Tag Archives: mika rottenberg

MIKA ROTTENBERG: EASYPIECES

Mika Rottenberg

A tunnel welcomes visitors to Mika Rottenberg’s Cosmic Generator at the New Museum (photo © Mika Rottenberg / courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth)

New Museum of Contemporary Art
235 Bowery at Prince St.
Through September 15, $12-$18
212-219-1222
www.newmuseum.org

Allegorical depictions of consumerism, the means of production, and the global reach of capitalism are at the center of Mika Rottenberg’s artistic concerns, and they are on full display in her first solo New York museum show, the delightful “Mika Rottenberg: Easypieces,” which continues at the New Museum through September 15. The presentation consists of three major video installations along with playful sculptures and an additional short film that immerse visitors in the Argentina-born, Israel-raised, New York–based Rottenberg’s unique visual and physical world. Her videos have an almost visceral and tactile appeal due to her inventive use of sound and imagery, while the uncanny sculptures that accompany them enhance the overall experience, bringing together humanity, nature, materiality, and technology. The title of the show was inspired by Richard P. Feynman’s Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher; Feynman, a theoretical physicist, writes in the introduction, “Each piece, or part, of the whole of nature is always merely an approximation to the complete truth, or the complete truth so far as we know it. In fact, everything we know is only some kind of approximation, because we know that we do not know all the laws as yet. Therefore, things must be learned only to be unlearned again or, more likely, to be corrected.” Feynman might have been speaking to physics students, but it also reads like Rottenberg explaining her work to her audience.

Mika Rottenberg

A hallway of ceiling fans leads to Mika Rottenberg’s new Spaghetti Blockchain video installation (photo © Mika Rottenberg / courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth)

Visitors get a hint of what’s to come as soon as they get off the elevator, where they are greeted by AC and Plant, an air conditioner sticking out of a temporary wall, a slow drip from which waters a potted plant on the floor. The three main videos burst with bright colors, make absurdist connections, and depict the monotony of everyday work. You enter the new Spaghetti Blockchain through a hallway of ceiling fans seen through slits in the walls; the twenty-one-minute video travels from Siberia, where Tuvan throat singer Choduraa Tumat vocalizes in traditional dress in a vast mountain landscape, to a potato farm in Maine shot from above, to the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Switzerland. A rotating hexagonal kaleidoscopic structure at the antimatter factory turns to reveal a knife slicing a jelly roll, a man getting his bald spot sprayed, sizzling candy melting, and other odd actions that serve as ASMR cues.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Mika Rottenberg’s Finger might just contain the key to the universe (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

You have to walk through a tunnel to get to 2017’s Cosmic Generator (Tunnel Variant), a twenty-seven-minute video that connects Chinese restaurants in Mexicali to a wholesale market in Yiwu, China, through a network of abandoned underground tunnels, creating seemingly arbitrary relationships that comment on border towns, immigration, and cheap Chinese labor and plastic goods. (Be sure to ride the large elevator to get a cool bonus.) You exit the room through a floor-to-ceiling sparkling rainbow curtain, like the ones on display at the Yiwu market, leading you to the three-minute short Sneeze, in which barefoot men in suits sit at a table, sneezing out rabbits, lightbulbs, and steak, referencing Thomas Edison’s 1894 five-second Fred Ott’s Sneeze. That room and the next contain bags of (fake) pearls and bunnies made of the gems, leading into 2015’s NoNoseKnows (Artist Variant), linking a pearl factory in China, where women first infect oysters so they will produce pearls, then harvest them and separate them, with fetishist Bunny Glamazon, who sniffs flowers in a small room and sneezes out plates of noodles. Meanwhile, a pair of upside-down feet stick out of a bucket of cultured pearls.

Mika Rottenberg

Pearls are at the center of Mika Rottenberg’s NoNoseKnows (Artist Variant) (photo © Mika Rottenberg / courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth)

The videos are supplemented by a room of kinetic sculptures that are directly or indirectly related, physical manifestations of what we have seen and/or experienced onscreen, blurring the lines between fact and fiction: AC and Plant is joined by Frying Pans (duo), a pair of pans on stovetops into which drops of water fall from above and sizzle, emanating smoke and sharp sounds; Finger is a digit sticking out of a wall, slowly turning, the cosmos visible on its long nail; Lips (Study #3) is a pair of sultry red lips on a wall, a miniature video playing inside, with smoke occasionally wafting out; and Ponytail (Orange) is made of real hair, flopping out of a hole in a wall. You’re not going to make sense out of every detail, so don’t try; just enjoy the pure fun of it all, even as it takes on aspects of labor with a Marxist bent. Rottenberg’s (Bowls Balls Souls Holes, Seven with Jon Kessler) work can be extremely funny and surreal, but it also is deceptively smart and clever as it deals with the apparatus of making and using, manufacturing and consuming, that so dominates modern society.

FRIEZE ART FAIR HIGHLIGHTS

Alex Da Corte’s giant floating baby and part of Heather Phillipson’s “100% Other Fibres” greet Frieze visitors (all photos by twi-ny/mdr)

Alex Da Corte’s giant floating baby and part of Heather Phillipson’s “100% Other Fibres” greet Frieze visitors (all photos by twi-ny/mdr unless otherwise noted)

FRIEZE ART FAIR
Randall’s Island Park
May 5-8, $29-$49 per day
friezenewyork.com

On a cold, rainy Friday afternoon, Frieze was about as comfortable and manageable as any major international art fair can get. You could take your time looking at the art, easily procure a table at one of the restaurants, and not have to wait on long lines to use the rest rooms. At the fifth annual Frieze New York, held on Randall’s Island, video, contemporary photography, and outdoor sculpture are out while large-scale painting, mid-to-late-twentieth-century photography, and performance are in. Below are our recommended highlights, in no particular order; also be on the lookout for works by Carolee Schneeman, Liz Magic Laser, Rieko Otake, Bernd and Hilla Becher, John Divola, Nancy Holt, Frank Bowling, and reverse pickpocket David Horvitz.

anthea hamilton

A troupe of mimes moves throughout the fair in a green vehicle in Anthea Hamilton’s “Kar-A-Sutra (After Mario Bellini)”

instructions from the sky

Eduardo Navarro’s “Instructions from the Sky” remained indoors because of the weather

maurizio cattelan

Maurizio Cattelan pays tribute to the Daniel Newburg Gallery by restaging his 1994 U.S. debut, “Warning! Enter at Your Own Risk. Do Not Touch, Do Not Feed, No Smoking, No Photographs, No Dogs, Thank you.” complete with chandelier and Gabriel the donkey, who recently appeared at the Met in La Bohème.

mika rottenberg

Look inside Mika Rottenberg’s “Lips” for a surprise video, right next to her sizzling “AC Trio”

roni horn

Hauser & Wirth’s staff have a tough time stopping people from touching Roni Horn’s untitled glass pieces

n dash

You can see more of N. Dash’s beautiful works of adobe, acrylic, gesso, string, canvas, and jute at Casey Kaplan in Chelsea

stories are propaganda

Philippe Parreno and Rirkrit Tiravanija collaborated on eight-minute video installation “Stories Are Propaganda”

spencer lowell

Spencer Lowell’s “New York, New York, New York” provides unique look at Queens Museum Panorama (photo courtesy Queens Museum)

alex katz nine women

Alex Katz’s “Nine Women” is significantly smaller than 1982 Times Square mural

homeless vehicle project

Perhaps Krzysztof Wodiczko’s twenty-five-year-old “Homeless Vehicle Project” could still help New York City’s homeless crisis

michelle grabner

Michelle Grabner’s untitled enamel on panel painting is a bright standout

francois morellet

François Morellet turns Galerie Herve Bize space into a dizzying experience

david schnell

Perennial favorite Galerie Eigen + Art features new works by David Schnell, including “Becken” (above) and “Pakt” (photo courtesy Galerie Eigen + Art)

fred wilson

Fred Wilson’s “Emilia’s Mirror — Act 5, Scene 2” is part of Pace installation

dewar and gicquel

Daniel Dewar and Grégory Gicquel’s “Stoneware Mural with Pipes n°4” is part of Frame Stand Prize-winning installation “Truth and Consequences”

MIKA ROTTENBERG: BOWLS BALLS SOULS HOLES

Mika Rottenberg’s latest multimedia architectural installation links bingo with global climate change (photo courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery)

Mika Rottenberg’s “Bowls Balls Souls Holes” is another unique, fascinating, fun, and complex installation (photo courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery)

Andrea Rosen Gallery
525 West 24th St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Tuesday — Saturday through June 14, free, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
212-627-6000
www.andrearosengallery.com

BedStuy-based multimedia artist Mika Rottenberg explores chance, luck, environmental concerns, and mass production on a global scale in her latest architectural video installation, “Bowls Balls Souls Holes.” Born in Argentina and raised in Israel before moving to Brooklyn, Rottenberg creates immersive pieces that combine video and sculpture focusing on wildly imaginative Rube Goldberg-like experimental contraptions that bring together radically diverse labor-intensive elements, along with a cast of men and mostly women who can do extreme things with their bodies. In “Tropical Breeze,” the characters (including professional body builder Heather D. Foster) made an actual product, Lemon-Scented Tropical Breeze Moist Tissue Papers; in “Mary’s Cherries,” various women (including fetish wrestler Rock Rose) perform household-like tasks that use red fingernails to make maraschino cherries. In “Cheese,” which was part of the 2008 Whitney Biennial, old-fashioned Rapunzel-esque farm girls use their very long hair to help make the title product. In one of Rottenberg’s crazier setups, “Squeeze” involves butt misting, wall tongues, and the stomping of iceberg lettuce. And in 2011, Rottenberg teamed up with Jon Kessler for the Performa 11 commission “Seven,” a unique chakras juicer that linked a New York lab with an African community.

Mika Rottenberg’s latest multimedia architectural installation links bingo with global climate change (photo courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery)

Mika Rottenberg’s latest multimedia architectural installation links bingo with global climate change (photo courtesy Andrea Rosen Gallery)

In the twenty-eight-minute “Bowls Balls Souls Holes,” Rottenberg links a Harlem bingo parlor with polar icebergs and a large sleeping woman who dreams of the moon and wakes up every time a drop of water falls from above and sizzles on her bare shoulder. Occasionally, the bingo caller releases a colored clothespin down a hole, sending it on a journey through multiple trapdoors until it is caught way below by a man (Guinness Book of World Records champion face stretcher Garry “Stretch” Turner, who has Ehlers-Danlos syndrome) who attaches it to his face. The idea of things coming full circle is central to the work, which features many kinds of round objects while also evoking a highly unusual assembly line. As with her other pieces, “Bowls Balls Souls Holes” is filled with some hysterical bits, in addition to some out-and-out confusing ones, which is always part of the fun. (Don’t try too hard to figure everything out.) The video is supplemented with related sculptures, from the bingo board and jars with boiling water to a trio of swirling ponytails and an air conditioner dripping water onto a hot frying pan.

CAMPAIGN: LIVE PERFORMANCE

Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir (aka Shoplifter), “Lonely,” performance view (at C24), synthetic hair and wood, 2012

C24 Gallery
514 West 24th St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Saturday, February 11, free, 4:00 – 6:00
646-416-6300
www.c24gallery.com

On January 12, the C24 Gallery celebrated the opening of its latest exhibit, the group show “Campaign,” with a series of live performances that explored how the female body is depicted in today’s culture. In conjunction with Fashion Week, the Chelsea space will bring back several of the performers on Saturday afternoon for another free show, which serves as a complement to “Campaign,” a display of painting, sculpture, video, and photography that examines image and personal identity and power in current popular thinking. Curator Amy Smith-Stewart has brought together a compelling array of international artists, including Jen Denike, Kate Gilmore, Jill Magid, Aleksandra Mir, Shana Moulton, Laurel Nakadate, Clifford Owens, Mika Rottenberg, and Hank Willis Thomas, each offering unique perspectives on female beauty and empowerment. The Saturday program will feature the Push Pops presenting a remix of their “Bulimic Flow” Yoga Hip Hop Fusion, which seeks to heal the third chakra; Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir (aka Shoplifter), who will continue her exploration of the symbolic nature of hair; and additional performances by Lisa Kirk and Katie Cercone (Diamond of the Push Pops), all of whom have works in the show.

MIKA ROTTENBERG AND JON KESSLER: SEVEN

Mika Rottenberg and Jon Kessler have collaborated on unique “Seven” installation in Chelsea (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Nicole Klagsbrun Project
534 West 24th St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Wednesday – Saturday through November 19, free, 2:00 – 8:00
www.nicoleklagsbrun.com
www.11.performa-arts.org
seven slideshow

In an inspired pairing, Performa 11 has brought together visual artists Mika Rottenberg and Jon Kessler for the delightful “Seven.” In such video-based works as “Mary’s Cherries,” “Cheese,” and “Squeeze,” Rottenberg, who was born in Argentina, raised in Israel, and is based in New York City, plays with time and space in short, complex films that are screened in specially designed architectural, sculptural surroundings, commenting on such themes as fetish, mass production, capitalism, rituals, and postcolonialism. For nearly thirty years, Yonkers-born artist and Columbia professor Jon Kessler has ingeniously utilized motors, lights, mirrors, and cameras in such kinetic sculptures as “Desert of the Real,” “Kessler’s Circus,” “Random Acts of Senseless Violence,” and “The Palace at 4 A.M.” “Seven” takes place in a laboratory where a technician is collecting the sweat off a rotating group of seven men and women who perspire in a glassed-in booth powered by a person on an exercise bicycle. Meanwhile, several monitors depict a small African desert community that is interacting with the technician; for example, when a man in Africa places a tube into a machine there, it pops out in the New York lab (and vice versa). Each person is identified by a different color of the rainbow, proceeding in order: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, which also represent the seven primary chakras. Don’t just grab a seat and stay put for the “show” (which reminds us of the experiments conducted in the Hatch on the television series Lost, just without the inherent danger); instead, be sure to walk around and check out every aspect of this unique chakra juicer. If you’re lucky, the technician might even let you turn the dentist drill on and off, like we did. Performed by Empress Asia, Marshall Factora, Esteban Jefferson, Jason Liles, Chris McGinn, Cecil Parker, Sunita Sharma, Juan Valanzuela, and Alex Wynne, “Seven” runs every thirty-seven minutes between 2:00 and 7:18 through Saturday at Nicole Klagbrun Project in Chelsea; admission is free and first come, first served, and it is advised that you stay for the full duration, which includes a rather silly but fun grand finale.

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.

THE INFLUENTIALS

Kate Gilmore, “Between a Hard Place,” video still, 2008 (courtesy of the artist)

SVA WOMEN ALUMNI INVITE ARTISTS WHO HAVE SHAPED THEIR WORK
SVA Theatre
333 West 23rd St. between Eighth & Ninth Aves.
Tuesday, September 13, free, 7:00
Exhibition continues at the Visual Arts Gallery (601 West 26th St.) through September 21
212-592-2145
www.schoolofvisualarts.edu

For the School of Visual Arts exhibit “The Influentials,” cocurators Amy Smith-Stewart and Carrie Lincourt invited nineteen female SVA alums to participate — while also asking each to invite a guest contributor of their own, a person who has made an impact in their lives and/or careers. Among the exciting duos (with the SVA alum listed first and their guest second) supplying multimedia works are Kate Gilmore and Marilyn Minter, Lisa Kirk and David Hammons, Suzanne McClelland and Judy Pfaff, Mika Rottenberg and Minter, Yuko Shimizu and Thomas Woodruff, Marianne Vitale and Bela Tarr, and Phoebe Washburn and her grandmother, Phebe. The show runs through September 21 at the Visual Arts Gallery in Chelsea, but there will be a special panel discussion on September 13 at 7:00 at the nearby SVA Theatre, where Art in America editor in chief Lindsay Pollock will lead a public talk about art and mentoring with a stellar lineup that includes McClelland, Minter, Pfaff, and Rottenberg.