Tag Archives: marina abramovic

!WOMEN ART REVOLUTION (!W.A.R.)

!WOMEN ART REVOLUTION will make its theatrical debut this week at the IFC Center with appearances by several of the women featured in the film

!WOMEN ART REVOLUTION (!W.A.R.) (Lynn Hershman-Leeson, 2010)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at Third St.
June 1-7
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.womenartrevolution.com

Since the mid-1960s, visual artist and educator Lynn Hershman Leeson has been tracing the history of the American feminist art movement, interviewing many of the most innovative and influential women artists of the last fifty years. After playing at the Sundance, Toronto, and Berlin Film Festivals, her documentary, !Women Art Revolution (!W.A.R.), opens June 1 at the IFC Center, with a series of special guests on hand at many of the screenings to talk about the revolution. Serving as director, writer, editor, producer, and narrator, Leeson shows works by and speaks with such seminal artists and art-world figures as Nancy Spero, Judy Chicago, Miranda July, Yvonne Rainer, Yoko Ono, Marcia Tucker, Martha Rosler, Miriam Schapiro, Carolee Schneemann, Marina Abramovic, Faith Ringgold, and the Guerrilla Girls, using new and archival footage that examines the growth of the movement. The film, which features an original soundtrack by Sleater-Kinney’s Carrie Brownstein, will run for one week at IFC, with the following special appearances, all with artist Alexandra Chowaniec: Leeson (6/1, 6:10), Leeson and Kathleen Hanna (6/1, 8:10), Howardena Pindell (6/2, 2:10), Carolee Schneemann (6/2, 6:10), J. Bob Alotta (6/2, 8:10), Janine Antoni (6/3, 12:15), Joyce Kozloff (6/3, 6:10), Martha Wilson (6/3, 8:10), Pindell (6/4, 2:10). B. Ruby Rich (6/4, 6:10 PM), Guerrilla Girls Frida Kahlo and Kathe Kollwitz (6/4, 8:10), Pindell (6/5, 2:10), Connie Butler (6/6, 4:10), Carey Lovelace (6/6, 6:10), and Lovelace and Faith Ringgold (6/7, 6:10). In addition, the full video and written transcripts of the interviews can be found online at the Stanford University Special Collections archive.

2011 FILM PRESERVATION HONORS AND 40th ANNIVERSARY BENEFIT CONCERT

Albert Maysles is one of the honorees at special Anthology Film Archives program at City Winery

City Winery
155 Varick St. at Vandam St.
Wednesday, April 27, $40-$200, 7:30
212-608-0555
www.citywinery.com
www.anthologyfilmarchives.org

Anthology Film Archives was founded in 1969 for the express purpose of preserving, studying, and exhibiting independent, experimental, and avant-garde film and video. In 1992, they began honoring artists, individuals, and organizations who have made a difference in appreciating and understanding film heritage in their annual Film Preservation Honors program. As part of its continuing celebration of its fortieth anniversary, Anthology will be hosting a special event on April 27 at City Winery, paying tribute to documentarian Albert Maysles, Harvard Film Archive founding director Vlada Petric, film scholar Tony Pipolo, Technicolor (for the restoration of Max Ophüls’s Lola Montes), and the Library of Congress (for its creation of the National Film Registry). Hosted by one of Anthology’s founders, Jonas Mekas, and with musician Richard Barone serving as master of ceremonies, the evening will feature live performances and appearances by Harmony Korine, Marina Abramović, Ólöf Arnalds, and Transgendered Jesus, in addition to such speakers as Andrew Sarris, Lola Schnabel, Ed Bland, and Stuart Liebman. There will also be an auction of custom-made Anthology Film Archives wines. Tickets are only $40, although if you splurge for the $200 benefit admission you’ll get VIP seating, light food and wine, and other amenities.

THE BROOKLYN RAIL THREE DAY SILENT ART AUCTION

Richard Serra’s “P&E XVII” 2007 litho crayon on Mylar will be one of many works available at Brooklyn Rail auction

Visual Arts Gallery at the School of Visual Arts
601 West 26th St., fifteenth floor
February 17-19, $25 admission, 12 noon – 6:00 pm
Auction February 19, 6:00 – 9:00 pm
718-349-8427
www.brooklynrail.org/auction

Phong Bui, publisher of the free arts paper The Brooklyn Rail, refers to the nonprofit print publication as “absurdly impractical,” noting that “what we’re doing as a collective is entirely removed from any pragmatic notion of supply and demand.” With that in mind, Bui is curating a fundraiser in honor of the Rail’s recent tenth anniversary. Taking place over the next three days at SVA’s Visual Arts Gallery in Chelsea, the works will be on view through Thursday through Saturday from 12 noon to 6:00, after which a live silent auction will be held Saturday night. Admission to the gallery is $25; among the participating artists with works for sale — and it’s quite an impressive list — are Marina Abramovic, Lynda Benglis, Joe Bradley, Paul Chan, Maria Elena Gonzales, Philip Guston, Alfredo Jaar, Alex Katz, Robert Mangold, Shirin Neshat, Philip Pearlstein, Will Ryman, Charles Seliger, Richard Serra, Ben Shahn, Joel Shapiro, Kiki Smith, Mark di Suvero, Terry Winters, and Lisa Yuskavage.

THINKING PERFORMANCE

Joan Jonas will restage “Mirror Piece I” at two-day performance-art symposium at the Guggenheim (© 2010 Joan Jonas / photo by David Heald and Kristopher McKay)

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
1071 Fifth Ave. at 89th St.
Thursday, June 17, 8:00, and Friday, June 18, 2:00
Tickets: $30
212-423-3500
www.guggenheim.org

In conjunction with the exhibition “Haunted: Contemporary Photography / Video / Performance,” the Guggenheim is presenting “Thinking Performance,” a two-day examination of performance art. On Thursday night, Joan Jonas will stage an expanded version of her 1969 work “Mirror Piece I: Reconfigured,” followed by a discussion between Jonas and curator Chrissie Ilies. On Friday beginning at 2:00, there will be a series of talks and discussions, including Rebecca Schneider’s “The Immaterial Labor of Temporal Drag: Tino Sehgal, Photography, and Interinanimation,” Carrie Lambert-Beatty’s “Performance Police,” Claire Bishop’s “Delegated Performance — Outsourcing Authenticity,” and a pair of artist conversations, one between Susan Philipsz and Nat Trotman, the other with Marina Abramovic and Nancy Spector. The two-day symposium will conclude with a viewing of the exhibit and a reception.

MARINA ABRAMOVIĆ: THE ARTIST IS PRESENT

Marina Abramović, “Art Must Be Beautiful, Artist Must Be Beautiful,” video (black and white, sound) (courtesy Pamela and Richard Kramlich, San Francisco)

Museum of Modern Art
West 54th St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Through May 31 (closed Tuesdays; Fridays free from 4:00 to 8:00)
Admission: $20 (includes same-day film screening)
212-708-9400
www.moma.org
online slideshow

With Tim Burton having already departed the museum and William Kentridge scheduled to leave May 17, the great triple play of March and April comes down to Yugoslavian-born performance artist Marina Abramović, whose emotionally and physically exhausting and exhilarating career retrospective continues at MoMA through the end of the month. “The Artist Is Present” chronologically follows Abramović’s forty-plus-year career through film, video, photographs, slide shows, audio, assorted ephemera, and, most excitingly, restagings of five of her performances using actors and models. Abramović puts herself in the center of her work, using her body to comment on politics, sexuality, gender, war, civil rights, and art itself. Establishing what she and longtime partner Ulay (Uwe Laysiepen) called “Art Vital,” their time- and space-based actions required “no rehearsal, no predicted end, no repetition, extended vulnerability, taking risks, exposure to chance, and direct contact,” among other perameters they set to elicit “primary reactions” from the audience, who sometimes became part of the piece. For example, in “Rhythm O,” Abramović stood naked in front of people, inviting them to pick up an object on a table and use it against her. Her collaboration with Ulay from 1975 to 1988 included the two running into each other over and over (“Relation in Space”), locking mouths for more than ten minutes (“Breathing In / Breathing Out”), screaming at each other (“AAA-AAA”), and standing with a bow and arrow ready to fly between them (“Rest Energy”). Several of their dual performances are re-created at MoMA, including “Point of Contact,” with two well-dressed people facing each other, their pointer fingers extended almost, but not quite, touching; “Relation in Time,” in which two people with long hair sit back-to-back, their hair tied together in a knot; and “Imponderabilia,” with two naked people stand on either side of a narrow doorway, forcing visitors to slide sideways between them, the space so tight that physical contact must be made.

By the close of the exhibit, Marina Abramović will have performed “The Artist Is Present” for more than seven hundred hours (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The centerpiece of the show is “The Artist Is Present,” which takes place in the spacious Marron Atrium. Every day, beginning from the retrospective’s opening on March 14 and continuing through its close on May 31, Abramović sits silently in a chair, facing a visitor, staring at one another for as long as the person wants, only a bare wooden table between them. For minutes or hours, the two do not move a muscle, never taking their eyes off each other, creating a tense, powerful mood throughout the museum. (The piece can be viewed from several floors.) On May 1, Abramović decided to take away the table, lending yet more tension and power, as if the entire room were on the edge of explosion. In many ways, this new performance, based on Abramović and Ulay’s 1981-87 “Nightsea Crossing,” is a fitting microcosm of the survey as a whole, with Abramović herself inviting — or, perhaps more correctly, challenging — the viewer to participate in her art and, by extension, her life, eliminating the boundary between artist and audience.