Showing posts with label performance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label performance. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2011

Yemenwed

No Image, Commercial Breaks


No Image "Aero"


No Image "Pharma"


No Image "Frag"


More work by Yemenwed can be seen here

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Veronika Spierenburg - From right to left



Veronika Spierenburg, From right to left, site-specific action, National Library Helsinki,  blu-ray video, 16 min, 2009
See more of Veronika's work here.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Nils Olof Hedenskog & Joakim Brolin

Creeping in Circles constitutes a series of medium format images that could be described as performative pieces.




Monday, February 28, 2011

yeahyeahyeahyeahyeah




Y5 is an independent and anonymous forum to immediately upload cellphone images to. The only censorship is the removal of non-cellphone images as determined by the site's administrator and founder, Tyler Healy.

see the images here

To submit, email content from your cellular device to yeah[at]yeahyeahyeahyeahyeah.com



[all .jpgs, anonymous, 2010-2011]

Thursday, September 30, 2010

belgium is happening














no country has shaped my perception of the visual world more than belgium . the artists and artworld from that region have provided a steady stream of beauty , design and pure moody inventiveness that has sunk in deep. when it comes to making things interesting i think the begians are unmatched. these images are from an album called belgium is happening documenting various performance art related pieces.

[ james Lee Byars, a pink silk airplane for 100 (1969) : hugo roelandt, fotowerken 3 (1974) : carlos ginzburg, latin American prostitute (holding a statement by baudelaire) (1974) :
théâtre laboratoire vicinal, tramp 6 (1972) ]

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Dana Gentile




Work by Dana Gentile. See more here.

[all Dana Gentile, from Mothering Nature, 2008]

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Johanna Heldebro




"Since my parents divorced two years ago, my father has become a stranger to me. I did not even know exactly where he lived. After searching his name on the internet to find out more about his new life, I traveled to Stockholm, Sweden, to secretly follow him."

See more by Johanna Heldebro here.

[all Johanna Heldebro, from To Come Within Reach of You]

Monday, June 21, 2010

lindsay lawson




work by lindsay lawson. see more here.

[all lindsay lawson. top to bottom: marmo di città (video still). 2010. Revenants 2008-10. a.trio (performance documentation). 2010.]

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

xavier cha




xavier cha's 'holiday cruise' project. "three characters circulated online prior to the show. the gallery served as a host site for the characters to meet and collaborate with eccentric fans met online or via social networking." see more here and here.

[all xavier cha. 2006. top to bottom: cornrow hairbraid. horn of plenty. polyhedra.]

Friday, March 13, 2009

video • urban camouflage





behold urban camouflage. see more here. thanks to michael for the link.

[all urban camouflage.]

Thursday, March 12, 2009

tyler coburn in real life this friday


the exhibition IN REAL LIFE continues this weekend and this event on friday night is really not to be missed!

artist tyler coburn will perform a "docent tour of art on the internet" commissioned especially for the exhibition IN REAL LIFE. a reception will follow.

friday 13 march, 8–10pm
at capricious space
103 broadway (between bedford and berry)
brooklyn, ny 11211
www.letsmeetinreallife.com

hope to see you there!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

løber nøgen




løber nøgen (which means "running naked" in danish) is an artistic community founded at fatamorgana, the danish school of art photography in copenhagen in august 2006. the core of løber nøgen consists of six photographers hailing from france, norway and denmark. see more of their work here.

[all løber nøgen. top to bottom: the wall. the beach. the harbour.]

Monday, June 9, 2008

emily roysdon




emily roysdon's project 'strategic form'. she writes: "the project strives to create an imagined body of resistance, a portraiture of possibility...fictional, aestheticized, ironic, these appearances celebrate collectivity." see more of emily's work here.

[all emily roysdon. from the series strategic form. 2006.]

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

interview • melanie bonajo


i heart photograph: i'd like to talk to you about "furniture bondage." the image is really striking both because the things attached to the woman almost cover her up and remove her from the image, yet they're held together by her presence. it makes me think a little bit of the work of haim steinbach. could you talk a little bit about ideas of consumerism and ownership in relation to the image?

melanie bonajo: the series is from the project "are all clichés true ?" when i was a child, i was very restless and never wanted to sleep. to have a little rest my parents would tie me to the bed, but i was able to escape running around with a mattress and half the bed tied to me. i would also run away in shopping malls, so they kept me on a leash until i was 6. this used to be a trend back in the seventies they told me. as an adult my life goal is all about preserving my stuff, bringing it from a to b and back again and dropping some of the things in c in between. if i look at the objects maintaining my life as a condensation of material energy, i often wonder how long i could live free and happy from the gain i get out of that pure energy. i wish i was a person like my grandfather who only owns what he needs and he uses it. nothing ever gets lost. everything is always in the place where it should be and has been for the last 50 years. he never wastes anything. i don't actually own so much stuff, but often i dream of burning everything i have.

i.h.p.: bondage is a loaded word and suggests photographers such as mapplethorpe, but the image doesn't present itself as very sexualized. what was the idea behind the use—in the image and the title—of bondage?

m.b.: the furniture bondage series speaks of the impossible need to create a perfect harmony with the world around us by exploring seemingly opposing elements together: a choreography of magnetic fields lingering between attachment/detachment, bonded/liberated, subject/object. the modern female is so rarely depicted without a realm of nostalgia. consciously, she is taught to master her social identity as an imago, that part of her belonging to the public domain. the imago is defined by stuff. the material aspects of life control our free-spirit. objects own the life instead of a life owning the objects. this series tries to triumph over consequences of imperfections, presenting women as unglamorous. the figure embodies worrying about the nature of its existence, like a modern shaman who lost her power by thinking through things and is now trying to reclaim her hidden female powers. the banality of daily culture becomes mysterious, while mystery fades to banality. capturing the brief life of this moment, the sculpture, performance, and photograph are equally presented. photography is not intended to gain the upper hand, but as a way of sculpting mental life. orchestrations of real life and real time events seem like an antidote, a remedy to save what otherwise gets lost in the speed of modern life: attention to the slow pace of the ordinary and extraordinary transformations of the commonplace.

i.h.p.: i'm wondering if you could talk about how the figure is posed—nearly nude, and turned away from the camera?

m.b.: the nudeness addresses the vulnerability of the human when taken away the imago, that part of the identity that belongs to the public domain. the head is turned away because the figure is not about the individual portrayed on the picture, it is an archetype, it should
be viewed as such. this aspect is emphasized by its anonymity.

i.h.p.: the fact that the woman almost seems equivalent to the things tied to her is also very loaded with feminist meaning, as you’ve discussed.

m.b.: it is absolutely not the women who is equivalent to the things, is the equivalence of the thing and the concept of the body (and although women’s bodies are more objectified than mens i cant really tell how far this correlation with the material aspect of life and the identification with the body is for man, because i am a woman).

i don’t see this work as a feminist piece of art at all. it is way more personal and at the same time related more to the abstract level of the soul-consciousness of man which illuminates matter, instead of from a gender point of view, looking at it from this perspective would always be interpreted as opposing to men and that is not what it is about. i believe in equal rights, social, political, and economical, but i don’t believe in equal roles, i think men and women have both very specific qualities that are not gender crossable and therefore man and women function better in gender related places within society although i do think exceptions make the rules and that every individual should have the freedom to choose what ever they function in best.

i.h.p.: one more question: as you mentioned, the photo functions as the document of a performance, but the woman portrayed seems passive rather than active.

m.b.: i don’t understand the connection you make between passive and performance, does it mean to you that a performance should be active? i see the women more as a one minute performance, the reason why i don't consider it a photographic work in the traditional sense is that composition and light don’t really matter.

[photo: furniture bondage by melanie bonajo. from the series are all clichés true? 2007. see more of melanie's work here.]
interview is a weekly column by nicholas grider that appears each tuesday on i heart photograph.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

edwin sanchez



columbian artist edwin sanchez says he doesn't consider his work as art. "instead i believe they are just projects and immediate actions that generate strong meanings." sometimes his projects are recorded with camera. i especially love one on the top called desired objects, photographs of thieves shoplifting from a store in medellín. have a look at more of edwin's projects here.

[all edwin sanchez. top: desired objects (photographic record of thieves captured at a store in medellín, colombia). 2007. bottom: subtraction exercise (1m2 of bricks from an important avenue in bogotá has been subtracted by the artist. 2004.]

Saturday, June 9, 2007

janne lehtinen




finnish photograph janne lehtinen records his many attempts to fly with various contraptions like home-made wings and aeroplanes in his series sacred bird. see more of janne's work here.

[all janne lehtinen. from the series sacred bird. top to bottom: hopper. 2003. title/date unknown. mountain. 2006. ]

Sunday, March 4, 2007

li wei


i enjoy this work by chinese photographer li wei because of the bodies where they shouldn't be in these performance-based pictures. check out more of his pictures here. and take a peek at the bizarre certificate of authenticity that comes with his work. there's also a nice little article about him in theme magazine.




[all li wei. top to bottom: li wei falls to the tokyo palace paris. in place ahead 1. li wei falls to the france. a pause for humanity.]