The new millennium would impact Coco in unimaginable ways. On September 11, 2001, asleep in her TriBeCa loft, an explosive crash jolted her awake. Coco grabbed her camera and ran outside. She was capturing the first strike of the terrorist attack as the second plane tore through the World Trade Center. With lower Manhattan sealed off, Coco took refuge with her mother, Alisa, in Chappaqua, NY. Even after NYC recovered, she never fully regained her life there and spent more time in Westchester to care for Alisa. In 2008, Coco moved to Lyons, Colorado. She transformed an aging bungalow into a phenomenal Art Box where she lives and works today. In 2018, Coco commenced an ongoing archiving project for her many thousands of artworks. Recording her life’s artwork has shown Coco the arc of her integrated career filled with ecological and political messages.
Integrations: 2000s to 2010s
Back to the Future.
In the 1960s, Coco’s acrylics made a sensation. These artworks were featured in numerous exhibits and widely collected. Sixty years later, Coco is at it again. The COVID pandemic offered Coco a chance to reflect. After recovering from a bout with the virus that she caught while in Italy in the end of 2019, Coco returned to her Art Box to recuperate. All it took was a large supply of canvas and assembled frames that she bought up from a local arts supply store. What emerged was again a sensation.
Calming Bush, Series, Photograph and Acrylic (2004), Below
Cut Book Explosions
Fresh Cuts from publications in Coco Gordon’s collection.
Dottoressa, Susan Levenstein, MD, Interactiv (2020)
Left: George Gershwin, Interactiv (2020) Center: John Cage, Silence, Interactive (2020) Right: Dick Higgins, Interactiv (2020)
Bride Of, Assemblage, Paper, Gesso, Metal (2020)
Performance Art
Galleria Visioni Altre, Video (Venezia, February 2020)
Mail Art
Bongiani OPHEN Art Museum, Contemporary Art Collection (2020)
Scrolling Order: Camie; Ray Members; Road Runner; Parcel Poet; Rayon Sand; Roof Top GordonT; L in Bathtub; iPost post; iMona Ray; Lawn Chair (2020)
Stylista Art Wear
Superskywoman (a.k.a. Coco Gordon) modeling her uniquely-designed, repurposed fashions (2019)