It’s no small feat for a Dallas art gallery to reach its tenth birthday. In an industry so reliant on global trends and collectors’ whims, the fact that Erin Cluley’s eponymous space is celebrating a full decade is worth popping the champagne.
For her anniversary, Cluley is launching a “greatest hits” show with a party on Aug. 24 from 6 to 8 pm. Running through Sept. 28 in both her main space and Cluley Projects, Erin Cluley: Ten Years will feature artists she has worked with for years, including Chul-Hyun Ahn, Chivas Clem, Riley Holloway, Anna Membrino, Nic Nicosia, Rene Trevino, and Zeke Williams, among others. For the gallerist, building and celebrating enduring relationships has always been her ethos.
“Dallas has always been collaborative, and I think that’s been an important factor in the life of the gallery,” says Cluley. “We’ll have a new work with artists we’ve worked with and might work with in the future, and we’ll have programming over the month, including partnering with (creative consultant) Marion Marshall, who helped me bring diversity in the collection in a thoughtful way.”
“I thought I would be a professor, and I quickly learned I didn’t want to do that,” Cluely recalls. “Grace advocated for me to get a job at her gallery, and I quickly learned I liked it and was pretty good at it. My boss at the time was willing to let me bring some artists on board, and I think I continued down the path I did because of him. Seeing the way he worked with artists, he was very generous and supportive, and I definitely picked up on that.”
By 2009, she was ready to return to Texas. Hired at Dallas Contemporary when it was still on Swiss Avenue, she landed at an opportune moment. Within a few months, Cluley was handling programming, helping the institution move to its current location on Glass Street. She also leveled up her experience working alongside blue-chip names such as Richard Phillips and Shepard Fairey as the museum’s director of exhibitions.
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Erin Cluley; Photo by Kevin Todora.
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Leila Jeffreys
Rose-crowned fruit dove, 2017
photograph on archival fibre based cotton rag paper
43 1/8 x 35 in
44 1/8 x 36 x 2 (framed)
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Nic Nicosia
100 Years, 2015
Graphite on Bristol
18 x 24 in.
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René Treviño
Turquoise, 2024
Acrylic on Dura-La
36 x 36 in
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Anna Membrino
Blush, 2021
acrylic on canvas
52 x 46 in
By the end of her time at the museum, Cluley felt well-equipped to launch exhibitions “with my eyes closed.” While pondering opening her own space, she ran the idea by developer Butch McGregor, who responded enthusiastically, helping her find a building near Trinity Groves. The neighborhood was a no man’s land of industrial spaces and weed-filled lots at the time.
Cluley pioneered the Tin District but, after five years, was ready for a more sedate location. She moved into the Design District’s River Bend development in 2019. Her roster evolved as well, now showcasing primarily Texas-based talent with an Australian or Mexican artist in the mix.
Throughout the last decade, the gallerist has reveled in working with both established talent and up-and-comers, so much so that she launched her satellite Cluley Projects in 2021 to provide opportunities for artists from underrepresented communities or without current representation. This allows her to grow her stable at the main space while nurturing the next generation.
“We are playing the long game,” she explains. “When I’m bringing on a new artist, I’m always thinking about what I can provide for them long term, whether getting them into private collections or museum exposure. I can never predict exactly what will happen, but I like to pride myself and my gallery on having these good relationships.”
—KENDALL MORGAN