Performance Art #3

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Performance Art #3 LIVE performance art #3 Robert Ashley * Dance Day at The Kitchen * Intermedia Festival * Childs/Glass/LeWitt * S.F. MOMA (Space/Time/Sound) * Performance Alla Milanese (Sixto 'Notes Festival) * Performance Books. Reviews Downloaded from http://direct.mit.edu/pam/article-pdf/doi/10.1162/pam.1980.0.3.1/1868714/pam.1980.0.3.1.pdf by guest on 26 September 2021 S2.50 Publishers Robert Ashley's "Perfect Lives (Private 3 Between the Covers: Two Performance 30 Bonnie Marranca Parts)" Anthologies Gautam Dasgupta Conversation with John Howell Ken Friedman Contributing Editors Executive Editor 33 Bonnie Marranca Peter Frank Dance Day at The Kitchen 8 Reviews Ken Friedman Robert Coe Kipper Kids, Pat Oleszko, Eric Editor Berenice Reynaud Bogosian, Sue Heinemann, Elaine John Howell Hartnett, Carolee Schneemann, Wendy Perron, Susan Rethorst, Staff Writers Intermedia Festival 12 Robert Atkins Christina Svane, Luigi Ontani, Statements Sally Banes by Elaine Summers, Marc Camille Chaimowicz, Untel, Design Allan Kaprow, Dick Higgins, Ken- Gautam Dasgupta Robert Coe Linda Montano, Betsy Damon, neth King, Joan Jonas, Peter Meg Eginton Barbara Hammer, Rosemary Frank, Meredith Monk Staff Photographers Tony Mascatello Hochschild, Walter Abish, Johan Elbers Ingrid Nyeboe Douglas Davis, Beth Anderson, Nathaniel Tileston Clair Wolfe Beverly Brown, Jill Kroesen, Peter Dance/Childs; Music/Glass; Film/LeWitt 18 Gordon, Julian Maynard Smith, 1 1980 by Performance Art Magazine. Performance Text/Howell; Photos/Tileston Lawrence Weiner, Pat Molella Art Magazine is published four times a year by Per- forming Arts Journal Inc. Editorial and business of- fice: P.O. Box 858; Peter Stuyvesant Station; New York; N.Y. 10009. Tel.: (212) 260-7586. Unsolicited S.F. MOMA(Space/Time/Sound-The 24 manuscripts must be accompanied by self- Seventies) addressed stamped envelope. Subscription rates Robert Atkins per year: Libraries and Institu- Individuals-$9.00; COVER DESIGN: Nathaniel Tileston tions-$16.00; Foreign, including Canada, add $4.00 per year for postage. Request for permission to reprint any material in Performance Art Magazine Performance Alla Milanese: Sixto Notes 27 must be made in writing to the publishers. Festival Advertising rates will be sent on request. Giorgio Verzotti A Periodical of Performing Arts Journal Publications Downloaded from http://direct.mit.edu/pam/article-pdf/doi/10.1162/pam.1980.0.3.1/1868714/pam.1980.0.3.1.pdf by guest on 26 September 2021 PUBLISHERS' NOTE PerformanceArt Magazine is changing its name *'creative confusion" in the performance world the openness of this world to new definition. to LIVE, and expanding its size and format as of today and this magazine was created to reflect We know from the response to this magazine. this issue. Several factors have contributed to the transformative nature of this activit,,. When nows in national and international distribution, this rethinking about the magazine and the we started the magazine last Spring we didn't that there is a great audience demand for a areas of perfonnance we are covering. realize the extent to wvhich we'd be covering publication about performance, and perform- performances in lofts. clubs, and alternative Namely, the Soho Weekly News seems to be ers, too, have begun to look to us for coverage of spaces. Neither did we anticipate the amount of and their work. We expect to grow into more na- phasing out performance coverage the activity wI h could comfortably fit in the tion a I a nd international perspectives on Village Voice has never expressed much interest, pages of this magazine. in it: other publications coming out of New performance as much as we can, though New York have only given the area token coverage: In our three issues thus far we've expanded I ork actisity will alway s be our focus. As it is. museums and galleries are sponsoring fewer per- coverage in perfoniance art and moved to in- we can't coN er all of it. formance events. That pretty much leaves us to clude dance, film. video, music, and literary LIVE will continue in its established format but explore the vast field of performance activity in readings. The notion of performance itself is we hope to more thoroughly pursue all kinds of New York on a regular basis. The new, larger changing and newer and younger performers performance activit,. trends, and aesthetics - size of the magazine will allow us to increase our are working in all kinds of imaginative cross- from the most out-of-the-way places to the more coverage and amount of photos in a more visual- over areas, helping to snape new audience ideas established spaces. ly expansive format atid design. about the nature and shape of the audience ex- perience. The title LIVE, we feel, better reflects There is great deal of what one might call the dynamism of the performance world 3nd The Publishers SUBSCRI PTI ON ORDER F ORM See Last Page 2 Downloaded from http://direct.mit.edu/pam/article-pdf/doi/10.1162/pam.1980.0.3.1/1868714/pam.1980.0.3.1.pdf by guest on 26 September 2021 PERFECT LIVES (PRIVATE PARTS) Robert Ashley Perfect Lives (Private Parts) deals with "life in the corn belt." Are you from the Midwest? iece resembles most the way live performances are I think where I grew up, Ann Arbor, Michi- 1e well, such as baseball the edge of done when they're done really gan, is considered to be right on and the Midwest. The slides and map showed covera ge where there are huge numbers of cameras Galesberg, Illinois, which is on the far eastern therefore a huge number of choices of what to show. edge of the corn belt. When I first drove across the country about ten years ago, I'd never really seen that geography and how it There will I)e six channels of imagery and one camera will be focused exclusively to that changed, and I started thinking about that each one wi th a different subject. The chan- area, and so on. What we learned at DTW is image of flatness. I was also reading a lot nels are set up in pairs. For instance, the out- that we need more room, so that those sub- about Egypt and geometry, the measurement door landsc apes will be compared to the jects can be more separated. What I expect of the earth and architecture, and all those piano players' landscapes-the keyboard, his the audience to see is us working on the tele- ideas about how the earth is divided up. I hands. And there are templates for all of the vision. For the Fall, I'm not thinking of it so thought about the Midwest flatness being various laye rs of the parts, the musical layers much as the presentation of a theatre piece, something like other flat places on the earth. I and video i nagery, and those templates are but as a presentation of the way somebody really got interested in it because it was flat filled out by pictures of real things. Each song from the Kitchen would (o television. rather than because I was there. Everything I has its own template. The staging this Fall And all of these different subjects will go into a know and about the place is so imaginary, I don't will be like that at DTW but expanded master feed for broadcast? really know anything about the Midwest. taken apart . The separate areas, like Blue one subject, will Exactly. The master video will be made as a Since the DTW performances were "in pro- Gene at the keyboard, who is selection from six different channels, three gress," what else will we see at this Fal's per- each have one camera devoted exclusively to and pre-taped channels and three live camera formance and broadcast? that. Jill an d David are another study, 3 Downloaded from http://direct.mit.edu/pam/article-pdf/doi/10.1162/pam.1980.0.3.1/1868714/pam.1980.0.3.1.pdf by guest on 26 September 2021 feeds. Each of those six tracks will be com- ferent cameras. This Fall there will be an ar- plete in itself for each of the seven songs, so tist at each camera and that artist will be do- that it becomes a kind of virtuoso mixing ing something like a piece in his or her style piece. As a television technique, it goes away but following those templates. I'm giving from the narrative style of camera work that them a geometrical boundary, a shape defini- you mostly see on commercial television. This tion within which to work and do something piece resembles most the way live perform- in their style that's unique so that each chan- ances are done when they're done really well, nel will look like a different artist did it. such as baseball coverage where there are And that's true of the music for each song as huge numbers of cameras and therefore a well isn't it? huge number of choices of whr to show. So the technical model for the piece is baseball rather than a movie. It's definitely not a film style. I'm more interested in mak- ing a setting in which Blue How are your six channels going to relate to each other? Gene can play the piano so The video material is being designed to relate that you can really see him those different channels in a geometrical way play the piano. which is what I call templates. For instance, in The Park, the template is simply the low BLUE GENE TYRANNY horizon, which means the bottom half of the That idea of geometrical layering is very ROBERT ASHLEY screen.
Recommended publications
  • The Electric Mirror: Reflecting on Video Art in the 1970S
    Robyn Farrell The Electric Mirror: Reflecting on Video Art in the 1970s In 1978, artist and filmmaker Lynn to say that television was the sole The desire to experiment with the Hershman Leeson wrote that, “Much antecedent of video art, but rather electronic and visual capabilities of the urgency and inspiration of art a critical relative to the developing of television dates back to 1963 video emanates from various types of medium. Representing the first with Nam June Paik’s first televisual commercial television broadcasting.”1 generation that grew up with television, manipulation in The Exposition of Included in Gregory Battock’s the artists included in this program Electronic Music-Electronic Television critical anthology, New Artists Video, were keenly aware of a viewer’s social at Galerie Parnass in Wuppertal, West Hershman Leeson’s essay “Reflections and psychological experience while Germany. Paik’s motivation to utilize on the Electric Mirror” identified TV watching TV. Their collective works the monitor and screen as a means genres that influenced video artists, encompass the interests of this “TV to assault the image provided the and declared video as “a manifestation generation,” and at the same time, the aesthetic framework for practitioners of contemporary art.”2 She went on post-war, post-pop proclivities of a in the following decade. Works in to describe video as “the extracted changing art landscape that ranged this program operate in this vein, film of television,” and pointed to the from minimal representation and illustrating how one could change a relations between the nascent medium captured action, to technophilic inquiry viewer’s perception through video and television as inextricably linked, and appropriation.
    [Show full text]
  • Against Rigour in Art a Review of Landscape: the Virtual, the Actual, the Possible? Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco October 24, 2014–January 25, 2015
    Brian Karl Against Rigour in Art A Review of Landscape: the virtual, the actual, the possible? Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco October 24, 2014–January 25, 2015 “A lady visited Matisse in his studio. Inspecting one of his latest works, she unwisely said, ‘But surely the arm of this woman is much too long.’ ‘Madame,’ the artist politely replied, ‘You are mistaken. This is not a woman, this is a picture.’” –Stelarc, “Prosthetic Head: Intelligence, Awareness and Agency,” interview with the Prosthetic Head, an artificial linguistic entity1 n the paragraph-long story “On Rigor in Science,” Jorge Luis Borges takes up a conceit from Lewis Carroll’s fnal novel, Sylvie and Bruno, Ifrst published in 1889: The proposal to expand the scale of map- making to align one-to-one to the areas that each map is meant to represent. In Carroll’s telling, some closer-to-the-earth farmers scuttle the project when they point out how such a map would kill all crops by blocking out the sun. In Borges’s telling, however, the fanciful notion went forward as the ne plus ultra or ad absurdum of representation, only to be abandoned after completion, left to decay through exposure, open to the elements by those next generations “not so fond of the study of Cartography” and who realized that the all-encompassing maps were “Useless” and “not without some Pitilessness.”2 The exhibition Landscape: the virtual, the actual, the possible? at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, featured work by a group of twenty-one artists working in a broad assortment of approaches and media and engaging with different thematics of representation, hovering around a focus—or, rather, foci—on different ideas of landscape, nature, and environment.
    [Show full text]
  • Department of Film and Video Archive
    Department of Film and Video archive, Title Department of Film and Video archive (fv001) Dates 1907-2009 [bulk 1970-2003] Creator Summary Quantity 200 linear feet of graphic material and textual records Restrictions on Access Language English Kate Barbera PDF Created January 20, 2016 Department of Film and Video archive, Page 2 of 65 Carnegie Museum of Art (CMOA) established the Film Section (subsequently, the Section of Film and Video and the Department of Film and Video) in 1970, making it one of the first museum-based film departments in the country. As part of the first wave of museums to celebrate moving image work, CMOA played a central role in legitimizing film as an art form, leading a movement that would eventually result in the integration of moving image artworks in museum collections worldwide. The department's active roster of programmingÐfeaturing historical screenings, director's retrospectives, and monthly appearances by experimental filmmakers from around the worldÐwas a leading factor in Pittsburgh's emergence in the 1970s as ªone of the most vibrant and exciting places in America for exploring cinema.º (Robert A. Haller, Crossroads: Avant-garde Film in Pittsburgh in the 1970s, 2005). The museum also served as a galvanizing force in the burgeoning field by increasing visibility and promoting the professionalization of moving image art through its publication of Film and Video Makers Travel Sheet (a monthly newsletter distributed to 2,000 subscribers worldwide) and the Film and Video Makers Directory (a listing of those involved in film and video production and exhibition) and by paying substantial honoraria to visiting filmmakers.
    [Show full text]
  • State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 from Acclaimed “Pacific Standard Time” Exhibition Series Comes to the Bronx Museum of the Arts
    State of Mind: New California Art circa 1970 from Acclaimed “Pacific Standard Time” Exhibition Series Comes to The Bronx Museum of the Arts Museum is Only East Coast Venue to Present Exhibition Illustrating Broad Impact “California Conceptualism” Continues to Have on Contemporary Art Bronx, NY, April 11, 2013 – This June, The Bronx Museum of the Arts will become the only East Coast venue to present State of Mind: New California Art circa 1970, an exhibition which explores the emergence of conceptual art in California in the 1960s and 70s. The exhibition was developed as part of the Getty Foundation’s collaborative exhibition series, “Pacific Standard Time,” and will feature 150 works by 60 artists in a range of media. Each of the artists featured in the exhibition—including Chris Burden, Lynn Hershman, Linda Mary Montano, Martha Rosler, Allen Ruppersberg, and Ed Ruscha—played a seminal role in the emergence of “California Conceptualism.” Marked by its radical forms and ideas, the new art movement permeated the country in the 60s and 70s and has continued to influence artists since its inception. Works in the exhibition exemplify the unrestricted style of the era, when art was produced for alternative audiences and outside of artists’ studios—in the streets, at artist-run galleries, and in other non-traditional spaces. State of Mind features video, film, photography, installation, artist's books, drawings, and extensive performance documentation and ephemera. The exhibition’s tour is organized by Independent Curators International (ICI) and will be on view at The Bronx Museum from June 22 – September 8, 2013.
    [Show full text]
  • 'State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970' at the Bronx Museum Of
    ‘State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970’ at the Bronx Museum of the Arts MAIKA POLLACK In the late 1960s and early 1970s, California was a contemporary-art backwater. Without a strong gallery system, work wasn’t likely to sell, and fine art existed in Hollywood’s shadow. Art professors and MFA students are always underdogs compared with the entertainment industry, but those on the West Coast—“snotty surfer upstarts,” as one artist put it—were considered even more so, by dint of the fact that they weren’t in New York. The best works in this exhibition curated by Constance Lewallen and Karen Moss take advantage of that outsider position, making use of art’s ability to conjure or invent new meanings and contexts. The standout piece is Allen Ruppersberg’s Al’s Grand Hotel (1971). Stationery announces that you can rent rooms in “The grand hotel,” a fictional/real hotel-as-art-project. Life-size http://galleristny.com/2013/07/state-of-mind-new-california-art-circa-1970-at- the-bronx-museum-of-the-arts/ cutouts show the artist as a shirtless cowboy—a kind of counterculture maître-d’—flashing a peace sign. A soundtrack of country songs played by Terry Allen on the opening night of the hotel event (from a 2011 LP) is paired with a guest book. That the whole thing takes place within the framework of art-making complicates the endeavor, blurring the line between doomed business, party, happening and savvy cultural capital- producing endeavor. Installation view. (Photo by David Familian/Bronx Museum of the Arts) Paul Kos, a Bay Area conceptual artist, has perhaps the second-coolest piece, Sound of Ice Melting (1970), with eight boom mikes, cables and speakers, and a Yamaha mixer all hooked up to a puddle of water (which presumably had once been a block of ice).
    [Show full text]
  • Course Schedule
    Printed on: Apr 8, 2020 at 1:54 PM Course Schedule Undergraduate : Spring 2016 : Art and Technology Course Schedule AT-100-01 Introduction to Art and Technology Credits: 3 Lasse Scherffig Tu Th 9:00AM - 11:45AM Room: 25 This course is an introduction to the practices and theoretical approaches used to produce the content and structure of art and technology; the relations between space, place and identity, as well as the ways in which these relations and their practices are produced in a range of media. Students explore the forces that shape the authority of technology in society from concepts of identity, democracy, and privacy, to the impact of technology on entertainment, economics and politics. Student projects include creative and critical project-based forms of practice completed at staged skill and conceptual levels of a gradually increased complexity. FALL ONLY. Prerequisite: none Satisfies: Introduction to Art &Technology I, Art &Technology Elective, Studio Elective, Media Breadth AT-109-01 Concepts and Tools for Artful Apps Intervention With Everyday Things Credits: 3 Chris Kubick M W 4:15PM - 7:00PM Room: 25 M W 4:15PM - 7:00PM Room: DMS2 As smartphones and tablets have become ubiquitous, these portable, location-aware, touch-screen multimedia devices and their applications are changing the way we consume, create, explore, and experience art. What's more, these apps are changing the way we live, by accelerating social interaction, challenging accepted notions of public vs. private space, informing and enabling political activism, and giving us new means to document and share our lives. As these new ways of life become more and more mundane, artists step into the breach, asking us to re-imagine the possibilities presented by these digital devices and their apps.
    [Show full text]
  • Performance Art Context R
    Literature: Literature: (...continued) Literature: Literature: Literature: (... continued) Literature: Literature: (... continued) Literature: Kunstf. Bd.137 / Atlas der Künstlerreisen Literature: (...continued) Literature: (... continued) Richard Kostelnatz / The Theater of Crossings (catalogue) E. Jappe / Performance Ritual Prozeß Walking through society (yearbook) ! Judith Butler !! / Bodies That Matter Victoria Best & Peter Collier (Ed.) / article: Kultur als Handlung Kunstf. Bd.136 / Ästhetik des Reisens Butoh – Die Rebellion des Körpers PERFORMANCE ART CONTEXT R. Shusterman / Kunst leben – Die Ästhetik Mixed Means. An Introduction to Zeitspielräume. Performance Musik On Ritual (Performance Research) Eugenio Barber (anthropological view) Performative Acts and Gender Constitution Powerful Bodies – Performance in French Gertrude Koch Zeit – Die vierte Dimension in der (Kazuo Ohno, Carlotta Ikeda, Tatsumi des Pragmatismus Happenings, Kinetic Environments ... ! Ästhetik / Daniel Charles Richard Schechner / Future of Ritual Camille Camillieri (athropolog. view; (article 1988!) / Judith Butler Cultural Studies !! Mieke Bal (lecture) / Performance and Mary Ann Doane / Film and the bildenden Kunst Hijikata, Min Tanaka, Anzu Furukawa, Performative Approaches in Art and Science Using the Example of "Performance Art" R. Koberg / Die Kunst des Gehens Mitsutaka Ishi, Testuro Tamura, Musical Performance (book) Stan Godlovitch Kunstforum Bd. 34 / Plastik als important for Patrice Pavis) Performativity and Performance (book) ! Geoffrey Leech / Principles
    [Show full text]
  • State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970
    November 13, 2013 State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 Una DimitriJevic State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 3 October 2013 – 12 January 2014 Smart Museum of Art, Chicago Review by Una DimitriJevic of Brave New Art World Organised as part of the landmark Pacific Standard Time initiative by the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA), and the Orange County Museum of Art,’ State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970’ is the first in-depth survey of conceptual art from California. Unlike their counterparts on the East coast, these Californian artists (whose collective output is represented here through more than 150 works by 60 artists and collectives) developed their ideas http://www.thisistomorrow.info/viewArticle.aspx?artId=2128 far from the highly monetised art-world and did not hesitate to confront questions about art-making and the role of artists with a good dose of humour. Their focus was on ideas and the artistic process, with the end-product itself seen as a secondary affair, a documentary relic. This was coupled with a desire to circumvent the traditional system of displaying and selling art. As such, much of the art produced by the California conceptualists consisted of happenings, public interventions and performances which are by their very nature ephemeral and irreproducible. All that can be represented in a gallery space is documentation of their occurrence: mainly video and photography, as well as the occasional scathing news article such as 'Conceptual Art – Just what is it?' from a 1971 edition of the Chronicle.
    [Show full text]
  • STATE of MIND: NEW CALIFORNIA ART CIRCA 1970 February 23 – May 19, 2013 Press Preview: Thursday, February 21, 11 Am-12 Pm
    1606 PASEO DE PERALTA, SANTA FE, NM 87501 SITE SANTA FE TO HOST STATE OF MIND: NEW CALIFORNIA ART CIRCA 1970 February 23 – May 19, 2013 Press Preview: Thursday, February 21, 11 am-12 pm Members’ Preview, Thursday, February 21, 5-7 pm Public Opening, Friday, February 22, 5-7 pm Curated by Constance Lewallen and Karen Moss; Co-organized by the Orange County Museum of Art and the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. The exhibition tour is organized by Independent Curators International (ICI), New York. January 10, 2013 - State of Mind is one of the three anchor exhibitions that helped chart the course of Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945-1980, the ambitious collaborative initiative of the Getty with arts institutions across southern California, celebrating the birth of the L.A. art scene. Martha Rosler, First Lady (Pat Nixon), 1967–72. Courtesy of the artist and Mitchell-Innes & Nash Gallery, New York. State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 is an exhibition investigating seminal conceptual and related avant-garde activities in the late 1960s and 1970s which reveal the critical interchange between artists living in California. Featuring approximately 150 works by 60 artists, State of Mind explores the growth of Conceptualism and the exploration of new methodologies, technologies and sites for artistic expression in California in response to immense social change. In 1970s California, the effects of a youth oriented counter-culture, the Civil Rights Movement, the Chicano students’ protest against racism and inequality, and the Vietnam War strongly influenced the artists in this exhibition.
    [Show full text]
  • Course Schedule
    SPRING 2015 COURSE SCHEDULE UNDERGRADUATE COURSES that we receive about the world is often interpreted as objective—especially when presented through an authoritative frame such as the museum—a change in presentation or environment can dispel the beliefs that we take for granted. This HISTORY AND THEORY OF CONTEMPORARY course will explore the evolution of display as well as the many ART approaches that have challenged established modes of looking and interpretation. HTCA-101-1 MODERNITY AND MODERNISM Satisfies Art History Elective; HTCA-101 for Transfers; Liberal Lauren Macdonald Arts Elective Prerequisite: HTCA-100 This course provides a framework within which to examine and HTCA-220E-1 SOCIETY PHOTOGRAPHIC articulate pivotal topics in world art and architecture and to TBA consider their relevance to contemporary practice. The material Prerequisite: HTCA-102 will be organized in rough chronology spanning the historical Photography, thanks to its enormous impact on modern society, period from 1500 to 1950. The question sustained across the plays an essential role in theorizing social relations. It is central to sessions is what constitutes the many ways of defining “the questions like: Will humans become machines? How do we modern” and the related terms “modernism” and “modernity.” understand suffering? Where is the line between public and This course will pose possible answers through the lenses of private? What is creativity? In this course we’ll study how critics humanist discourse and its problematization in the ages of and artists have employed photography (not just as a practice, imperialism and colonialism; changing patronage for art in an but as an idea) for thinking about the conditions of modernity emerging system of commodity relations; the rise of urban and contemporary life.
    [Show full text]
  • Wczesna Sztuka Wideo (1965-1976) Videotapes. Early Video Art (1965-1976) Wystawa Czynna Do 13 Kwietnia 2020 | Exhibition Open Until 13 April 2020 Zacheta.Art.Pl 2
    , 1973, dzięki uprzejmości | courtesy of Video Data Bank at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago of Video Data Bank at the School Art Institute | courtesy , 1973, dzięki uprzejmości Portapak Conversation Portapak | Rozmowa Portapak Rozmowa Videofreex, Videofreex, Vito Acconci, John Baldessari, Lynda Benglis, Dara Birnbaum, Don Burgy, James Byrne, peter campus, Douglas Davis, Cara DeVito, Valie Export, Terry Fox, Anna Bella Geiger, Frank Gillette, Tina Girouard, Julie Gustafson, Hermine Freed, Nancy Holt, Joan Jonas, Beryl Korot, Marlene Kos, Paul Kos, Shigeko Kubota, Suzanne Lacy, Richard Landry, Mary Lucier, Ivens Machado, Andy Mann, Cynthia Maughan, Susan Mogul, Antoni Muntadas, Bruce Nauman, Letícia Parente, Nam June Paik, Józef Robakowski, Martha Rosler, Dan Sandin, Ira Schneider, Ilene Segalove, Steina & Woody Vasulka, Videofreex, William Wegman, Lawrence Weiner Wczesna sztuka wideo (1965-1976) Videotapes. Early Video Art (1965-1976) wystawa czynna do 13 kwietnia 2020 | exhibition open until 13 April 2020 zacheta.art.pl 2 kontakt dla mediów | press: Olga Gawerska, [email protected], +48 22 556 96 55, +48 603 510 112 15.02–13.04.20 2 | 3 Zachęta — Narodowa Galeria Sztuki | Zachęta — National Gallery of Art Wideotaśmy. Wczesna sztuka wideo (1965–1976) Videotapes. Early Video Art (1965–1976) kurator | curator: Michał Jachuła współpraca | collaboration: Julia Leopold projekt ekspozycji | exhibition design: Wojciech Popławski (OP Architekten) projekt logotypu wystawy | exhibition logo designed by Piotr Antonów realizacja |
    [Show full text]
  • Claire Tabouret
    CLAIRE TABOURET + CASH FOR GOLD LIKE SMOKE FOR MIRRORS AND LAND FOR SEA WITH PAUL + MARLENE KOS, TAKESHI MURATA, AND MUNGO THOMSON — 26 AUGUST–24 OCTOBER, 2017 Curator : Lauren Mackler A proposal from Astérides — OPENING TIME Wednesday–Friday, 2–7 pm Saturday and Sunday, 1–7 pm — GUIDED TOUR Guided tour of the exhibitions every Saturday and Sunday. More information on the online agenda can be found at www.lafriche.org. The tour is included in the entrance ticket, without reservation. For more information about these visits, school reservations and social centers, contact the team of la Friche la Belle de Mai: T: +33 (0)4 95 04 95 47 / [email protected] CLAIRE TABOURET The Gold Miners, 2017 (various details) AS A PRELUDE: On the other hand—in a parallel exhibition—a series This exhibition of Claire Tabouret’s work is the of artworks and artifacts play with the tinsel of Hollywood: rear culmination of a residency the artist held in Marseille, from projections, clever editing techniques, and cinematic parlor January to June 2011. In this show, Tabouret revisits the work tricks. This second layer to our presentation contextualizes the she made at that time from the vantage point of her current first while complicating it, blurring the line between background studio in Los Angeles and alongside newly produced paintings and subject, frame and content. It showcases works by and prints. These new works—large-scale pieces freestanding additional artists as well as scenographic elements quoting in the architecture of the gallery—will host the older works hung from cinema.
    [Show full text]