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Performances in Woodlands, May–June 2011.
Erased erased de Kooning drawing 2
2009
transparent photoshop layer
download here
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Bootleg video from the Soirée by Domingo Castillo.
It’s straight out of a Don Delillo novel: A few hours after television producers set up a replica of Occupy Wall Street for the filming of a new episode of Law and Order Special Victims Unit, the real Occupy Wall Street announced plans to occupy the fake one. At 11:30 p.m. the call to occupy the set went out on Twitter. It’s located at nearby Foley Square and includes a replica of the OWS kitchen and library as well as numerous tarps and tents. “They’ve delivered us this perfectly wrapped Christmas present with a bow on top: They rebuilt our camp,” OWS organizer Jake De Groot told me shortly before the announcement went out. “How could we not go and take it?”
Amazing. This is a nice sequel to “#Occupy as Live Action Role-playing” (my take or barthel’s when it was republished).
With Performa having recently concluded and in the wake of the Marina Abramovic kerfuffle at the MOCA gala, I have been giving a lot of thought to the difference between visual art performance and contemporary performance – more specifically, Time-Based Art with its origins in dance and theater. This is an ongoing obsession of mine and one that I feel needs to be addressed critically. Thanks largely to RoseLee Goldberg, who literally wrote the book on performance art, the visual arts world has “rediscovered” performance in an unprecedented way. Unlike RoseLee, it seems that many of the visual arts curators currently working to promote visual arts performance lack knowledge in contemporary performance, and I think this presents a problem, as well as a challenge.
Visual Art Performance vs. Contemporary Performance | Culturebot
Although this article is about dance– and theatre-based performance rather than music, this is what my work is about.
I think the writer has a bit of a blind spot that shows here:
From the artistic director I was told, “The visual arts world hates craft, they’re seeking ‘authenticity’,” suggesting that when a visual artist stages a performative event it should not have any degree of artifice, that it be perceived as “real”.
The director I spoke to said that the visual arts world, somewhat understandably, finds theater laughable and as a result rarely studies it. While I share the visual arts world’s distaste for popular theater predicated on “psychological realism”, I lament the fact that there are many, many devoted practitioners of contemporary performance who are as dramaturgically engaged in the construction of their time-based work as visual artists are in creating the intellectual framework around their object-based work, and that this is, apparently, not recognized or valued by the visual arts world. It is as if when visual artists and curators “discover performance” they think that they are the first to ever encounter the aesthetic issues it proposes. It would seem that they are frequently unaware of – or indifferent to – the fact that there is a long history of performance theory; that theater, and especially dance, have for many years explored issues around presence, embodiment, presentational aesthetics, the observed/observer relationship, the visual presentation of the constructed environment, the semiotics of representation, etc., etc.
And yes, thats exactly right—but Horowitz’s focus on craft in relationship to performance is too limited. His model for the two modes of performance is that visual artists are object-based and dramatic performances are experience-based, which is a useful over-simplification, fair enough, but not necessarily accurate, and there’s something strange about the way he talks about narrative forms and psychological drama etc. I think he’s misreading the distrust of craft in visual art—it’s not something confined to performance. In the comments someone suggests that “if I go out and make a painting and claim that it is somehow more authentic and real because, well, I don’t know how to paint—I’ll get laughed out of the room” but that is in fact categorically not true, and you can confirm that by going to any little show with paintings in it here in the UK (not so much back in Edmonton, or maybe elsewhere in Canada, but so much here).
Contemporary visual art has a very complicated relationship to craft, and just as I would say some of the best object work engages with that directly by creating a contradictory experience, the best performance work engages with it by being careful about creating a complicated experience of dramatic quality, and by very directly engaging some of the things Horowitz feels are so unfashionable, like narrative drama.
(I wanted to reblog this article from where I found it but it was a couple of days ago and I don’t remember, and couldn’t track it down. Sorry someone!)
I have just three final events left this week for my residency at Woodlands. If you haven’t gotten a chance to see me performing or participate so far, this is when you can do it.
This Sunday is the “big lunch” picnic starting at 1:00 in Woodlands Community Garden (91-111 W Prince’s Street) and I’ll be providing some entertainment with a little game. It’s structured around exploring the neighbourhood and in particular entering into the lanes and forgotten spaces. These spaces will sort of be gates to the mythic underworld in a classical questing narrative, but I’ve tried to leave lots up to the players. You’ll be collecting treasures from these places, and it can be as competitive or casual as you like it. With water balloons. I’m finishing my preparations and finalising a couple of details today.
Expect the game to be starting between one and two o’clock. If there’s enough interest, we can hang around and play something else afterwards too, like Manhunt or just board game at the picnic.
Over the month I’ve been playing my violin in random spots in the neighbourhood and inviting the public to come find me, or to stumble across me. But for my last appearance I’d love a bit of an audience. On Tuesday evening I’ll be giving a proper little recital from 7–9 pm in the empty lot on the corner of Great Western Road and Montague Street, to be followed by a drink at the Doublet. Please come along for some of the performance!
And I’ll be running one last game of Manhunt before I’m done, this Wednesday at 9:30 pm. We’ll meet at the Garden, as we did with the first one back in early May.
After my residency is done I’ll be taking a few weeks on holiday, but Manhunt will continue elsewhere in the city after I return–if you are looking to play some hide and seek later this summer, sign up for the mailing list at http://manhunt-glasgow.tumblr.com
I will be performing in Woodlands on Tuesday afternoon from 1:00, subject to weather conditions.
Then, I’m off to the South to do some visiting and exploration and ultimately to stage three big waterfights over the weekend in Bristol. We will return to regularly scheduled Manhunt-and-performance next week, and I’ll have more information on my Game for Woodlands which will be happening the afternoon of Sunday 5 June, in tandem with a big picnic lunch at Woodlands Community Garden. It’ll be good, promise.
I’ve got my thinking cap on.
My performance regimen for the month began this weekend. Friday I put in about two hours in a small grassy enclosure housing some kind of utility substation before being defeated by hail and rain. Today I performed for a more respectable three hours in a rubbish-filled alleyway. It was very beautiful, yet unrepeatable. I felt the power of the sublime.
This week I’ll be performing in the afternoon on Tuesday 17 May and Thursday 19 May, starting about 1:00 pm. I’ll be somewhere in a similar space in Woodlands. On Wednesday we meet for Manhunt at 9:30, details on the site.