Yearly Archives: 2011

PERFORMA 11: NEW VISUAL ART PERFORMANCE BIENNIAL

Elmgreen & Dragset’s HAPPY DAYS IN THE ART WORLD kicks off the fourth edition of the Performa biennial, which runs November 1-21 all over the city

Multiple venues in all five boroughs
November 1-21, free – $75
www.11.performa-arts.org

More than a hundred venues will be hosting cutting-edge experimental productions at Performa 11, the fourth edition of the biennial multidisciplinary arts festival being held all over the city November 1-21. Featuring art, music, dance, theater, film, architecture, and more in exciting combinations, the three-week festival consists of long-term exhibitions, special one-night stands, and other limited engagements that push the envelope of contemporary performance. Elmgreen & Dragset revisit Beckett in Happy Days in the Art World at the Skirball Center, with Joseph Fiennes and Charles Edwards. L’Encyclopédie de la parole’s Chorale turns political speeches, text messages, and movie quotes into choral works at the Performa Hub on Mott St. Rashaad Newsome holds a medieval rap joust Tournament in conjunction with his new exhibit at Marlborough Chelsea. Anthology Film Archives screens rare footage of one of Lenny Bruce’s last performances, as well as routines by Richard Pryor, Albert Brooks, and Andy Kaufman. Innovative installation artists Mika Rottenberg and Jon Kessler team up to create the chakra sauna Seven at Nicole Klagsbrun Project Space. Matthew Stone journeys into shamanism at the Hole. Mai-Thu Perret’s Love Letters in Ancient Brick at the Joyce SoHo reimagines Krazy Kat as a love-triangle dance. Dripping paint drives Jonathan VanDyke’s storefront drama With One Hand Between Us at Scaramouche. Israeli collective Public Movement choreographs public demonstrations in various parks for Positions. Daido Moriyama restages his thirty-year-old Printing Show—TKY at the Aperture Foundation. Deaf artist Christine Sun Kim will go from audio to visual with Lukas Geronimas in Feedback at Recess. Liz Glynn’s Utopia or Oblivion: Parts I and II will take place in several outdoor venues, using Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic dome as inspiration. Raphael Zarka mixes skateboarding and sculpture in Free Ride at the Performa Hub. Gerard Byrne turns the Abrons Arts Center into an interactive theater for In Repertory. Varispeed’s Perfect Lives Manhattan is an all-day performance of Robert Ashley’s opera. Performa Ha! gathers comedians and musicians at the HA! comedy club. And that’s only the first week of this outstanding collection of diverse talent and unique performances, with many of the events free.

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE examines the fascinating life and career of marathon aficionado Fred Lebow

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE (Judd Ehrlich, 2008)
Brooklyn Museum
Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Auditorium
200 Eastern Parkway
Thursday, November 3, free with suggested museum admission of $10, 7:00
718-638-5000
www.fredlebowmovie.com

Run for Your Life tells the remarkable story of Fischl Leibowitz, better known to the world as Fred Lebow. At the age of fourteen, Lebow left his home in Romania and eventually immigrated to the United States. In the late 1960s, he became obsessed with running, at the time a strange form of exercise practiced by very few New Yorkers. But soon Lebow was organizing events such as the Cherry Tree Marathon through the Bronx in 1969 and the Central Park Marathon, leading to the first-ever five-borough New York City Marathon in 1976, a race that many believe helped lead the city through its financial, crime-filled crisis. Through archival footage, news reports, photos, and new interviews with Lebow’s friends, family, and colleagues, a fascinating picture emerges of a driven visionary who was a masterful manipulator and negotiator, a man ahead of his time with regard to marketing and sponsorship. Among the people who share their memories of Lebow are marathoners Bill Rodgers, Frank Shorter, and Greta Waitz, former mayor Ed Koch, parks commissioners Henry Stern and Gordon Davis, past presidents and board members of the New York Road Runners Club, and his sister, who makes latkes for filmmaker Judd Ehrlich. Lebow was one of the all-time great New York characters, forever wearing a painter’s cap and sweatsuit, doing whatever was necessary to get himself and his sport to the next level. The ending is both exhilarating and heartbreaking. With the New York City Marathon scheduled for November 6, Run for Your Life, which was a highlight of the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, will have a special screening at the Brooklyn Museum on November 3, followed by a Q&A with Ehrlich and other special guests.

DOC NYC — INTO THE ABYSS: A TALE OF DEATH, A TALE OF LIFE

Werner Herzog speaks with Death Row inmate Michael Perry in INTO THE ABYSS

NYU Skirball Center for the Performing Arts
566 La Guardia Pl. at Washington Sq. South
Wednesday, November 2, $35 (film only) -$60 (film & after-party), 7:30
Festival runs November 2-10 at NYU and the IFC Center
212-924-7771
www.docnyc.net
www.wernerherzog.com

Upon meeting convicted murderer Michael James Perry on Death Row eight days before the twenty-eight-year-old was going to be executed by the state of Texas, master filmmaker Werner Herzog tells him, “I have the feeling that destiny, in a way, has dealt you a very bad deck of cards. It does not exonerate you, and when I talk to you, it doesn’t necessarily mean that I have to like you, but I respect you, and you are a human being, and I think human beings should not be executed.” After explaining his personal view on capital punishment, Herzog then lets the rest of the compelling documentary Into the Abyss: A Tale of Death, a Tale of Life play out like a police procedural as he investigates how and why two teenage boys murdered three people in October 2001. Herzog opens the film by speaking with Death House chaplain Rev. Richard Lopez in a potter’s field graveyard, then follows that with four sections that detail the crime, the community in which it occurred, and the family members on both sides of the law affected by the grisly, senseless murders. Herzog divides the film into four primary chapters — “The Crime,” “The Dark Side of Conroe,” “Time and Emptiness,” and “A Glimmer of Hope” — as he talks with the often smiling Perry and his cohort, Jason Aaron Burkett; Lt. Damon Hall, who shares the specific aspects of the murders of Sandra Stotler, her seventeen-year-old son, Adam, and Adam’s friend Jeremy Richardson, supplemented by original crime-scene video; Charles Richardson, Jeremy’s older brother; Lisa Stotler-Balloun, Adam’s sister, who has seen more than her fair share of loss; Melyssa Thompson-Burkett, who fell in love with Burkett after he was incarcerated; Delbert Burkett, Jason’s stepfather, who is also behind bars; and Captain Fred Allen, who oversaw executions in the Huntsville prison. Herzog asks penetrating but not leading questions that get the subjects to talk openly and honestly about the crime and its aftermath and their lives in general, many of which seem trapped in a vicious cycle of violence, jail, poor education, and other endless hardships. Into the Abyss is a powerful film that, because of Herzog’s extremely sensitive handling of an extremely controversial topic, is not nearly as polemical or political as it could have been. Into the Abyss is the opening-night gala selection of “Doc NYC,” a nine-day festival of documentary films running November 2-10 at the IFC Center and NYU, screening dozens of feature-length and short nonfiction films from around the world, divided into such categories as Viewfinders, Icons, American Perspectives, Metropolis, and Midnight Rock Docs, with a special tribute to Richard Leacock and a series of panel discussions about the state of the industry.

SUE DE BEER: HAUNT ROOM

Sue de Beer’s “Haunt Room” offers psychological thrills and chills on the High Line (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Sue de Beer’s “Haunt Room” offers psychological thrills and chills on the High Line (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The High Line, 14th Street Passage
Daily through Sunday, December 4, free, 12 noon – 6:00 pm
www.thehighline.org
www.suedebeer.com
haunt room slideshow

In such recent site-specific works as “Black Sun” and “The Ghosts” and such gallery shows as “Depiction of a Star Obscured by Another Figure,” Sue de Beer creates multimedia sculptural installations that delve deep into the human psyche using dreamlike imagery. Last week de Beer unveiled her latest work, which seeks to give visitors nightmares instead. Two years in the making from its original concept, “Haunt Room” is an infrasound-based fourteen-sided chamber that warns all ye who enter that it might cause “changes in blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing rate. Infrasound exposure may also temporarily induce feelings of drowsiness, extreme sorrow, pressure in the ears, loss of concentration, and disorientation.” Appropriately enough, the New York-based de Beer was raised in Salem, Massachusetts, and there are likely to be plenty of witches showing up on Halloween to partake of the chills “Haunt Room” offers. The structure stands behind the wall on the High Line’s Fourteenth St. Passage, with a round center room with smoke-colored Plexiglas walls bathed in soft, glowing light and emitting creepy creaks and rumbling noises in addition to inaudible low-frequency sounds meant to induce physical and emotional feelings associated with haunted spaces. If you go in with a group of friends who are chatting away about their trip to Uniqlo or how plastered they got the night before, “Haunt Room” is likely to be a disappointment; however, if you get the chance to experience it with a few like-minded souls who remain quiet, close their eyes, and allow the installation to take over — we recommend imagining yourself trapped in a low-budget horror flick, with no way out — “Haunt Room” will set you off balance, making you feel dizzy and out of sorts.

IHOP

Breakfast can be had twenty-four hours a day at new IHOP on Fourteenth St. (photo by twi-ny/ees)

International House of Pancakes
235-237 East 14th St. between Second & Third Aves.
212-388-1499
www.ihop.com

We’ve been actively avoiding chain restaurants for the past five years, keeping our distance from McDonald’s, Starbucks, Burger King, Taco Bell, Wendy’s, Pizza Hut, Subway, Domino’s, and other eateries and coffee shops that are part of national and multinational conglomerates. But alas, our streak came to a quick end when we set our eyes on the new IHOP on East Fourteenth St. There might be some 1,500 International House of Pancakes restaurants around the country (and in Canada, Mexico, and Guatemala), but until recently the only one in Manhattan was in West Harlem. Well, about a month ago a twenty-four-hour IHOP suddenly appeared on Fourteenth between Second & Third and another on Flushing Ave. in Bushwick (7:00 am – 12 midnight), with more to follow in Queens and Brooklyn, so we’re doomed. When we were kids, every once in a while on a Sunday morning our father would announce that we were going to IHOP, and we would get all excited, jumping into the car, rushing over to the blue-and-orange temple, and waiting for the man with the big head and the weirdly deep voice to call our name, all the while dreaming of the Young People’s Plate, pancakes with a face on it made out of cherries, butter, and a pineapple slice, soon to be slathered in boysenberry syrup.

New IHOP is packing them in on East Fourteenth St. (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

We felt like kids again when we went to the new IHOP on Fourteenth last month, this time getting escorted right to a small table because the long line was filled with large parties and families ready to partake of the many breakfast delights that are available twenty-four hours. We went for the Pick-a-Pancake Combo, with chocolate-chip pancakes, two eggs, bacon, and hash browns along with the Swedish crepes with lingonberries and the classic bottomless cup of coffee, still served in those same brown-and-black pots left on your table. And yes, every bite filled us with immense joy and took us back to our giddy childhood. By the time we cleaned our plates we were already thinking about what we would order on our next visit: Stuffed French toast with sausage links? Country fried steak & eggs? Biscuits & gravy? The corned beef hash and cheese omelette? Or maybe the new Bacon ’N Beef Bacon & Egg Cheeseburger, with hickory smoked bacon blended right into the beef? It’ll probably be the Split Decision Breakfast, with a little bit of just about everything. But then the next time? And the time after that?

TALK TO ME: DESIGN AND THE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN PEOPLE AND OBJECTS

Yann Le Coroller, “Talking Carl,” 3DSmax, Vray, and Xcode software, 2010 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Wednesday – Monday through November 7, $25
212-708-9400
www.moma.org

On October 14, Apple released the iPhone 4S, the latest iteration of the handheld device that reached a whole new synthesis of design, technology, and communication with Siri, which responds to voice commands with a voice of its own. Although not part of MoMA’s interactive “Talk to Me: Design and the Communication between People and Objects,” the iPhone is a prime example of how the relationship between man and machine has changed over the decades. “The bond between people and things has always been filled with powerful and unspoken sentiments going well beyond functional expectations and including attachment, love possessiveness, jealousy, pride, curiosity, anger, even friendship and partnership,” writes senior curator Paola Antonelli in the exhibition catalog, which also contains essays by Jamer Hunt, Alexandra Midal, Khol Vinh, and Kevin Slavin. Indeed, there is surprising warmth to the exhibit, which invites visitors to explore not only the many items’ visual splendor but their interactivity as well. People are greeted at the entrance by Yann Le Coroller’s “Talking Carl,” a cute and silly Etch-a-Sketch-like animated being that responds to sound and touch, a fun opening to a wide-ranging wonderland of high- and low-tech displays that examine both form and function.

“MetroCard Vending Machine,” vending machine: steel and other materials; interface: Director, Photoshop, Illustrator, and Visual Basic software, 1999 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Divided into six sections — “Objects,” “I’m Talking to You,” “Life,” “City,” “Worlds,” and “Double Entendre” — “Talk to Me” features sociological projects that help the blind, the homeless, and the maimed, geographic grids that impact business and transportation, and three-dimensional charts and graphs that detail private and public information. There are also plenty of innovative works that are just plain fun. In “The Wilderness Downtown,” people plug in the name of their street or hometown, which soon becomes a visual part of Arcade Fire’s music video for the song “We Used to Wait.” Straphangers can buy a real MetroCard from a vending machine that has been slightly reconfigured for the show. Dishes and silverware morph with a heated argument excerpted from the Oscar-winning film American Beauty in Geoffey Mann’s “Cross-fire.” Chris Woebken and Natalie Jeremijenko use voice-recognition software for “Bat Billboard,” which broadcasts messages from bats who live behind it. A close look at Maarten Bass’s “Analog Digital Clock” reveals that it is not quite what it seems, combining people and time in a unique way. Marcos Weskamp’s “Newsmap” arranges news stories by how much coverage they receive in the media. Sissel Tolaas’s “Berlin, City Smell Research” uses the olfactory sense to create a different kind of map of Germany’s capital. Andy and Carolyn London give life to manhole covers, pay phones, and other objects to relay interviews with tourists in “The Lost Tribes of New York City.” And “N Building facade” turns the outside of a Tokyo building into an immense QR code that offers all types of information about the structure. In fact, every item in “Talk to Me” has its own QR code, so adventurous museumgoers can delve deeper into the works and interact with them further. “Talk to Me” is an engaging exhibition that takes an entertaining look at the shape of things to come. The show is now in its final week, with several special events still scheduled: Rob Walker will moderate the discussion “The Language of Objects,” with Kenneth Goldsmith, Ben Greenman Leanne Sharpton, and Cintra Wilson, on November 2 at 6:00 ($10), and gallery conversations will take place with Jennifer Gray on November 3 at 6:00, Marianne Egler on November 5 at 11:30 am, and Diana Bush on November 6 at 1:30, all free with museum admission.

ALEJANDRO JODOROWSKY’S EL TOPO

Alejandro Jodorowsky takes viewers on quite an acid trip in surreal Western EL TOPO

EL TOPO (Alejandro Jodorowsky, 1970)
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
Tuesday, November 1, $13, 6:00
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

Chilean-born Mexican filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky’s El Topo is a psychedelic head trip, an acid Western that will blow your mind. Jodorowsky stars as the title character, a gunslinger traveling through a deserted landscape accompanied by his naked young son, who already knows his way around a firearm. After coming upon a town that has been decimated by a nasty group of marauders working for the Colonel, El Topo seeks violent revenge, eventually taking off with a woman and leaving his boy behind as he meets four masters on his path to proving he is the best there is. But soon El Topo is praying for redemption with a community of inbred cripples trapped in a cave. El Topo is a wild and bizarre journey through religious imagery, romance, and vengeance, a surreal spaghetti Western strained through the mad mind of Jodorowsky, widely hailed as the creator of the midnight movie. The film melds Bergman with Leone, Tod Browning’s Freaks with Hiroshi Inagaki’s Samurai Trilogy, filtered through Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima’s Lone Wolf and Cub. It’s like nothing you’ve ever seen before and, despite your better instincts, will lure you into the cult of Jodorowsky. El Topo is screening on All Saints’ Day at Lincoln Center, introduced by Jodorowsky and followed by a conversation with outgoing Film Society program director Richard Peña; the night before, Jodorowsky will be at MoMA to introduce a screening of The Holy Mountain, followed by a discussion with Klaus Biesenbach and Joshua Siegel.