General Strike: A Matchbox Show

General Strike: A Matchbox Show

What does solidarity mean for the artist? Or, what can art do in a time of crisis?

The concept of a general strike is appealing to many advocates and activists because, in the face of oppression or inequality, it’s one of the few options available to the general public. General strikes are sometimes thought of as the “people’s veto,” and for the un-unionized among us, are less about joining our colleagues on the picket lines and more a call for solidarity. They ask us to pinpoint our strengths and identify how our skills can best be of use.

 

Graham Franciose


Writing about the need and dream of solidarity, activist and novelist Sarah Schulman describes recognition, risk, and creativity as the essential tools in harnessing “the people power necessary to reach the tipping point that transforms lives and, in the most extreme conditions of brutality, actually saves lives.” For artists, these three tenets–recongition, risk, and creativity–are often already the building blocks of a practice. Discerning eyes and trenchant observations, personal sacrifices and provocative positions, combined with a wealth of imagination, are evident in both the studio and the streets. Artists are in many ways world-builders, helping to illuminate what’s previously gone unnoticed or otherwise been thought impossible.

In General Strike, we witness more than 70 approaches to a singular object: a large, wooden matchbox. Containing purple-tipped matchsticks, these vessels of potential display a wide array of mediums and methodologies offered by artists across North America. While some revel in whimsy, beauty, and the pleasures of life, others direct us toward bold, decisive action. All, in their own ways, speak to an innate impulse to transform something simple into another thing entirely.

 

Stevie Shao


Like any crisis, whether tangible or of conscience, what’s required is a variety of responses, the best of which fan the flames of courage and ultimately insist on our shared humanity. The particularities of such approaches–and those stoking their creation–are what make this fight worthwhile, especially when we’re all striking together.

General Strike opens on November 21 and runs through December 20.

 

A portion of the proceeds from all work sold in General Strike will be donated to the ACLU.

 

Participating Artists

David Alvarez

Lauren Asta
Emma Baker-Terhaar
Ben Blount
Adrian Landon Brooks
Emmy Star Brown
Stephanie Brown
Hollie Chastain
Gigi Chen
Felicia Chiao
Jon Ching
Yen Yen Chou
Lisa Congdon
Kevin Cyr
Sarah Detweiler
Josh Dihle
Ashley Dreyfus    
Ryan Duggan
Josiah Ellner
Amy Feigley-lee
Liz Flores
Graham Franciose
Leah Gardner
Dan Grzeca

Heather Sundquist Hall
Jasjyot Singh Hans
Rachel Hayden
Barry Hazard
Christopher Michael Hefner  
David Heo
Andrew Hem
Jessica Hess
Paulina Ho
Matthew Hoffman
Yellena James
Blake Jones
Hanna Lee Joshi
Sofija Kamasi
Christina Keith
Allison May Kiphuth
Kelly Knaga
Danym Kwon
Kyler Martz
Andrew & Kelsey McClellan
Arna Miller
Sam Onche  
Rodrigo Oñate
Nate Otto

Juan Arango Palacios
Pizza in the Rain
Katerina Popova
Pedro Trueba Ramírez
Bunnie Reiss
Renee Robbins
Jay Ryan
Juliet Schreckinger
Stevie Shao
Shawn Smith
Sobé
Sonnenzimmer    
Koy Suntichotinun
Diana Sudyka
Joe Swec
Kristin Texeira
Alexis Trice
Jocelyn Tsaih
Cymone Wilder
Wingchow
Tanner Woodford
Chunbo Zhang
Ravi Zupa

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