Blog/NewsPrint
 
 
 

Sedition at White Box opens Wednesday 10/29


SEDITION
Curated by Dread Scott, Kyle Goen,
and Hajarah Abdus-Sabur

Exhibition on View:
October 29th - November 23, 2008
Opening Reception: Wednesday October 29th, 6-9pm

Artists: Melanie Baker, Wafaa Bilal, Sandow Birk, Emily Douglas, Hasan Elahi, Mounir Fatmi, Jon Hendricks, Arnold Mesches, Naeem Mohaiemen, Sheryl Oring, Jenny Polak, Martha Rosler, Jackie Salloum, Hank Willis Thomas and Raphael Zollinger

When the President of the United States says, “You’re either with us or you’re with the terrorists”, Sedition is the only option. In an era of war, lies and torture, Sedition is the only option. When Black people are left to suffer and die in a flooded city, when cops fire fifty shots at an unarmed person and are later found inculpable, when nooses are hanging in Jena, Louisiana, Sedition is the only option. Empires demand Sedition*. ­

Sedition will reveal art about the tumultuous times we are living in. Following the rich history of art that challenges dominant ways of seeing, Sedition will show work that has been under fire and art that is firing its own ammo. Work such as Hank Willis Thomas’s Hang Time (Circa 1923), which features the “Air Jordan” logo hanging from a noose on a tree, encourages viewers to contemplate how systemic violence against African-Americans has set the stage for the persistence of racism. Wafaa Bilal’s Virtual Jihadi is an interactive video game in which an avatar becomes a suicide bomber in a hunt for President Bush. Jenny Polak’s ICE raid tracking uses Google Maps to document and trace Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids on the undocumented throughout the U.S.

WHITE BOX
Viewing Hours
Wednesday to Sunday, 11am - 7pm
Location
329 Broome Street. New York, NY. 10002

Category PERFORMA PICKS, Visual Art

Posted by Esa | Tuesday, October 28th, 2008 | 0 comments

Brokers With Hands On Their Faces

are to be found on this blog. Reminds me of the publications of German artist Petter Piller, where he collects photographs of people touching cars (”Autos berühren”) or pointing at something (”Bedeudungsflächen”). via

Category Visual Art

Posted by Georg | Tuesday, October 28th, 2008 | 0 comments

Works and Process: NY. 2022 at the Guggenheim

NY. 2022
This looks like it could be, as the kids say, “totally rad”

NEW COMMISSION
Fri & Sat, Oct 24 & Oct 25, 8 pm
Visual artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster and composer Ari Benjamin Meyers create an original performance installation for the Peter B. Lewis Theater. Inspired by the iconic science-fiction movie Soylent Green (1974) depicting a disturbing vision of New York City in 2022, this “musical drama about endings” will be performed by Staten Island’s Richmond County Orchestra (musical director Alan Aurelia). Photographs by Alex S. Maclean and costumes by Balenciaga complete the work.

Presented in conjunction with theanyspacewhatever exhibition, on view Oct 29–Jan 5, 2009. The exhibition galleries will open at 7 p.m.

Click here for info about Works and Process

Category PERFORMA PICKS, Performance, Visual Art

Posted by Esa | Monday, October 13th, 2008 | 0 comments

Jesper Just at the Brooklyn Museum

jesper just

Danish artist Jesper Just (director of the fabulous multimedial opera True Love Is Yet To Come for Performa in 2005) is shown at the Brooklyn Museum at the moment. I went there on Saturday to get an idea of his video work and was fascinated and impressed: It seems that Just found a way to mark the hideout of those instants that let us doubt in the distinction between dream and reality. He exaggurates the moment and supposedly everyday situations suddenly shift in a fantastic world, and with his visual language it afterwards seems like it always has been like this. In his new work, Romantic Delusions, even the simultanity of a story shown on three screens seems very natural. If you believe in power of moments inbetween, you should go and see it. Also if you don’t. Also there’s the huge Gilbert & George retrospective that’s not to be missed. So go Brooklyn.

Jesper Just: Romantic Delusions
Sept 19, 2008 - January 4, 2009

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn, New York 11238

Category PERFORMA PICKS, Visual Art

Posted by Georg | Monday, October 6th, 2008 | 0 comments

Dumbo Arts Festival

dumbo arts festival

This weekend Dumbo Arts Center opens its galleries for people to look behind the curtains: Installation, Sculptures, Projections, Interactive Art, Performances as well as mysterious “Water Art” and “Elevator Art” are presented in and around the Dumbo Area on 3 days and will keep all of your senses busy. Even the huge video art screenings of Video_Dumbo will not only supply those of you who just want to sit, but also those who want to experience some live-video and interaction broadcasts (which is compared to the size of New York quite rare I think). So no excuses. I will definetly spend my precious weekend there, being able to do it without sneaking in because it is free (!)

General times: Fr 7-9pm, Sa & So 12-9pm
30 Washington Street, Brooklyn, New York, 11201
Schedule & more Information

Category EVENTS, PERFORMA PICKS, Visual Art

Posted by Georg | Thursday, September 25th, 2008 | 1 comments

PS122: “The Passion Project”

Photo by Paula Court.

A ten-by-ten-foot cube in the middle of a dark room acts as the stage for Reid Farrington’s The Passion Project, a half hour long installation which will run through September 20 at PS122. The cube is defined by hanging ropes (these are tied into loops along the perimeter and across the top of the space), several frames holding parchment screens (leaning on the perimeter of the space), and an intermittent square of white light projected onto the floor that appears at the beginning of the performance. The stage awaits dormant, its audience encouraged to walk around it before and during the performance by Mr. Farrington himself. It is reminiscent of a cage, of a room, of a place at once distant and intimate. At times, I felt compelled to enter the stage and experience being inside, rather than outside the cube. But that is the job of Shelley Kay, the live performer who eventually enters the cube, as she said in an interview with Gia Kourlas, “walking into the throngs like a boxer”.

What ensues is an extremely physical half hour, in which Kay lifts, hangs, moves and unhooks the parchment frames from and onto different locations all around the cube. Her challenge is to catch projected images from Carl Th. Dreyer’s 1928 “The Passion of Joan of Arc”, a classic black and white silent film on the story of Joan of Arc’s condemnation and eventual death as a martyr. The film has been cut and edited by Farrington, so that for the most part what appears on the screens are close ups of different characters: Joan of Arc, of course, as well as various representatives of the orthodox clergy that broke her with long interrogations and finally had her burned. Kay moves frantically around the cube, catching an image of Joan of Arc, and letting her hang onto a loop, then running in a diagonal for the close up of a clergy man—this only lasts a few moments, than Kay kneels, puts down the frame she’s holding, and grabs another to run onto the next projection. The effect is powerful: the frames become windows, shields, tools, all necessary to piece together Joan of Arc’s story. As the performance builds up, Kay begins to sweat, her physical presence conrasting the mediated presence of the actors all around her. While we watch Kay catching images and working hard on keeping up with her cues, Farrington also stands on the side, watching. Like the men in the film, and like us spectators, he only witnesses Kay’s efforts and physical challenges. An interesting echo to the projections of the clergymen on the screen.

The powerful visuals of The Passion Project are enhanced by Farrington’s sound design, a multi-layered mixture of church chants, the sound of the film’s reel being projected, the voices of people editing the film, as well as some less recognizable voices and noises. The volume of the sound sometimes reaches almost unbearable loudness, creating a physical and emotional experience for the audience. The parchment screens themselves create loud snaps every time Kay reaches out to catch an image. Like the projections on the screens, the sound is not continuous, but has a repetitive quality to it. The overall effect is a three dimensional puzzle coming together, a puzzle with many layers and not definitive form.

Farrington’s piece successfully brings the audience into the nightmare of Joan of Arc, while taking a step back from film as a medium of representation. Through Kay’s performance, Farrington breaks down and exposes the different frames from the film: Kay is literally piecing the film together. By the end of the installation, the film has become at once more and less than itself, a combination of live performance, sound art, and clips of the original film. There were moments when I wished for more distance, more ambiguity towards the inevitably tragic nature of the story. My desire might have been encouraged by almost unidentifiable moments of humor within the installation (for instance, when Joan of Arc is being burned and on one of the screens there appears: “Jesus!”). Kay’s performance, although based on cues and tasks, sometimes overly amplified the evident suffering already on display in the projections of Joan of Arc. Yet overall the piece opened up the original film in unexpected ways, the installation offering a perfect medium through which to present the work. Anyone interested in video, dance, or installation performance should not miss Farrington’s latest work.

Category Dance, Film, Performance, REVIEWS, Visual Art

Posted by Beatrice B | Monday, September 15th, 2008 | 0 comments

MORE IN NYC

A few things to check out:

From Performa Alum Cian McConn
TURF //// work by 4 Irish artists
Installation / performance / drawing / video / beer / wine / freckily Irish artists
work by Kevin Flanagan, Cian McConn, Eve Vaughan and Stephanie Hough
Friday, September 12th, 7:30
266 West 37th Street, Between 7th & 8th Avenues

Cabinet Magazine for a party to celebrate the release of “The Book of Stamps”
Saturday, September 13, 6:30-8:30
Postmasters Gallery, 459 West 19th Street, New York

From Performa Curatorial Associate Tairone Bastien
A Seer Out of Season
An exhibition at On Stellar Rays
Opening reception Sunday, September 14th from 3-6 pm
Curated by Candice Madey and Tairone Bastien
Presenting works by Danny Jauregui, Dave McDermott, Elizabeth Neel, Alessandro Pessoli, Tia Pulitzer and Georgia Sagri

Fluxconcert
September 26 & 27, 2008 | 8PM
Abrons Arts Center (directions)
466 Grand St., New York, NY (map)
$10

Performances at Lisa Cooley Gallery
City Center
Sunday, September 28, 6 pm

Stefan Tcherepnin and Amir Mogharabi
Sunday, October 5, 6 pm

Photo by Maki Kaoru

Photo by Maki Kaoru

Category EVENTS, Music, Performance, Visual Art

Posted by Esa | Thursday, September 11th, 2008 | 0 comments

Art and Music Fall Picks

My gallery picks for the fall – shamefully they are all men!

Shaun El C. Leonardo & Clifford Owens
September 5 through October 6, 2008
Reception: Friday, September 5, 7-9 pm (but make sure you go on September 20th)
Momenta Art

Monsters
Curated by Robert Longo
September 7 - October 5, 2008
Rental Gallery

Rirkrit Tiravanija: Demonstration Drawings
September 12 – November 6, 2008
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 11, 6-8 pm
Drawing Center

Christian Marclay
September 4 - October 11, 2008
Paula Cooper (521 West 21st)

Chris Johanson, Totalities
September 4 - October 18, 2008
Deitch Projects (18 Wooster St) Soho

WHITE BOX’S NEW SPACE!
Opens election season a big show called Sedition curated by the feistiest duo since Batman and Robin – Dread Scott and Kyle Goen with Hajarah Abdus-Sabur
October - November, 2008
Check their website for details

Another political show and series of performances Political HQ curated by Larry Litt and Eleanor Heartney at Pratt opens September 26th and goes through the election.

Some outer borough stuff

Martin Boyce and Ugo Rondinone
We Burn, We Shiver.
September 7–November 30, 2008
SculptureCenter

A Performance
Mattin + Bernard Gal
Thursday September 25th
Issue Project Room

A New Biennial!
RSDI Alumni Biennial
The Old American Can Factory
September 11 - September 28, 2008
http://www.xoprojects.com/risd.html

I am still waiting for something really monumental to happen that will change DUMBO from being a sleepy little mini-Dayton Ohio into the raging cultural scene. In the meantime we have the Annual DUMBO Art Under the Bridge Festival from Sept. 26 to 28 which is often not too terrible AND the newly minty and waterier Galapagos Arts Space.

Galapagos has teamed up with The Field, which I find to be an interesting development because they are actually presenting something that looks and smells like arts advocacy.
The Field Panel Discussion
Starving Artist: Fact or Fiction: Non-Profit Doesn’t = No Money
Tuesday, September 16th, 7:30pm, reception to follow
Galapagos Art Space

New Venues to check out for music and performance – all run by reputable and interesting folks.
Le Poussin Rouge
Santo’s Party House
Light Industry in Brooklyn

If you are in London
Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard
5 September - 12 October 2008
Kate MacGarry Gallery

If you are in Shanghai
Christian Marclay: Screen Play
e-arts Festival
Featuring performances by Elliott Sharp with Wu Na, Wang Li Chuan, Ben Houge with Yan Jun and Bruce Gremo and Top Floor Circus

If you are a kind and wonderful soul who want to help Performa
THE METAL BALL
A Performa Benefit
November 15th
7pm – Midnight
Tickets and Information call us or click here!


If you are not at the Metal Ball in NYC with us then you want to be in New Haven:
Yvonne Rainer: RoS Indexical (2007) & Spiraling Down (2008)
Yale International Dance Festival

November 14th – November 15th

Category Music, PERFORMA PICKS, Performance, Visual Art

Posted by Esa | Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 | 2 comments

Upcoming Lecture by Art-historian Briony Fer

Annual Hilla Rebay Lecture: The Life of Things: Eva Hesse’s Studiowork at the Guggenheim, Sep 9

Briony Fer, Professor of Art History, University College, London

Briony Fer is a remarkable lecturer. Erudite and a classically trained art-historian, she is an inventive thinker and brings wonderful language to her live presentations.

Category Visual Art

Posted by RoseLee Goldberg | Wednesday, August 27th, 2008 | 1 comments

Chris Burden @ Gagosian 21st Street

Dropped by Gagosian’s summer group show (21st Street location) today and found the performance documentation for Chris Burden’s most notorious performances from the early 70’s - a must see for any performance buff.

Also next door Eyebeam has an entertaining group show up worth seeing - the kids will love it…

Category PERFORMA PICKS, Performance, Visual Art

Posted by Esa | Thursday, July 31st, 2008 | 0 comments






Performa is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).