James Kalm peddles through the rain to bring viewers a report on this historic recreation. Opening in 1972 A.I.R. was the first women's co-operative gallery to open in New York. Due to the underrepresented position of female artists, this group came together, organized, built and maintained this gallery dedicated to showing the best quality art produced by women, regardless of its medium. Uniquely, this gallery combined the radical social challenges of Feminist thought with a new experimental spirit in art and helped establish a new creative enclave downtown called Soho. Featuring and interview with co-curator and founding member Patsy Norvell.
ya, i guess ever since taht time he freaked da koons out on the roof that time...hehe.
seintzeit 3 years ago
LOL! Even the biggest playas sometimes have that effect on the females. I won't hold against James.
asdffd 3 years ago
graduate school sometimes helps.
seintzeit 3 years ago
ha. but not all the ladies at AIR...did you see how barbara zucker scowled and made a b-line whenever she got within camera shot? whew.
seintzeit 3 years ago
light as air
MrWowforever 3 years ago
Hip Hop might've changed but one thing that hasn't changed is all the ladies still love cool James. Kalm that is.
asdffd 3 years ago
lighten up.
seintzeit 3 years ago
the MACHINE ruins everything...rock and roll, punk rock, hip-hop and even country....high school was wrong, popularity ruins things eventually
MrWowforever 3 years ago
hip hop has changed.
seintzeit 3 years ago
LL Cool J- Ladies Love Cool James.
asdffd 3 years ago