An artwork advanced in Albuquerque’s Barelas neighborhood suffered damages and is quickly shuttered after a fireplace broke out earlier this month. Sections of the nonprofit Fourteenfifteen Gallery, its Alpaca occasion house, and the adjoining Minnow music venue caught fireplace within the early morning of November 2 when an alleyway erupted in flames, a spokesperson for Fourteenfifteen advised Hyperallergic.
Whereas the constructing stays intact, smoke and water destroyed artists’ provides, together with electronics, instruments, plinths, and provides belonging to the documentary manufacturing firm Basement Movies, in addition to printed supplies, exhibition ephemera, and “other objects of sentimental value that are harder to replace,” the group stated.
The Albuquerque Fireplace Division stated in an Instagram submit that the fireplace was contained inside 50 minutes and no one was injured. The trigger, the assertion continues, is unknown and was not investigated. In accordance with Fourteenfifteen’s spokesperson, there isn’t a estimate for when repairs can be accomplished, however the group’s GoFundMe has raised $10,000 for repairs because it was launched final week. The advanced is positioned in a historic district alongside the famed Route 66, that’s residence to the Nationwide Hispanic Cultural Heart.
Intensive harm on the ground of Fourteenfifteen
Fourteenfifteen and the Minnow are run by members of LoA, a collective of curators and artists. Final 12 months, the group’s curatorial staff advised Hyperallergic that they launched in 2018 to have interaction underrepresented and experimental artists. The constructing, based on Fourteenfifteen’s web site, has belonged to varied artist-run areas for greater than 20 years.
Fourteenfifteen was slated to open Ladmo: An Exhibit That Bears A Putting Resemblance to A Retrospective, with works by artist Bryan Konefsky, final week, however was compelled to shut its doorways pending repairs. The collective has hosted puppet reveals, mutual aid-generating occasions, and inaugural launch events for zines like BorderPlex, which platforms queer and trans Borderland artists.
“We are currently in the process of itemizing materials and damages and are tremendously grateful for your financial support via our Gofundme and various raffles and upcoming benefit shows which we will rely on to replace what was lost,” Fourteenfifteen stated in a press release to neighborhood members shared with Hyperallergic. “These third spaces are the very fabric of a flourishing and vibrant community and we are grateful just to be a small part of this wonderful history.”
The gallery stated it doesn’t have a timeline for reopening.