De Land studied philosophy and linguistics at
New York University. In 1984, De Land opened Vox Populi, on East Sixth Street in the
East Village. De Land renamed the gallery American Fine Arts, Co. In 1986, it moved the space to 40
Wooster Street. Colin was an early supporter of
Andrea Fraser,
Cady Noland,
Mark Dion,
Jessica Stockholder,
John Waters, and
Christian Philipp Müller. Waters said that de Land was “a cult gutter-couture icon.” De Land regularly had art theory and history classes for art collectors.
Art Club 2000, a six-member collaborative made up of recent Cooper Union grads, formed in 1992 in collaboration with de Land. Art Club 2000 would have a show annually at American Fine Arts Co. for the next seven years. In his obituary
Roberta Smith wrote, "he was known for his relaxed work habits and even more relaxed art installations, which did not all open on time, as well as an insistent sartorial style that presaged the
white trash look. At times he exhibited fictive artists, like John Dogg, whose work was widely assumed, but never confirmed, to have been made by Mr. de Land and the artist
Richard Prince." == Armory Show ==