UNOBTAINIUM - December 7

UNOBTAINIUM - December 7

Friday, Dec 06, 2019 - Saturday, Dec 07, 2019 12:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Location:
Boo-Hooray
22 Eldridge Street
2nd Floor
New York, New York
10002

THEEEE unobtainium

- that which cannot be obtained through the usual channels of commerce

Captured Tracks, Groove Merchant, Human Head and Boo-Hooray present: UNOBTAINIUM!

Rare VINYL * POSTERS * PHOTOGRAPHY * ART * ZINES * BOOKS

Friday December 6th from 7 – 10 PM RSVP-ONLY PREVIEW

LEGENDARY wine, PROFOUND snacks and SUBLIME DJ-performances

by EDAN, COOL CHRIS and DJ RIVOSTO

Saturday December 7th from 12 NOON until 5 PM launching a baffling goodie bag benefiting 8Ball Community

CELEBRATE the opening of the NEW and MIGHTY SUAVE gallery and bookshop in MANHATTAN’S glamourous CHINATOWN

Boo-Hooray 22 Eldridge Street 2nd floor NYC NY 10002

RSVP: info@boo-hooray.com

BOO-HOORAY exhibits both at home in New York City as well as internationally. We also stage collaborative exhibitions with the Hayward Gallery and Rough Trade in London, Tsutaya Daikanyama, Hysteric Glamour, and United Arrows in Tokyo, Galleri Operatingplace in Stockholm, Colette in Paris, PopMontreal in Montreal, Mishka Los Angeles, Printed Matter at both MOCA/LA and PS1/NYC, and Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, the New York Public Library, the Grolier Club, and Milk Gallery in New York.

Boo-Hooray exhibitions have included shows featuring Larry Clark, The Velvet Underground, Ray Johnson, Afrika Bambaataa, Jonas Mekas, Ed Sanders, Linder Sterling and Jon Savage, Spencer Sweeney, Houston Rap, private press vinyl, Wallace Berman, anarcho-punk group Crass, Jason Polan, Jack Smith, cult-filmmaker Ed Wood, and Situationist Times editor Jacqueline de Jong.

The exhibitions are drawn from cultural archives that Boo-Hooray excavates, organizes, and places in institutions such as Columbia University’s Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Cornell University’s Division of Rare Manuscript Collections, Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, and the University of Oxford’s Bodleian Library.