Amidst Fanfare and a Parade, Art House Productions Cuts the Ribbon

Amidst Fanfare and a Parade, Art House Productions Cuts the Ribbon

It was not spontaneous, but it was sincere.  Grown men and women in shiny, conical party hats paraded south on Marin Boulevard to the train station in the midday July sun.  They followed a brass band, clapped, and shook noisemakers as they walked.  The party favors (and pink-frosted slices of celebratory cake) were supplied by Art House Productions, one of the longest-running, best-loved, and best-connected organizations in Jersey City.  Art House executive director Meredith Burns shepherded the crowd to the sidewalk in front of the Hendrix at 345 Marin Boulevard.  Soon there was a great red ribbon; soon there were politicians and real estate developers; soon there was Mayor Fulop; soon there was a little kid playing mayor for the day. She held a pair of scissors.  Amidst cheers, she snipped the ribbon. After too long without a permanent home, the Art House was, officially, back.

Unofficially, the new facility has been welcoming guests for a while. Curator Andrea McKenna has mounted a series of entertaining shows in the Art House gallery, including exhibitions of work by Mark Kurdzeil, Frank Ippolito, and other regional innovators.  The Jersey City Comedy Festival took over the handsome hundred-seat theater in early June.  But July 13 marked an official reopening — one blessed by the city government and applauded by members of the local arts community. (Some enthusiastic passersby, too.)  

The jubilant mood on the sidewalk was underscored by a palpable sense of relief.  The Art House had originally teased a summer 2022 ribbon-cutting, but pandemic-era concerns and construction delays pushed back the date of the reopening party to autumn, and then to winter, and then to 2023.  Throughout the wait, a de-centered Art House continued operations: its annual Snow Ball, the Diner in Blanc event in Lincoln Park, McKenna’s ambitious exhibitions, a play reading in the gallery, and continued organization and supervision of Jersey City Fridays, the quarterly citywide arts festival.  Yet the organization’s physical absence was felt.  In the two decades since its founding, Art House has been among the most reliable providers of performing arts programming to a city that has always been starved for venues.  With Art House on the sidelines, the theatrical landscape of Jersey City was a far emptier place

Click here for the full Jersey City Times article by Tric McCall