimes stylized as "(C)-Pop" or "©-Pop") was a metro Detroit art gallery that operated from 1996 to 2009.

History

[edit]

C-Pop was originally opened in March 1996 by Rick Manore with partners Michael Lask and Marty Geramita in the basement of a former church at 515 S. Lafayette in Royal Oak with a significant initial emphasis on rock posters, but was also associated with and moved towards a focus on less mass-produced art, including the Lowbrow art movement.[1][2] The first exhibit in the space was for Robert Williams in May 1996.[3] The gallery later moved to the David Whitney Building (Suite 313) in Detroit before finally opening in its final location at 4160 Woodward (the former Detroit Bowling & Trophy, in the same block as the Majestic Theater) in September 1999, with a notable sign created by Alex Porbe and significant renovations to the space funded by artist and eventual gallery owner Tom Thewes (son of Compuware co-founder Thomas Thewes).[4] The physical gallery closed in the summer of 2009.[5][6][7]

Exhibitions

[edit]

Amongst the many artists who exhibited at C-Pop were Niagara, Glenn Barr, Mark Dancey, Robert Williams, Shag, and Shepard Fairey[8] The following is an incomplete listing of C-Pop exhibits:[9]

  • Robert Williams May 17–June 23, 1996
  • Fiction Burn – Glenn Barr 1996 [10]
  • All Men are Cremated Equal – Niagara November 1996 [11]
  • The Art of Derek Hess March 21, 1997 [12]
  • Blinkless Eyes and Fresh Fruit Pies, The Art of the Residents and Steven Cerio May 3, 1997
  • Good to the Last Drop – Mark Dancey October 4, 1997
  • Nocturnal Planet – Glenn Barr November 22, 1997 [13]
  • Faster Niagara, Kill... Kill 1997
  • Carne d'Amour / Carne De Amore (Group Show) February 6, 1998 (sometimes references as Carne d'More [10][12]
  • Is Schism – Parlangeli Bill Brovold May 2–31, 1998 (final Royal Oak show)
  • It's My Party and I'll Die If I Want To – Niagara November 14, 1998
  • C Stands For….. (group show) September 25, 1999
  • Why Walk When You Can Drive (group) 1999 [10]
  • Strangers Have the Best Candy (group) 1999 [10]
  • Underbelly – Glenn Barr December 11, 1999 – January 14, 2000
  • Cat Scratch Derek – Derek Hess June 3, 2000 (with Glenn Barr "Barcode"?) [10][12]
  • Crime Lines – Niagara October 7, 2000
  • Cortex of Desire – Glenn Barr and David Sandlin December 2, 2000
  • The Leisure Principle – Shag / Allegories: The Fall of Virtue – Isabella Samaras / Hoods & Heaters Pulp Illustrations September 7, 2002
  • Tight as a Tourniquet – Derek Hess / Superhero Group Show October 5, 2002 [12]
  • They Won't Let Me Be Good – Niagara April 5, 2003
  • Flying Circus The Graphic Energy and Inspired Illuminations of Mark Dancey December 6–30, 2003
  • Fun House Art Show The Visual Art of Iggy Pop, Ron Asheton & Scott Asheton plus related group show February 7, 2004
  • TEN WOMEN ARTISTS FROM THE BOOK: VICIOUS, DELICIOUS, AMBITIOUS; March 6, 2004
  • The Silver Opium Series – Niagara November 2005
  • Incidental Contact (group show) May 1, 2006
  • Obey With Caution The Phenomenology of Shepard Fairey November 1, 2006
  • Saints Preserve Us (group show) November 18 – December 18, 2006
  • It’s All About © (group show; apparently referred to at times as "The End Is Near") May 1–June 13, 2009 (Final show)

Music

[edit]

C-Pop hosted various musical acts in its space as well in a limited fashion, including Jack White, the Demolition Doll Rods, and the Time Stereo Noise Camp.[14][15]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Inc, CMJ Network (1 April 1998). "CMJ New Music Monthly". CMJ Network, Inc. – via Google Books. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  2. ^ "Tribes of the Cass Corridor - C Pop Gallery".
  3. ^ "Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan · Page 32".
  4. ^ Gallery, (C)POP. "An International Art Movement Finds a Home in Detroit In the New and Permanent Location of (C)Pop Gallery".
  5. ^ http://www.detnews.com/article/20090320/ENT01/903200325/1033/ent/Detroit+s+C-Pop+art+gallery+expected+to+close+in+June [dead link]
  6. ^ "Discuss Detroit: CPOP Closing".
  7. ^ Mark (27 April 2009). "Comics Devastation!: Art is dead and Detroit is art".
  8. ^ "What? Tuesday - Obey Giant".
  9. ^ Many of the initial gallery references are taken from printed postcards from the gallery itself
  10. ^ a b c d e "Glenn Barr". Archived from the original on 2016-08-06. Retrieved 2016-05-09.
  11. ^ "Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan · Page 73".
  12. ^ a b c d "Online Portfolio of Artist Derek Hess".
  13. ^ http://www.westland.lib.mi.us/pdf/observers/1997-12-21.pdf Westland Observer, December 21, 1997, page D5
  14. ^ "C Pop Gallery - The Concert Database".
  15. ^ "2002 NOISE CAMP WRAP UP". Archived from the original on 2017-01-12. Retrieved 2016-03-07.

42°21′05.9″N 83°03′37.1″W / 42.351639°N 83.060306°W / 42.351639; -83.060306