Press + News

“NEW INC & NEW MUSEUM PRESENT DEMO2024”


Event
05.06.2024

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NEW INC & New Museum Present DEMO2024
Wednesday–Friday, June 5–7 | All Day
WSA | 161 Water Street, NYC

Feel the pulse of the next generation of creative projects and enterprises at DEMO2024, a multi-day festival from NEW INC, the New Museum’s incubator for art, design, and technology. Celebrating NEW INC’s 10th anniversary, DEMO2024 features showcases, talks, activations and a pop-up store featuring Year 10 members— all hosted in the WSA. DEMO2024 is open to the public and completely free, but registration is required

Safe Space


Playground Detroit
03.05.2019

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SAFE SPACE, a group exhibition curated by We-Are-Familia, is currently on view at the Detroit Public Library, open to the public now through May 3, 2019, which features the work of 24 local artists and designers. This exhibition celebrates Detroit’s thriving arts scene while bypassing the traditional realms of galleries and museums. Instead, it brings their diverse and spirited work to the Library, a welcoming place where the community can congregate: a safe space. We-Are-Familia asked a rich variety of artists and designers what “safe space” means to them. The list of exhibitors includes native Detroiters, longtime residents, and newcomers to the city — many of whom have immigrated here from around the world. Their creative contributions to Detroit are helping shape the city’s future during an exciting time, when the possibilities are endless. SAFE SPACE spotlights Detroit’s vast creativity by featuring a diverse cross-section of artists and designers. Local Artists and Designers include an impressive and well-curated roster featuring Aaron Blendowski, Alex Youkanna, Bre’Ann White, Chad Wentzel, Christian Mickovic, Laura Quattrocchi, Lauren Kalman, Marco Lorenzetti, Michael Christy, Nadiya I. Nacorda, Nina Cho, Osman Khan, OUIZI, Renee Rials, Sam Keller, Sarah C. Blanchette, TMRWLND Studio, William Kang as well as Friendship Circle Soul Studio members: Aislinn Wendrow, Blake Jackson, Jonathan Barnett and Stephanie Harris. From a storytelling robot designed by Michigan professor Osman Khan, to paintings and woven pieces from Soul Studio’s program for artists with special needs, to mirror-centric works by up-and-coming industrial designers Aaron Blendowski and Nina Cho— SAFE SPACE seeks to “showcase an expansive array of artistic styles and mediums that embody Detroit’s thriving creativity.” Following the exhibition’s final day, We-Are-Familia will be hosting a celebration on Saturday, May 4th from 9 PM to 1 AM at Candy Bar in The Siren Hotel, a vibrant cocktail lounge inside one of the world’s best-designed hotels. The event will be co-hosted by Friends and Lovers, with music by DJ Kenan Juska, who hosts the celebrated radio show “Chances with Wolves.”

We-Are-Familia is a group of artists and designers from around the world who work collaboratively. Together, they build community through the arts, which are multi-sensory and multi-linguistic. We-Are-Familia has exhibited at The Museum of Art and Design, New York City, Colette Paris, and at the Fountain Art Fairs in New York City and Miami. Past initiatives include a Keepsake Box project and multiple site-specific events that take over otherwise uninhabited spaces.

The Detroit Public Library is the fourth largest in the country; the first building opened during the Civil War, surprising the city with over 5,000 volumes of choice and rare works—free to the public. At the time, the Detroit Free Press wrote, “Its influences for good cannot be too highly estimated.” Since then, its legacy is steeped in the pursuit of social progress, such as being home to the first black president of the American Library Association Clara Stanton Jones.

“A Family Affair”


Interior Design
01.01.2012

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When graphic designer and art director Jennifer Garcia meets a fellow creative type, she feels a connection so strong that it can be compared only to kinship. That emotion inspired her to launch We-Are-Familia, a multidisciplinary global network exploring the ties that bond us. Its latest effort is the Kin Coda collection of unusual keepsake boxes. Filled with family-oriented artworks, the 25 assemblages were designed by the likes of Joe Doucet and David Weeks-half with discarded materials and products donated by Fritz Hansen. The company’s New York showroom already displayed those boxes, but Garcia is talking to museums about a full family outing.

“Artfully Designed Boxes”


Fast Company
23.11.2011

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The artists’ collective We-Are-Familia transforms Fritz Hansen remnants into stunning receptacles for ephemera.

We-Are-Familia, a global network of artists, recently partnered with the Danish furniture company Fritz Hansen for an exhibition of keepsake boxes fabricated from found and recycled materials. But these aren’t your typical rectangular receptacles for safeguarding valuables; instead, they’re eye-catching creations that house ordinary things. The container imbues the contents with significance, rather than the other way around.

Fourteen of the 25 boxes were part of the Kin Coda exhibition at Fritz Hansen’s New York showroom; 11 were completed and displayed earlier. All are assembled from found and recycled materials, including parts of chairs designed by Danish greats Arne Jacobsen and Poul Kjaerholm. Steph Mantis’s Keepsake Box No. 22, for instance, is a houselike structure constructed from swatches of Fritz Hansen vinyl and fabric and propped up on a base from Kasper Salto’s Nap chair.

“Art and Design Collide”


Cool Hunting
17.11.2011

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A project four years in the making, Kin Coda comprises a range of 25 uniquely crafted keepsake boxes, each an assemblage of art by the diverse design collective We-Are-Familia. Since graphic designer Jennifer Garcia began the project in 2007, several of the first 11 boxes have been featured in galleries or snapped up by discerning collectors, debuting at Colette and then coming stateside to Open Space in Beacon, NY and Fountain Art Fair.

For boxes 12-25, We-Are-Familia used damaged furniture from the sustainably-minded Danish brand Fritz Hansen. In order to protect the integrity of their classic designs, Fritz Hansen is forced to destroy a small amount of unusable furniture each season, and when sales director for North America David Obel Rosenkvist heard about the collective’s forward-thinking project, he and his team decided to donate the damaged chairs and tables to Garcia and her team.

Garcia originally started the project to exemplify the synonymous nature of art and design, and has brought her point to life with this second wave of furniture-based conceptual boxes, currently on view at NYC’s Fritz Hansen store. Several notable designers, including David Weeks, Iacoli & McAllister, Kiel Mead, Joe Doucet, UM Project and more, have put their own distinctive twist on the Fritz Hansen furniture, which rounds out the project. Serving as a stimulating foundation for the ingenious designers, the Fritz Hansen furniture takes new shape in works like Chen Chen and Kai Williams’ deconstructed Star Base Swivel Chair in fire engine red, or Nightwood’s rustic Swan chair-turned-“Hunter-Gatherer Chair,” and UM Project’s modern armoire made from Arne Jacobsen Series 7 chairs.

Living up to the We are Familia name, Garcia tells us that when one of the pieces sells—prices top off at $10,000—they all split the profit. It’s with this communal enthusiasm that the designers created the singular keepsakes, each brimming with the works of 40 different artists. The full collection of collaborative creations, combined with the support of Fritz Hansen, perfectly illustrates the familial spirit of the artists’ collective.

Kin Coda will be on display for just a short time at Fritz Hansen, from 17-23 November 2011.

“Kin Coda Exhibition”


Mocoloco
12.11.2011

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From We-Are-Familia, Kin Coda, an exhibition of the completion of one-of-a-kind keepsake boxes, a project first originated in 2007. “Fritz Hansen™, the renowned Danish furniture design company, and WE-ARE-FAMILIA, a global network of creative individuals from all disciplines, are pleased to announce KIN CODA, an exhibition of the completion of one-of-a-kind Keepsake Boxes, a project that first originated in 2007.” “The entire series consists of 25 unique Keepsake Boxes, each showcasing approximately 40 original ‘mementos’, or artworks, contributed by the WE-ARE-FAMILIA family of artists. Each Keepsake Box is a sculptural assemblage of found, recycled and surplus materials. Possessing nostalgic warmth yet employing contemporary forms of expression, the boxes provide a new and exotic understanding of ordinary things.” “To date, WE-ARE-FAMILIA has actualized 11 boxes. Boxes 12 through 25 complete the project and will be exhibited with support from Fritz Hansen, which has donated a bulk of products and materials; rejected, damaged or otherwise unmarketable. Fritz Hansen has long believed that sustainability, quality and design are all equally important. By creating products that are meant to last forever, even the remnants are considered useful.” The 14 artists invited to design and fabricate boxes 12-25 are : Brendan Ravenhill (LA), Fort Standard (BK), Chen Chen and Kai (BK), David Weeks (BK), Joe Doucet (NYC), UM Project (BK), Nightwood (BK), Silva Bradshaw (BK), Steph Mantis (BK), Kiel Mead (BK), Brian Balderston (BK), Iacoli + McAllister (Seattle), MN*LS (Austria), Patrick Townsand (Long Island City) and Jennifer Garcia (NYC).

“Organically-Grown Business”


On-Verge
01.02.2011

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Creative Director of WE-ARE-FAMILIA Jennifer Garcia initiated the collective by simply posting an internet listing that asked artists to contribute to her personal project. Garcia explained that she had no idea how much WE-ARE-FAMILIA would grow and that she initially hoped to create an oeuvre of ambitious, dedicated and emerging artists and companies who were willing to submit work to a very haphazardly-planned organization. Her only request was that each submission related to the idea of “family,” hence the group’s name. During the first year, Garcia recalled that she had reached out to other art organizations without much luck. Now after four years, WE-ARE-FAMILIA produced eleven keepsake boxes, was invited to multiple art fairs, threw populated exhibitions for emerging artists, and was commissioned by the Museum of Art and Design, New York, during Metal Ball. The members seemed to adhere to a Post Structuralist postulate during development; yet when it came to art, the collective chose design over chance aesthetics but always encouraged multiple viewpoints.

As a graphic designer, Garcia originally planned on producing twenty-five books cataloging contributors’ works. She was overwhelmed by and thankful for the large number of responses from not only artists but graphic and fashion designers, illustrators, composers, directors and film makers, photographers, even manufacturing companies. Finally, she decided to admit fifty of the numerous applicants. Each member donated twenty-five works of art ranging from musical compositions, photographs, drawings, video art, prints, illustrations, designed goods and more. Her tentative plan morphed into twenty-five “keepsake boxes, but even boxes (think Duchamp’s “boxes”) could not contain the various forms of art.

Ultimately, Garcia and the fifty members agreed to produce twenty-five mementos. The “boxes,” which mimic furniture, are constructed by found objects, which hold up to forty original or printed and numbered works signed by creators. The first three constructions were crafted after Garcia and members rummaged through left-over materials in Brooklyn and Queens. These three sculptures were exhibited at Colette in Paris.

The viewing at Colette, being the American boutique in Paris, might have stimulated the upcoming and tremendous recognition WE-ARE-FAMILIA began to receive in the United States. Reed Space, Open Gallery and Fountain Miami (and later New York) directly contacted WE-ARE-FAMILIA and invited the collective to exhibit. Correlating with the main objective of WE-ARE-FAMILIA, to make the art world more of a family community, the collective always made each space its home. At Open Gallery WE-ARE-FAMILIA threw an event, complete with a bus to take patrons around the city until a small dinner was hosted by the collective—always emphasizing that not only members but also patrons and art enthusiasts are part of the familia.

Realizing that the “boxes” were much more than merely boxes, the members pursued to commission architectural and design firms to facilitate production, adjoining a completely new genre of art with the project. Nevertheless each keepsake box was personally cared for by the collective from design, composition and completion. Nearly all fifty artist received credit on each box.

Moreover, WE-ARE-FAMILIA started to collaborate with real-estate companies that offered free space for pop-up exhibitions. Beginning with a store front during last year’s Brooklyn Art Walk, the makeshift gallery was offered for the full summer allowing WE-ARE-FAMILIA to exhibit, as well as, to hold toy making work shops, sculpture exhibitions, et cetera. The collective is approachable, which makes it easy to post it in up-and-coming areas and revive art scenes where lack of resources impedes artistic development.

Subsequently, big-time developers caught on to WE-ARE-FAMILIA’s success. For example, MODERN SPACES, a luxury real-estate firm, most-recently, exhibited the work of Chris Mendoza (a non-member) in a duplex penthouse in Long Island City. Not only does this benefit WE-ARE-FAMILIA, but MODERN SPACES also uses exhibitions to usher more clients into available apartments. The trade off may seem a bit counterintuitive considering the collective’s grass-root, yet it claims no distinction among “Fine Art,” “Craft” or “Architecture.”

Therefore collaborations produce additional recognition. As the group attracts more attention and takes on advanced projects, its members prosper in their specific fields: an artist has been featured in a past exhibition at Guggenheim and a director plans to release his first feature film in Paris.

Considering the collective’s recent and massive breakthroughs, Garcia has admitted that she can not predict the future. Her dream remains to finish twenty-five keepsake boxes and to finally exhibit them in a retrospective. She has promised that WE-ARE-FAMILIA plans to continue to review proposals, accept challenges and support art communities.

Four years ago fifty strangers shared one thing in common; they had replied to Jennifer Garcia’s listing. Today they, along with numerous enthusiasts, help to define the robust concept of an international “art family.” Notably, WE-ARE-FAMILIA is derived from common Postmodern ideology; the collective’s structure has been assembled by chance and appeals to Pluralism. However, WE-ARE-FAMILIA celebrates the subjectivism of art and appears to abjure detachment of artist from work. With luck, similar groups may succeed meretricious art factories as fresh artistic formations—eventually, connecting art with community.

“Kin Coda Exhibition”


Design Milk
14.01.2011

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Kin Coda is an exhibition featuring the collaborative work of WE-ARE-FAMILIA and the Danish furniture company Fritz Hansen. WE-ARE-FAMILIA is a worldwide network of artists who have come together to complete 25 Keepsake Boxes that feature approximately 40 original “mementos” contributed by the artists themselves. Each box features found and recycled materials assembled together to exhibit ordinary things but in a new way. Eleven of the 25 boxes were previously completed and boxes 12 through 25 will be on display at the Fritz Hansen showroom in New York City from November 17th through November 23rd, 2011.

Above is We-Are-Familia Keepsake Box No. 22 of 25, entitled “Household”. Designed by Steph Mantis, 2011. Made with a Kasper Salto Nap Chair base, an Arne Jacobsen Series 7 chair, various Fritz Hansen fabrics and vinyls and an enclosed set of works by We-Are-Familia artists.

“Real Art Houses”


The Daily News
17.09.2010

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“Greetings from Miami Beach”


Tokion
01.04.2010

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“The D*s Guest Blog”


Design Sponge
07.07.2009

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We-Are-Familia’s primary ongoing project is a series of 25 one-of-a kind keepsake boxes showcasing original “mementos” contributed by its family of international artists. The artists at open space in Beacon, NY will address “the spatial tropes of domesticity and familial dynamics by transforming open space into a living room of seamlessly integrated furniture, art and design.” There are some phenomenal artists participating (including Amy Ruppel and Nightwood) and the July 11th opening will include a green BBQ, drinks from Kingston’s Micro Brewery and street projections after dark. The show runs from July 11th to September 6th.

“Runs in the Family”


Nylon
27.03.2009

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In the French film, Amélie, Audrey Tautou discovers a boy’s childhood keepsake box, returns it to him, and leaves the now grown man in tears. WE ARE FAMILIA, an art collective whose members independently study the concept of family, chose this nostalgic chest as a canvas for their current exhibition at Colette in Paris. Fifty artists, designers, and musicians, from H Fredriksson to Hisham Bharoocha, hand crafted 25 kindred-themed keepsake boxes in Brooklyn from found and recycled materials. The result is a, er, captivating collection of 3D works that feature digital prints, silk-screens, and 8-track tape soundscapes that will be on display until 2008.

WE ARE FAMILIA
Colette
213 rue Saint-Honoré, Paris
Preview the exhibition at colette.fr

“All in the Familia”


Elle
10.12.2007

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Since its fashionable inception in 1997, Paris concept shop Colette has made its way into customers’ closets, iPods, makeup cases, breakfast tables, and bookshelves. Now they’re making their presence felt at the family gathering with an exhibition from NY-based artists’ collective We-Are-Familia, “an independent creative study on the concept of family”. The project features fifty artists, musicians, and designers contributing their own mementos and personal ideas of family to create keepsake boxes fashioned from recycled and found objects. The boxes, each signed and numbered, will be on display at Colette starting Monday. Contributors include artist-turned-accessories-designer Kim Songe, Zurich art direction firm Superette, designer Helena Fredriksson, and an assorted crew of sound engineers, film producers and photographers who make up We-Are-Familia’s modern day global family. And while the work is provocative and beautiful, its most laudable quality just might be its ability to distract from this season’s inevitable highlighting of your own family’s dysfunction.