David Gryn blog

Archive for the ‘Martha Rosler’ Category

Artprojx screening at Ikon Gallery – The Voice and the Lens

In Art Basel Miami Beach, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Dara Friedman, David Blandy, IKON, Ikon Gallery, Kota Ezawa, Martha Rosler, Mel Brimfield, Rashaad Newsome, Sam Belinfante, Screenings, Terry Smith, Video Art on 09/11/2012 at 1:13 pm

Artprojx presents a selection of artists’ films and videos 

at 

The Voice and The Lens at Ikon Gallery

Featuring: 

David Blandy

Mel Brimfield

Kota Ezawa

Dara Friedman

Rashaad Newsome

Martha Rosler

Terry Smith

at

The Voice and the Lens: Part I 

at the Ikon Gallery, Birmingham

Friday 9 November, 7-9.30pm (doors 6.45pm)

Tickets £6 / £4 students & unemployed

Weekend pass £10.50 / £6.50 students & unemployed

To book visit www.bookwhen.com/ikongallery

See the full programme: http://www.ikon-gallery.co.uk/programme/current/event/711/autumn_almanac_the_voice_and_t/

Forthcoming projects – coming very soon: 

David Gryn / Artprojx curates for MOCAtv. The Poetics of Anxiety and Melancholia. Artists: Meredith Danluck, Jesper Just, Kerry Tribe, Matthew Stone, Nick Abrahams, Stuart Croft, Sam Samore and Thomas Nordanstad, Shoja Azari, Jumana Manna, Hans op de Beeck, Nicholas Provost, Susanna Wallinhttp://www.youtube.com/user/MOCATV

David Gryn / Artprojx curates Art Video for Art Basel Miami Beach 2012, Dec. Artists inc: Tim Davis, Adam Shecter, Ryan McGinley, Ragnar Kjartansson, Nick Abrahams, Ari Marcopoulous, Julieta Aranda, Melanie Smith, Sam Samore, Dineo Seshee Bopape, Julika Rudelius, Theaster Gates, Yoshua Okon, Jordan Wolfson, Mauricio Lupini, David Adamo, Jesper Just, Jack Early, Takeshi Murata, Terence Gower, Sefer Memişoğlu, Michael Sailstorfer, Gigi Scaria, Guy Ben-Ner, Cao Fei, Mircea Cantor, Andrea Bowers, Rashaad Newsome, Daniel Arsham, Drew Heitzler & Sam Sharit, Josiah McElheny, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Pedro Reyes, Rubén Ortiz Torres & Emmanuel Lubezki, Michael Portnoy, David Zink Yi, Chen Xiaoyun, Hu Xiangqian, Pierre Bismuth, Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Nate Boyce, Evandro Machado, William Kentridge, Adam Shecter, Ana Prvacki, Amar Kanwar, Robin Rhode, Marie Bovo, Hans Schabus, Simon Dybbroe Møller, Jumana Manna. 

Programme details: http://miamibeach.artbasel.com/global/show_document.asp?id=aaaaaaaaaaaznjk

http://miamibeach.artbasel.com/go/id/eoe/

http://www.artprojx.com/Art_Video_2012_ArtBaselMiamiBeach.html

David Gryn, Director & Founder of Artprojx screens, curates and promotes artists’ moving image projects, working with leading international contemporary art galleries, online platforms, art fairs, institutes and artists.

Artprojx projects have included: Art Basel Miami Beach, MOCAtv, Gagosian, White Cube, Sadie Coles HQ, Lisson Gallery, The Modern Institute, Whitney Museum, Tate Britain, ICA, Frieze Art Fair and artists have included: Christian Marclay, Dara Friedman, Santiago Sierra, Mark Wallinger, Christian Jankowski, Tracey Emin, Susan Hiller, Dexter Dalwood, Jeremy Deller, Wilhelm Sasnal, William Eggleston, Natalie Djurberg, William Kentridge, Luke Fowler. www.artprojx.com

Untied Tastes of America at the Hamburg International Short Film Festival 2012

In 3001 Kino, Art, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Jesper Just, Kota Ezawa, Martha Rosler, Meredith Danluck, Mungo Thomson, Rashaad Newsome, Ryan McGinley, Ryan McNamara, Slater Bradley, Takeshi Murata, Untied Tastes of America, Video, Yael Bartana, zeise on 21/05/2012 at 10:05 am


Artprojx Cinema presents

Untied Tastes of America
artist’s films and video

selected by David Gryn

Yael Bartana, Slater Bradley, Meredith Danluck, Kota Ezawa, Dara Friedman, Jesper Just, Ryan McGinley, Ryan McNamara, Takeshi Murata, Rashaad Newsome, Martha Rosler, Mungo Thomson.

28th Hamburg International Short Film Festival, May 29th – June 4th 2012 www.shortfilm.com

Programme

Screenings: Thursday 31 May at 7.45pm and 9.30pm
Zeise Kinos. Friedensallee 7. 22765 Hamburg www.zeise.de

Programme Rerun: Sunday 3rd June 5:30 pm at “3001 Kino” www.3001-kino.de

What is America? What is the state of American culture/society today? These questions, so often asked the world over that it has almost become a banal enquiry into the general state of humanity, have never been so important as they are today. Globalisation is perceived and experienced by many to be synonymous with American culture and ideology. At the same time, this sense of the omnipotence of American culture is under severe strain in the wake of the global financial meltdown. To observe American culture today is perhaps to witness the (in)glorious ending of a particular way of life; a culture in decline; a society undergoing traumatic restructuring.

These are works by both American and foreign artists that explore the blurred borderlands of American culture and society. What is explored in these works is not America as a fixed, geographical location but America as an ‘idea/ideal’; a continuously evolving and shifting congeries of emotions, places, powers, infrastructures, populations and visions. Curatorial Text by Paul Goodwin.

Yael Bartana – Tuning
Slater Bradley – Don’t Let Me Disappear
Meredith Danluck – Psychic Space (from North of South, West of East)
Kota Ezawa – Brawl
Jesper Just – Sirens of Chrome
Ryan McGinley – Entrance Romance (it felt like a kiss)
Ryan McGinley – Friends Forever
Ryan McNamara – The Latest in Blood and Guts
Takeshi Murata – Infinite Doors
Rashaad Newsome – The Conductor
Martha Rosler – God Bless America
Mungo Thomson – Untitled (TIME)

Double-bill
Dara Friedman – Musical & Dancer

http://festival.shortfilm.com/index.php?id=3364&L=1

Rosler’s simple and direct powerful anti-war message, and with Bartana a play on the national anthem. Newsome’s hip-hop hands meets Orff’s Carmina Burana, Bradley provides an alienated wondering around NY, McGinley plays with the power of advertising and pop culture, Danluck goes to the very bleak edge of David Lynch and John Waters territory. Murata takes on our obsessive TV culture and McNamara fuses performance, image and film to observe the absurd and difficult in our viewing culture. Jesper Just drives us around the economically challenged downtown USA city and confronts African-American stereotypes of women. Ezawa distills American culture into his unique animation aesthetic, whilst Thomson shows us the history of the US via all the covers of Time magazine. In a separate double-bill Friedman fills NY with the breakout song and Miami with dance.

David Gryn the Director of Artprojx works in collaboration with leading and emerging contemporary art galleries, artists, art museums and art fairs. Artprojx has worked with Art Basel Miami Beach (2011/12), Frieze Art Fair, ICA, Tate Britain, Whitney Museum (Mark Wallinger), Sadie Coles HQ (Wilhelm Sasnal), Salon 94 (Takeshi Murata), Gavin Brown enterprise (Dara Friedman), Gagosian (Dexter Dalwood), White Cube (Christian Marclay), Hauser & Wirth (Marcel Broodthaers), Victoria Miro Gallery (William Eggleston), The Modern Institute (Jeremy Deller) and many more.

Many thanks to the artist’s galleries:

Elizabeth Dee (Ryan McNamara)
Galleria Raffaella Cortese (Martha Rosler, Yael Bartana)
Gavin Brown’s enterprise (Dara Friedman)
Gavlak Gallery (Mungo Thomson)
James Cohan Gallery (Jesper Just)
Marlborough Gallery (Rashaad Newsome)
Murray Guy (Kota Ezawa)
Renwick Gallery (Meredith Danluck)
Salon 94 (Takeshi Murata)
Team Gallery (Slater Bradley, Ryan McGinley)

Contact:

David Gryn

david@artprojx.com

+447711127848

www.artprojx.com

More information:

Yael Bartana
Tuning, 2001
one channel video
2 min

A single show, fixed frames video of a woman wearing a suit “Trapped inside the ritual! Of humming the U.S. National anthem while giving a military salute. She is accompanied by an orchestra off-camera playing the anthem’s music.

Yael Bartana (Israel, 1971) represented Poland at the 2011 Venice Biennial. She has been interested in relationships of power since a very early age, particularly, in instances of crude conflict. Her work simulates the imagery of history and political advertising using language drawn from old movies and magazines, while appealing to the discourse on power. Her films are marked by a unique sense of timelessness though they are underscored by a strong political concern, commenting on both social control as well as the innermost mechanisms of oral and visual language. Merging music and performance, Bartana notably stages a potent counterpoint of social roles.

Slater Bradley
Don’t Let Me Disappear, 2009-11
HD video projection, color, sound,
10:25 min

Though he has worked in a variety of media, Bradley is best known for his work in film. Don’t Let Me Disappear is a highly literate work which functions as an update on his previously shown Boulevard of Broken Dreams, which follows Bradley’s Doppelgänger, model and actor Benjamin Brock, as he wanders alone through New York City. Brock, who distinctly resembles Bradley, has been a consistent subject of the artist’s work over the past decade. While he acts in part as a stand-in for the artist, he does not necessarily portray him directly, instead representing a variety of figures, a kind of everyman.

The work strongly alludes to perhaps the best-known wanderer of New York City, The Catcher in the Rye’s Holden Caulfield. Like the Doppelgänger, Salinger’s iconically alienated character walks aimlessly through New York’s streets, critical of and emotionally removed from his surroundings. The Doppelgänger perceives an artificiality as he examines the city; his anguished expression as he absorbs the city recalls Holden’s condemnation of its “phonies.” At the end of Bradley’s film, the Doppelgänger finds and puts on a red hunting hat, identical to the one described in the novel, and in doing so transforms into Holden.

The film depicts the New York City of E.B. White’s famous essay Here is New York. White divides New York into three separate cities: that of the native New Yorker, that of the commuter, and, the most significant of the three, that of the transplant, for whom New York is a final destination. The inhabitant of this third New York, paradoxically, is surrounded by people but perpetually alone. Though he has long resided in New York, Bradley originates from San Francisco, and the film shows his delicate relationship with the City. It is one of intimacy and distance, awe and terror, adoration and distrust.

The Doppelgänger observes and touches the built environment and crowds of the city, all without actually engaging any person or thing. Bradley continually draws attention to the act of walking: the video opens with a shot of legs waiting at a crosswalk, then follows the walking feet of its subject, waiting two and half minutes before showing the rest of his person. Here, Bradley refers to to Walter Benjamin’s conception of the flâneur, Flaubert’s archetypal figure who strolls through the modern city. Benjamin’s flâneur perceptively observes his surroundings but remains wholly uninvolved with them. Department store window displays, like the ones the Doppelgänger desperately examines, are a product of the flâneur’s prevalence in the post-industrial city.

Throughout the video, the Doppelgänger’s disembodied voice mumbles brief passages from little-known Russian author Mark Levi’s mysterious 1934 Novel with Cocaine, which chronicles an adolescent male’s descent into hedonism and drug addiction during Russia’s tumultuous years 1916 through 1919. Like the novel, Don’t Let Me Disappear examines the depravity of a young man’s existence during a period of national strife.

Meredith Danluck
Psychic Space (from North of South, West of East), 2012
Hi-Definition video
6 min

Psychic Space (from North of South, West of East), is a a scene taken from Danluck’s feature film North of South, West of East in which a disgruntled auto industry worker, played by actor Ben Foster, seeks solace and escape from the numbing repetition of the factory through huffing solvent and nodding off in the men’s room. The simple beauty and rich inner life of the nod almost balance out the industrial toilet’s piss stained floor and grime caked walls. The film’s sound design rises and falls, creating a narrative arc on which to project a beginning, middle and end. Though one would think watching a man pass out on the toilet for over six minutes might get boring, the driving sound combined with Foster’s divine performance play into collective expectations of thrill, suspense and even comedy.

Meredith Danluck is an artist and filmmaker living and working in New York City. Danluck’s work mines the rich territory of the American dream through the tropes of Hollywood and narrative archetypes. She has exhibited at the Liverpool Biennial, Reina Sofia Museum, MoMA, PS1 Museum among others. She has screened films at a number of festivals including Toronto International

Film Festival, SXSW, Byron Bay, DocNYC and Margaret Mead. Her most ambitious work up to date is a four channel feature film entitled, North of South, West of East which was commissioned by Ballroom Marfa as part of a show called Autobody, curated by Neville Wakefield. These four narrative films play simultaneously in symphony. Danluck is represented by the Renwick Gallery.

Kota Ezawa
Brawl, 2008
digital animation transferred to 16mm, sound
Edition of 10
4:11 min

Brawl, 2008 is a 16mm animated film of a fight at a Pistons-Pacers basketball game that began with a foul and a cup of beer thrown from the stands and ended with the suspension of 9 NBA players. Accustomed to tracking the linear movement of the ball through the court, the televised video feed jerkily shifts and pans and zooms throughout the arena to show multiple points of conflict simultaneously unfolding. Ezawa describes the scene as reminiscent of a Rubens painting, for instance The Battle of the Amazons, 1598, where tension is dispersed across the surface. He layers multiple audio recordings into the film’s soundtrack, mixing the voices of the announcers with the sounds of players and audience coming from the stadium floor and catacombs.

Kota Ezawa transforms seminal moments in media history into vector-based images and animations reminiscent of classic cartoons. The resulting imagery, somewhere between Andy Warhol and South Park, is then re-presented in a number of formats including video, film and slide projection as well as lightbox, etching and collage. Ezawa’s material ranges in source from the iconic to the obscure, from commerce to politics, to entertainment and art: from the televised footage of the reading of the verdict in the O.J. Simpson trial through Richard Burton’s and Elizabeth Taylor’s on/off-screen marital strife John Lennon, Susan Sontag and Joseph Beuys speaking publicly on art as political protest, to the assassinations of two American presidents and the home videos of celebrities. Kota Ezawa was born in 1969 in Cologne, Germany. He studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, Germany, San Francisco Art Institute and Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA. He has had solo exhibitions at Matrix,

Jesper Just
Sirens of Chrome, 2010
RED transferred to Blu-ray
Edition of 7 + 2 AP
12:38 min

Excerpted from ‘Sirens of Chrome’: Jennifer Frias, Associate Curator, UCR Sweeney Art Gallery.
Gender and identity come into play as Just re-imagines the role of women to contradict mainstream pop-culture’s association with men and cars – the archetypal relationship between object and desire. In classical Hollywood cinema, as feminist film theorist, Laura Mulvey defined it; women are almost always represented in a sexualized way in order to appeal to a male audience. The spectator is in a masculine subject position and the woman as the object of desire. Just defies this argument in creating a reversal of roles where the women are the protagonists exhibiting two modes of the male gaze – the voyeur and the fetishist.

Just presents his unconventional storytelling with conventional elements of slick Hollywood films by exploring the dynamics of African-American women and defying their portrayal in mainstream cinema. Just has said, in making Sirens, he wanted to challenge the long list of films that depicted African-American women as one-dimensional sexual beings, savages and lascivious. From Birth of a Nation in the early 1900s to the “Blaxploitation” films of the 1970s, Black women were type-casted as carnal and promiscuous, often as prostitutes or “jezebels.” According to Just, the actresses in the video were allotted the opportunity to tamper into the persona of their role. In essence, the actresses took control of their portrayal by either confronting the associations with Black women cinema stereotypes or appropriating the identity commonly conveyed by the opposite sex. While the physical presence of a male figure is non-existent in the storyline, the women become lead figures embodying their being in a masculine domain.

Jesper Just’s films create a world in which both the viewer and the protagonist oscillate between dominance and submission. Having made over a dozen films since graduating from the Danish Academy of Art in 2003, Just’s work is characterized by romance-soaked narratives and a shared sense of mood, atmospheric milieus. Just’s pictures are notably conjured through the manipulation of both social and cinematic convention; his use of appropriation mutates to bend the conventions of mainstream Hollywood productions while building from their structure. Heavily influenced by film noir aesthetics, Just reveres the films of iconic directors such as Bob Fosse, Lars von Trier, Alfred Hitchock, David Lynch and Elia Kazan. Here, Just’s influences assist in informing visual tones through stylized sets and wistful music, elements as equally important to the films as the characters seen within them.

Shot on a variety of film stock, including 16 mm and 35 mm, Just’s works are rich with the textures of the medium. Just’s significant production value and international access to lush spaces and surrealistic backdrops yield epic works crafted with seductive cinematic charge.

Jesper Just was born in 1974 in Copenhagen, Denmark and lives and works in New York, NY. His work is in the collections of the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburg, PA; the Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark; the Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden; the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Tate London, London, UK and Sammlung Julia Stoschek, Germany among others. Just’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit, Michigan, The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, Portugal; the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.

Film stills and film courtesy of the artist and James Cohan Gallery, New York/Shanghai; Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin, Paris and Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen. Copyright © Jesper Just 2010

Ryan McGinley
Entrance Romance (it felt like a kiss), 2010
color video, sound,
3:30 min

In Entrance Romance (it felt like a kiss) Ryan McGinley presents famous fashion model Carolyn Murphy (best known as the flawless face of Estée Lauder) with exquisitely drawn-out frames that showcase her most minute expressions as she endures actions of love and violence. Glass-shard explosions and gas-fueled flames are illuminated by soft golden light and set to a blissful soundtrack of meditative chanting. The result is a commingling of chaos and control as cinematic play and thrill-seeking collide with fleshly innocence and vulnerability. Just as the artist’s most well known photographs capture a youthful sublime within the boundless American landscape, Entrance Romance is a sumptuous portrait of enduring American adventure.

Ryan McGinley
Friends Forever, 2010
color & black and white video, sound,
5 min

Friends Forever presents a portrait of two young bands, Smith Westerns and Girls, and their fans. Shot at Pitchfork Music Festival 2010, McGinley closely observes details of the live performances with a fan’s adoring eye, his lens awash with atmospheric blurs and kaleidoscopic light amidst the sonic haze of warm, psychedelic guitars and reverb-loaded percussion. Friends Forever is an evolution of McGinley’s deep interest in the genre of rock photography, as seen in his 2006 photographs of fans at Morrissey concerts.

Youth, liberation and the joy of losing yourself in the moment are elements that feature throughout Ryan McGinley’s work, from his early roots in documenting the urban adventures of his downtown Manhattan friends to his subsequent cross-country travels in utopian environments throughout America to his most recent studio portraits. McGinley’s elaborate and rigorous process of photo-making creates moments of breathtaking beauty: naked feral kids poised in ecstatic abandon. The lack of clothing and other contemporary signifiers along with the archetypical landscapes give the photos a sense of timelessness in which the viewer can project his or her own story.

Over the years McGinley’s work has evolved from documenting reality toward creating settings where the situations are choreographed. The process of carefully staging and directing ‘happenings’, often in beautiful rural landscapes, is increasingly more cinematic in tone, while retaining the spontaneity of his early work.

Ryan McNamara
The Latest in Blood and Guts, 2009
black and white digital video with sound
5 min

Thirty five years ago in July, a newsreel jammed and could not be played during the Sarasota, Florida morning news program Suncoast Digest. Chubbuck, the host, brushed the glitch aside and said, “In keeping with Channel 40′s policy of bringing you the latest in blood and guts, and in living color, you are going to see another first-attempted suicide.” She then pulled out a .38 revolver from a bag of puppets she kept underneath her desk and shot herself behind the ear.

In one sense, The Latest in Blood and Guts is a memorial for the late newscaster Christine Chubbuck; it is also a rehearsal of Ryan McNamara’s childhood dream to be a variety show host. The video proposes a reenactment of trauma towards a therapeutic resolution that results in macabre parody. The friction between what the person portrays themselves as and what they are, dancing or dying, comically questions the distinction between life and death, and the paradoxical lifelessness of the moving image.

Ryan McNamara creates situation-specific works that collectively form an expanded view of participation within art production. His works involve other artists, viewers and dance professionals as collaborators. Created before and during after the performative events, photography and objects are integral to McNamara’s practice. He forms a uniquely social discourse, developing events that break with traditional notions of performance and embrace realism and interaction as necessary aspects of viewing experience. The participants themselves are central to the primary activity or action and McNamara is the engaged enabler of a situation he has authored with an undefined final outcome.

Welcoming uncertainty, McNamara has enthusiastically and intentionally pursued temporary and collaborative projects as diverse as biennial exhibitions, museum benefits, and one night performances in a variety of public and private spaces resulting in a truly fluid practice that intertwines the art community, social networks and technology.

Takeshi Murata
Infinite Doors, 2010,
digital video, color, sound
2:04 min

Infinite Doors draws on the determined staying power and unremitting stimulation of prize-oriented game show culture. Utilizing clips from The Price is Right, Murata edits a kinetic series of prize unveils. Unrelenting audience applause and an excessively animated announcer make the clip at once comical and peculiar. The superfluity of reward and overload of visual cues become absurd in their excess and begin to smother the very excitement they are meant to induce.

Takeshi Murata was born in 1974 in Chicago, IL. He graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1997 with a B.F.A. in Film/Video/Animation. Murata produces extraordinary digital works that refigure the experience of animation. His innovative practice and constantly evolving processes range from intricate computer-aided, hand-drawn animations to exacting manipulations of the flaws, defects and broken code in digital video technology. Whether altering appropriated footage from cinema (B movies, vintage horror films), or creating Rorschach-like fields of seething color, form and motion, Murata produces astonishing visions that redefine the boundaries between abstraction and recognition.

Murata has exhibited at The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas; Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, California; Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, Japan; Peres Projects, Los Angeles; Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, New York; Eyebeam, New York; FACT Centre, Liverpool, UK; Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; New York Underground Film Festival; Smack Mellon, Brooklyn, Foxy Production, New York, and Deitch Projects, New York, among others.

Rashaad Newsome
The Conductor, 2005-2009
six-part video installation with sound
Dimensions variable
6:18mins

Rashaad Newsome’s “The Conductor (Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi)” and “The Conductor (Primo Vere, Omnia Sol Temperat),” are the first and second parts of an ambitious six- part video installation that sets Carl Orff’s “Carmina Burana” against a video montage of expressive hand gestures extracted from popular rap videos, and a musical background of hip-hop beats. As Orff’s iconic oratorio opens with “O Fortuna,” a closely edited sequence of bejeweled gestures appears to conduct the music.

Rashaad Newsome was born in New Orleans, Louisiana where he received a B.A. in Art History at Tulane University before studying Film at Film Video Arts NYC as well as music production and programing at Harvestworks NYC . Newsome has exhibited nationally and internationally at such creditable institutions and Galleries as: The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; PS1MoMA, New York, NY; The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, NY; Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford Connecticut; Centre Pompidou, Paris; ar/ge Kunst Galerie Museum, Bolzano, Italy; Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow, Russia and Galerie Stadpark, Krems, Austria. Recent awards include: 2012 Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award, New York, NY, McColl Center for Visual Art Artist Residency, Charlotte, North Carolina, 2011, Artist in Residence, Pilchuck Glass School, Seattle, Washington; 2010 The Urban Artist Initiative individual Artist Grant, UAI, New York, NY; 2009 Rema Hort Mann Foundation, Visual Arts Grant, New York, NY and 2009 BAC Community Arts Regrant, New York, NY.

Martha Rosler
God Bless America, 2006
One channel video
1 min

In this video work, Rosler presents a short but incisive statement. A Mechanical toy figure dresses as an American soldier plays “God Bless America” on a trumpet. The camera pans down, revealing that the toy’s camouflage-clad trouser leg has been rolled up to uncover a mechanism that looks uncannily like a prosthetic limb.

Martha Rosler has been an important figure in art since the 1960′s, contributing ground-breaking works in media including video, photography, installation, performance, photo-text and critical writing. Her work addresses social life and the public sphere, often staking out feminist and anti-war positions. She has been included in numerous international exhibitions, most recently the Singapore Biennale; WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, PS1 in Queens, and other venues; UnMonumental at The New Museum in New York; Documenta 12; and Skulptur Projekte Münster; and Ambitions d’Art at Institut d’Art Contemporain in Villeurbanne, France.

Among Rosler’s best-known works are her photomontages from the series Bringing the War Home: House Beautiful (1967-72), which combines war scenes with images of domestic comfort and high design. In the wake of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, Rosler revisited the photomontage format, but reflecting the new spaces and technologies of war and its representations, in such works as Prospect for Today, Point and Shoot, and Invasion (2008).

Mungo Thomson
Untitled (TIME), 2010
DVD color video, silent
2:31 min

Mungo Thomson’s Untitled (TIME) flips through every cover of Time Magazine, from the first to the present, at a rate of one image per frame, 24 frames per second (i.e. 24 Time Magazine covers per second). This video can be seen as a study in cultural history done almost subliminally, as each viewer instantaneously recognizes specific images and text.

Mungo Thomson was born in 1969 in Woodland, California, and lives in Los Angeles and Berlin. He attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 1994, and received an MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 2000. His work has been featured in solo exhibitions at Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles; Gavlak Gallery, Palm Beach; John Connelly Presents, New York; the Kadist Art Foundation, Paris; GAMeC, Bergamo, Italy; and the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. Recent group exhibitions include those at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Menil Collection, Houston; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Vancouver Art Gallery; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Thomson’s work has also been shown in several biennial exhibitions, including 12th Istanbul Biennial in Istanbul, Turkey; the 2008 Whitney Biennial in New York; the 2008 Le Havre Biennale in Le Havre, France; and the 2004 California Biennial at the Orange Country Museum of Art, Newport Beach. Writings on his work have appeared in publications such as Artforum, Frieze, Flash Art, and Uovo.

Dara Friedman Double-bill

Dara Friedman
Musical 2007-2008
High-definition digital video
48 min

Dara Friedman’s video Musical plays upon the vitality of city life, especially on the crowded streets of midtown Manhattan, where unexpected and memorable encounters can be a daily occurrence. Friedman, who notes that she wants to “turn the volume up on the song that’s going on in your head as you’re walking down the street,” is interested in blurring the traditional separation between art and life, and between artist and audience. Like pebbles thrown into a lake,each performance causes a ripple effect that lasting a moment before the city returns to business-as-usual.

Dara Friedman
Dancer, 2011
Super 16mm film transferred to HD video, black & white, sound
25 min

Dancer documents a series of dances that took place on the streets of Miami. In the film, the performers have two dance partners: the camera and the city. The dancers, over 60 in all, represent a range of styles and ages – classical, street, ethnic and improvised. Movement was developed with choreography for and with the camera in hand. The work is in black and white, filmed with a hand-cranked Bolex in Super 16mm. The camera allows itself to be led, the film frame delineating the parameters of the stage, and the barrel lens sometimes catching the movement merely out of the corner of its eye. Inspired by the late Pina Bausch (1940-1990), Dara Friedman is not necessarily interested in “how people move, but rather, what moves them”. Performances are enmeshed with the soundtrack which paces the film throughout its 25 minute running time.

Dara Friedman is best known for her film and video installations, in which she employs techniques of Structuralist filmmaking to depict the lushness, ecstasy, and energy of everyday life. She often distills, reverses, loops, or otherwise alters familiar sounds and sights, drawing attention to the distinct sensory acts of hearing and seeing. Whether her work portrays a series of narrative fragments or a single evocative scene repeated over and over, Friedman heightens the emotional impact by cutting directly to the film’s climax in order to, as she puts it, “get to the part you really care about.”

Born in 1968 in Bad Kreuznach, Germany, Dara Friedman now lives and works in Miami. Her work has been featured in solo exhibitions at Miami Art Museum (2012, 2001); The Whitney Museum of American Art (2010) Gavin Brown’s enterprise, New York (2011, 2007, 2002); The Kitchen, New York (2005); The Wrong Gallery, New York (2004); Kunstmuseum, Thun, Switzerland (2002); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2002); and SITE Santa Fe, New Mexico (2001). Friedman attended University of Miami, School of Motion Pictures (MFA); The Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London; Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main, Germany; and Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York. Her work is included in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and the Museum of Modern Art, New York among many others.

Artprojx Newsletter May 2012

In Art, Artprojx, Artupdate, Dara Friedman, David Gryn, Film, Global Tour, Hamburg International Short Film Festival, Jesper Just, Kota Ezawa, London, Martha Rosler, Meredith Danluck, Mungo Thomson, Rashaad Newsome, Ryan McGinley, Ryan McNamara, Slater Bradley, Takeshi Murata, Untied Tastes of America, Video Art, Yael Bartana on 17/05/2012 at 3:54 pm

Kota Ezawa ‘Brawl’ courtesy Murray Guy Gallery, New York

Artprojx Cinema presents … Untied Tastes of America, artist’s films and video, selected by David Gryn.

Artists: Yael Bartana, Slater Bradley, Meredith Danluck, Kota Ezawa, Dara Friedman, Jesper Just, Ryan McGinley, Ryan McNamara, Takeshi Murata, Rashaad Newsome, Martha Rosler, Mungo Thomson.

28th Hamburg International Short Film Festival, May 29th – June 4th 2012

http://www.shortfilm.com

http://www.facebook.com/events/179170312208663/

Artprojx 3 Day Course @ Artupdate Learning 12-14 June 2012

A three day course giving you an overview of the artworld and the tools to help you progress. The art world can seem a strange and difficult place to navigate, this course gives you the knowledge and understanding to help you find your way.

Artupdate Learning @ The Fashion & Textile Museum, 83 Bermondsey Street, London SE1 3XF.

The course is suitable for art students, recent graduates, artists, curators and anyone who want to get more insights into the artworld.

Space is limited, book by 31st May 2012 to receive the special introductory price. Booking and further information is available here http://www.artupdatelearning.com/artworld-business-promotion-summer-school

See more info at http://www.artprojx.com

Hamburg International Short Film Festival interview with David Gryn

In 3001 Kino, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Cinema, Dara Friedman, David Gryn, Film, Hamburg, Hamburg International Short Film Festival, Jesper Just, Kota Ezawa, Martha Rosler, Meredith Danluck, Mungo Thompson, Rashaad Newsome, Ryan McGinley, Ryan McNamara, Slater Bradley, Takeshi Murata, Untied Tastes of America, Video Art, Yael Bartana on 07/05/2012 at 1:24 pm

Artprojx presents: Untied Tastes of America

Interview with David Gryn

IKFF: As the founder and director of Artprojx Cinema you are a true all-rounder and pioneer. How would you describe the background and motivation of your work?

David Gryn: I would say that my motivation for what I do is rooted in my early experiences as an art student/artist of seeing artists’ films and videos in the context of museums and galleries and I never found it satisfying and I could never watch anything from the beginning to the end, as I was always distracted, and wanted to socialize and yet I was always happy sitting in cinemas and being generally engrossed by whatever I watched and for long durations. So I started screening films in cinemas, which was not a new concept, but aiming at marketing and promoting the events and experiences in a similar way to how cinemas market mainstream film. I also like to show films that I enjoy listening to, as for me a great film is something that affects all my senses, but I always walk away from a film with a memory of its sound and music.

You liaise with galleries, museums, art fairs, distribution companies and corporations. During the Armory Show in March, Artprojx Cinema and AV-arkki brought video art to the silver screen at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea. Is the divide between the white cube and the
cinema dissolving?

I think the divide is ever increasing – but for the wrong reasons. The art world is kind of polarized between two forces: commerce and art. In my experience over the last ten years I have seen an ever increasing shift away from galleries showing moving image works at art fairs and yet there are more artists than ever making work in this way – so to understand this paradox you have to accept that galleries generally try and show work that sells and most moving image work does not. The galleries showing film may do so for a variety of reasons such as: the artist brings them notoriety/attention/kudos/credibility, the artist is excellent, there is a possibility of sales. In my view the art fairs, the galleries, museums, curators, critics are all filtering systems that help audiences to determine what is quality ›art‹, but can all be fallible. Generally most cinemas do not understand artists’ moving image and there is no real box office incentive to motivate them either. This is where Artprojx stands between the art world and the cinema – to make it clear as to what is being screened – that it is a work made by a visual artist and not by a filmmaker.

Despite the worldwide economic crisis, art objects sell at astronomical prices. What trend do you observe on the video art market?

I know many collectors who think that video art is very good value at present and a very small and unique market – so that buying top works is affordable and that it gives the collector a niche position. I think we are on the verge of artists’ moving image becoming a more valuable player in the art market. However, one of my interests in it as a medium is that it still generally resists the commercial imperative and concentrates on the message and/or the aesthetic.

Filmmakers and video artists use online platforms like YouTube and Vimeo to reach a wider audience. In 2010, The Guggenheim Foundation and YouTube partnered to launch the world’s first professionally curated search for short online films. Is online video capable of becoming an art form in its own right?

I think like anything, the best work made by good artists is good art regardless of where or on what it is shown. The problem lies with the agenda (commercial or political) of the platform and its partners and the presumption from audiences that all art is art, and by default anything can be art if you call it art. Which as any art saturated reader will know – that just isn’t the case. If the platforms and companies can have good people at the helm steering the art ship then it is likely that the work featuring on new platforms will be in safer hands. I am happy viewing art on YouTube and similar sites in much the same way I look at newspapers and TV, but I believe that the experiencing of art is generally social, physical, dramatic and that showing, sharing and seeing art online is a separate experience – and will evolve in different guises over many years.

Big names like Steve McQueen, Sam Taylor-Wood and Clio Barnard have ventured into the field of feature-length film. Does this have an effect on their credibility as artist filmmakers?

I think they are three very different artists, and I would say that knowing the work of Steve McQueen best – that he is a great artist. However, once you change jobs you become something else ¬– so I just hope that he can maintain the qualities he had as an artist into that of a mainstream filmmaker and that is not to say he won’t make art or that his films are not artful – but they are possibly restricted by the confines of commerce – which pure art is not (or should not be). But I would say I would name and include Bergman, Tarkovsky, Lynch, Waters, Sofia Coppola in my list of great artists in any medium.

You work all around the world, but as a London-based American you are especially familiar with both the US and European psyche. What kind of interactions, differences and similarities do you observe between the two continents in terms of video art?

I really don’t see art or life as having nationalistic boundaries or being defined by passports – so in essence and I state the obvious – the best artists make the best art whatever the medium or location. I would say that artists in urban centres – such as London and NY – have more opportunities around them to encourage their success and are more likely to merge into a network to help propel them. The interactions between artists often don’t take place due to the resistance to collaboration. The financial support mechanisms for artists are based on private funding/patronage in the USA against a more public funding system in Europe – and both have an effect on the art and its making.

You were the curator of Art Video at last year’s Art Basel Miami Beach. We are absolutely thrilled that you are going to show some works that were featured in the ›Americania‹ programme. The title is an amalgam of America and Arcadia which seems to be an oxymoron at first sight. What was the idea behind the selection of works and the designation of the programme?

This programme title ›Untied Tastes of America‹, like ›Americania‹ is an obvious play on words. It is the unrestricted visions of America both good and difficult. My thinking was moulded by seeing Martha Rosler’s one-minute film ›God Bless America‹, which packs a hefty punch via such simple means. Her anti-war work has a wit, sadness, introspection and a powerful message – that encouraged my thinking and selection of the other works in the programme.

Interview: Mirjam Wildner via e-mail.

German version:

Artprojx presents: Untied Tastes of America
Interview mit David Gryn

IKFF: Als Gründer und Leiter von Artprojx Cinema sind Sie ein echter Allrounder und Vorreiter. Wie würden Sie ihren Background und die Motivation für Ihre Arbeit beschreiben?

David Gryn: Ich würde sagen, die Motivation für das, was ich mache, liegt in meinen frühen Erfahrungen als Kunststudent beziehungsweise Künstler verankert. Damals sah ich Kunstfilme und -videos in Museen und Galerien und fand das nie befriedigend. Ich konnte mir nichts von Anfang bis Ende anschauen, weil ich immer abgelenkt war und mich lieber mit den Leuten um mich herum unterhalten wollte. Gleichzeitig gefiel es mir aber, im Kino zu sitzen und in das, was auch immer ich da sah, für einen längeren Zeitraum einzutauchen. Also fing ich an, Kunstfilme in Kinos zu zeigen. Dabei folgte ich zwar keinem neuen Konzept, aber mir ging es darum, die Veranstaltungen und Erlebnisse so zu vermarkten und zu promoten, wie es Kinos mit Mainstream-Filmen machen. Mir gefällt es, Filme zu zeigen, denen ich gerne zuhöre, denn meiner Meinung nach muss ein guter Film immer alle meine Sinne ansprechen. Wenn ich einen Film gesehen habe, bleiben immer der Ton und die Musik in meinem Gedächtnis hängen.

Sie arbeiten mit Galerien, Museen, Kunstmessen, Vertriebsfirmen und Unternehmen zusammen. Während der Armory Show im März brachten Artprojx Cinema und AV-arkki Videokunst auf die Kinoleinwand des SVA Theatre in Chelsea. Wird die Kluft zwischen White Cube und Kino kleiner?

Ich denke, die Kluft wird immer größer – aber aus den falschen Gründen. Die Kunstwelt bewegt sich gewissermaßen zwischen zwei Polen beziehungsweise Kräften: Kommerz und Kunst. Meine Erfahrung der letzten zehn Jahre hat gezeigt, dass Galerien immer mehr Abstand davon nehmen, Film- und Videokunst auf Kunstmessen zu zeigen. Gleichzeitig gab es aber in diesem Bereich noch nie so viele Künstler wie heute. Um dieses Paradoxon zu verstehen, muss man sich damit abfinden, dass Galerien generell versuchen Arbeiten zu zeigen, die sich gut verkaufen. Film- und Videokunst gehört nicht dazu. Galerien, die Filme präsentieren, können verschiedene Beweggründe dafür haben: zum Beispiel, weil der Künstler ihnen Bekanntheit, Aufmerksamkeit, Renommee beziehungsweise Glaubwürdigkeit verschafft; weil der Künstler hervorragend ist und die Verkaufschancen gut aussehen. In meinen Augen sind die Kunstmessen, Galerien, Museen, Kuratoren und Kritiker allesamt Filtersysteme, die dem Publikum dabei helfen festzulegen, was qualitativ hochwertige ›Kunst‹ ist. Aber keiner von ihnen ist unfehlbar. In der Regel verstehen die meisten Kinos nichts von Film- und Videokunst und da es sich nicht gerade um potenzielle Kassenschlager handelt, kann man sie dazu auch nicht motivieren. Genau an diesem Punkt zwischen der Kunstwelt und dem Kino vermittelt Artprojx. Wir machen transparent, was gezeigt wird, und dass es sich um die Arbeit eines visuellen Künstlers handelt und nicht um die eines Filmemachers.

Trotz der Weltfinanzkrise werden Kunstobjekte zu astronomischen Preisen verkauft. Welchen Trend beobachten Sie auf dem Markt für Videokunst?

Ich kenne viele Sammler, die der Auffassung sind, dass Videokunst gegenwärtig sehr preiswert ist und einen sehr kleinen und einzigartigen Markt darstellt, sodass der Kauf von erstklassigen Werken erschwinglich ist und der Sammler eine Nische für sich beanspruchen kann. Wir werden bald erleben, dass die Film- und Videokunst eine größere und wertigere Rolle auf dem Kunstmarkt einnehmen wird. Mich hingegen interessiert an dem Medium, dass es immer noch dem kommerziellen Imperativ weitgehend standhält und sich auf die Botschaft beziehungsweise auf die Ästhetik konzentriert.

Filmemacher und Videokünstler nutzen Online-Plattformen wie YouTube und Vimeo, um ein größeres Publikum zu erreichen. 2010 kooperierten die Guggenheim Foundation und YouTube, um den ersten professionell kuratierten Wettbewerb für Online-Kurzfilme aus der Taufe zu heben. Haben Online-Videos das Potenzial, sich zu einer eigenständigen Kunstform zu entwickeln?

Ich denke ganz allgemein, die beste Arbeit eines guten Künstlers ist gute Kunst, egal wo sie gezeigt wird. Problematisch sind die Absichten – kommerzielle oder politische – der Plattform und ihrer Kooperationspartner und die Annahme des Publikums, dass alles automatisch Kunst sein kann, wenn man es als solche bezeichnet. Und das ist, wie jeder Kunstkenner weiß, einfach nicht der Fall. Wenn die Plattformen und Unternehmen gute Leute am Steuer haben, ist es wahrscheinlich, dass die Arbeiten hier in urteilssichereren Händen sind. Ich schaue mir gerne Kunst auf YouTube und ähnlichen Seiten an. So wie ich Zeitung lese und Fernsehen gucke. Ich glaube allerdings, dass das Erleben von Kunst etwas Gemeinschaftliches, Physisches, Dramatisches ist. Das Zeigen, Teilen und Sehen von Kunst im Internet ist eine völlig andere Erfahrung und wird im Laufe der Jahre unterschiedliche Formen annehmen.

Große Namen wie Steve McQueen, Sam Taylor-Wood und Clio Barnard haben sich in den Bereich des Langfilms gewagt. Hat das einen Einfluss auf ihre Glaubwürdigkeit als Filmkünstler?

Ich denke, es sind drei sehr unterschiedliche Künstler. Ich bin mit Steve McQueens Arbeit am vertrautesten und würde sagen, dass er ein großartiger Künstler ist. Sobald man jedoch seinen Beruf wechselt, entwickelt man sich zu jemand anderem. Ich hoffe einfach, dass er die Qualitäten, die er als Künstler hatte, auch als Mainstream-Filmemacher aufrechterhalten kann. Und damit meine ich nicht, dass er keine Kunst mehr machen wird oder dass seine Filme nicht kunstvoll sind, aber sie werden möglicherweise durch den kommerziellen Rahmen eingeengt werden, was auf Kunst in ihrer Reinform nicht zutreffen sollte. Ich würde Bergman, Tarkovsky, Lynch, Waters und Sofia Coppola auf meiner Liste großartiger Künstler jeglichen Mediums nennen.

Sie arbeiten auf der ganzen Welt, aber als in London lebender Amerikaner sind Sie mit der amerikanischen und europäischen Psyche ganz besonders vertraut. Welche gegenseitigen Beeinflussungen, Unterschiede und Ähnlichkeiten beobachten Sie zwischen den zwei Kontinenten im Hinblick auf Videokunst?

Meiner Ansicht nach haben weder die Kunst noch das Leben nationalstaatliche Grenzen und sie lassen sich nicht über einen Reisepass definieren. Im Wesentlichen – und das ist nichts Neues – produzieren die besten Künstler die beste Kunst, egal in welchem Medium oder an welchem Ort. Ich würde sagen, dass Künstlern in Metropolen wie London und New York mehr Möglichkeiten zur Verfügung stehen, die ihren Erfolg fördern, und die Wahrscheinlichkeit ist größer, dass sie den Weg in ein Netzwerk finden, das ihnen dabei hilft weiterzukommen. Eine Zusammenarbeit zwischen Künstlern findet selten statt, weil sie sich vor Kollaborationen scheuen. Die finanziellen Fördermechanismen für Künstler basieren in den USA auf privater Unterstützung beziehungsweise Mäzenatentum, während es sich in Europa meistens um öffentliche Fördermittel handelt. Beide beeinflussen die Kunst und ihr Entstehen.

Sie haben letztes Jahr die Video Art auf der Art Basel Miami Beach kuratiert. wir sind sehr glücklich, dass Sie einige Werke aus dem ›Americania‹-Programm zeigen werden. Der Titel ist ein Amalgam aus America und Arcadia, was auf den ersten Blick widersprüchlich erscheint. Welche Idee stand hinter Ihrer Auswahl der Arbeiten und der Ausrichtung des Programms?

Der Programmtitel ›Untied Tastes of America‹ ist wie ›Americania‹ offensichtlich ein Wortspiel. Es geht um die unlimitierten Bilder von Amerika, sowohl um die guten als auch um die schwierigen. Meine Überlegungen nahmen Gestalt an, als ich Martha Roslers Einminüter ›God Bless America‹ sah, der einem mit solch einfachen Mitteln einen kräftigen Schlag verpasst. Ihr Antikriegswerk hat eine Scharfsinnigkeit, Traurigkeit, Introspektion und starke Botschaft. All das beeinflusste meine weiteren Überlegungen und die Auswahl der anderen Arbeiten des Programms.

Das Interview führte Mirjam Wildner via E-Mail im April 2012

http://festival.shortfilm.com/index.php?id=3364&L=1

IKFF_12_gryn_korrektur copy

Artprojx Cinema presents … Untied Tastes of America

In 3001 Kino, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Dara Friedman, David Gryn, Hamburg, Hamburg International Short Film Festival, Jesper Just, Kota Ezawa, Martha Rosler, Meredith Danluck, Mungo Thomson, Paul Goodwin, Rashaad Newsome, Ryan McGinley, Ryan McNamara, Slater Bradley, Takeshi Murata, Untied Tastes of America, Yael Bartana on 09/04/2012 at 11:24 pm

Artprojx Cinema presents


Untied Tastes of America
artist’s films and video

selected by David Gryn

Yael Bartana – Tuning
Slater Bradley – Don’t Let Me Disappear
Meredith Danluck – Psychic Space (from North of South, West of East)
Kota Ezawa – Brawl
Jesper Just – Sirens of Chrome
Ryan McGinley – Entrance Romance (it felt like a kiss)
Ryan McGinley – Friends Forever
Ryan McNamara – The Latest in Blood and Guts
Takeshi Murata – Infinite Doors
Rashaad Newsome – The Conductor
Martha Rosler – God Bless America
Mungo Thomson – Untitled (TIME)

Double-bill
Dara Friedman – Musical & Dancer

28th Hamburg International Short Film Festival, May 29th – June 4th 2012 www.shortfilm.com

Screenings: Thursday 31 May at 7.45pm and 9.30pm
Zeise Kinos. Friedensallee 7. 22765 Hamburg www.zeise.de

Programme Rerun: Sunday 3rd June 5:30 pm at “3001 Kino” www.3001-kino.de

What is America? What is the state of American culture/society today? These questions, so often asked the world over that it has almost become a banal enquiry into the general state of humanity, have never been so important as they are today. Globalisation is perceived and experienced by many to be synonymous with American culture and ideology. At the same time, this sense of the omnipotence of American culture is under severe strain in the wake of the global financial meltdown. To observe American culture today is perhaps to witness the (in)glorious ending of a particular way of life; a culture in decline; a society undergoing traumatic restructuring.

These are works by both American and foreign artists that explore the blurred borderlands of American culture and society. What is explored in these works is not America as a fixed, geographical location but America as an ‘idea/ideal’; a continuously evolving and shifting congeries of emotions, places, powers, infrastructures, populations and visions. Curatorial Text by Paul Goodwin.

Rosler’s simple and direct powerful anti-war message, and with Bartana a play on the national anthem. Newsome’s hip-hop hands meets Orff’s Carmina Burana, Bradley provides an alienated wondering around NY, McGinley plays with the power of advertising and pop culture, Danluck goes to the very bleak edge of David Lynch and John Waters territory. Murata takes on our obsessive TV culture and McNamara fuses performance, image and film to observe the absurd and difficult in our viewing culture. Jesper Just drives us around the economically challenged downtown USA city and confronts African-American stereotypes of women. Ezawa distills American culture into his unique animation aesthetic, whilst Thomson shows us the history of the US via all the covers of Time magazine. In a separate double-bill Friedman fills NY with the breakout song and Miami with dance.

David Gryn the Director of Artprojx works in collaboration with leading and emerging contemporary art galleries, artists, art museums and art fairs. Artprojx has worked with Art Basel Miami Beach (2011/12), Frieze Art Fair, ICA, Tate Britain, Whitney Museum (Mark Wallinger), Sadie Coles HQ (Wilhelm Sasnal), Salon 94 (Takeshi Murata), Gavin Brown enterprise (Dara Friedman), Gagosian (Dexter Dalwood), White Cube (Christian Marclay), Hauser & Wirth (Marcel Broodthaers), Victoria Miro Gallery (William Eggleston), The Modern Institute (Jeremy Deller) and many more.

Many thanks to the artist’s galleries:

Elizabeth Dee (Ryan McNamara)
Galleria Raffaella Cortese (Martha Rosler, Yael Bartana)
Gavin Brown’s enterprise (Dara Friedman)
Gavlak Gallery (Mungo Thomson)
James Cohan Gallery (Jesper Just)
Marlborough Gallery (Rashaad Newsome)
Murray Guy (Kota Ezawa)
Renwick Gallery (Meredith Danluck)
Salon 94 (Takeshi Murata)
Team Gallery (Slater Bradley, Ryan McGinley)

Contact:

David Gryn

david@artprojx.com

+447711127848

www.artprojx.com

More information:

Yael Bartana
Tuning, 2001
one channel video
2 min

A single show, fixed frames video of a woman wearing a suit “Trapped inside the ritual! Of humming the U.S. National anthem while giving a military salute. She is accompanied by an orchestra off-camera playing the anthem’s music.

Yael Bartana (Israel, 1971) represented Poland at the 2011 Venice Biennial. She has been interested in relationships of power since a very early age, particularly, in instances of crude conflict. Her work simulates the imagery of history and political advertising using language drawn from old movies and magazines, while appealing to the discourse on power. Her films are marked by a unique sense of timelessness though they are underscored by a strong political concern, commenting on both social control as well as the innermost mechanisms of oral and visual language. Merging music and performance, Bartana notably stages a potent counterpoint of social roles.

Slater Bradley
Don’t Let Me Disappear, 2009-11
HD video projection, color, sound,
10:25 min

Though he has worked in a variety of media, Bradley is best known for his work in film. Don’t Let Me Disappear is a highly literate work which functions as an update on his previously shown Boulevard of Broken Dreams, which follows Bradley’s Doppelgänger, model and actor Benjamin Brock, as he wanders alone through New York City. Brock, who distinctly resembles Bradley, has been a consistent subject of the artist’s work over the past decade. While he acts in part as a stand-in for the artist, he does not necessarily portray him directly, instead representing a variety of figures, a kind of everyman.

The work strongly alludes to perhaps the best-known wanderer of New York City, The Catcher in the Rye’s Holden Caulfield. Like the Doppelgänger, Salinger’s iconically alienated character walks aimlessly through New York’s streets, critical of and emotionally removed from his surroundings. The Doppelgänger perceives an artificiality as he examines the city; his anguished expression as he absorbs the city recalls Holden’s condemnation of its “phonies.” At the end of Bradley’s film, the Doppelgänger finds and puts on a red hunting hat, identical to the one described in the novel, and in doing so transforms into Holden.

The film depicts the New York City of E.B. White’s famous essay Here is New York. White divides New York into three separate cities: that of the native New Yorker, that of the commuter, and, the most significant of the three, that of the transplant, for whom New York is a final destination. The inhabitant of this third New York, paradoxically, is surrounded by people but perpetually alone. Though he has long resided in New York, Bradley originates from San Francisco, and the film shows his delicate relationship with the City. It is one of intimacy and distance, awe and terror, adoration and distrust.

The Doppelgänger observes and touches the built environment and crowds of the city, all without actually engaging any person or thing. Bradley continually draws attention to the act of walking: the video opens with a shot of legs waiting at a crosswalk, then follows the walking feet of its subject, waiting two and half minutes before showing the rest of his person. Here, Bradley refers to to Walter Benjamin’s conception of the flâneur, Flaubert’s archetypal figure who strolls through the modern city. Benjamin’s flâneur perceptively observes his surroundings but remains wholly uninvolved with them. Department store window displays, like the ones the Doppelgänger desperately examines, are a product of the flâneur’s prevalence in the post-industrial city.

Throughout the video, the Doppelgänger’s disembodied voice mumbles brief passages from little-known Russian author Mark Levi’s mysterious 1934 Novel with Cocaine, which chronicles an adolescent male’s descent into hedonism and drug addiction during Russia’s tumultuous years 1916 through 1919. Like the novel, Don’t Let Me Disappear examines the depravity of a young man’s existence during a period of national strife.

Meredith Danluck
Psychic Space (from North of South, West of East), 2012
Hi-Definition video
6 min

Psychic Space (from North of South, West of East), is a a scene taken from Danluck’s feature film North of South, West of East in which a disgruntled auto industry worker, played by actor Ben Foster, seeks solace and escape from the numbing repetition of the factory through huffing solvent and nodding off in the men’s room. The simple beauty and rich inner life of the nod almost balance out the industrial toilet’s piss stained floor and grime caked walls. The film’s sound design rises and falls, creating a narrative arc on which to project a beginning, middle and end. Though one would think watching a man pass out on the toilet for over six minutes might get boring, the driving sound combined with Foster’s divine performance play into collective expectations of thrill, suspense and even comedy.

Meredith Danluck is an artist and filmmaker living and working in New York City. Danluck’s work mines the rich territory of the American dream through the tropes of Hollywood and narrative archetypes. She has exhibited at the Liverpool Biennial, Reina Sofia Museum, MoMA, PS1 Museum among others. She has screened films at a number of festivals including Toronto International

Film Festival, SXSW, Byron Bay, DocNYC and Margaret Mead. Her most ambitious work up to date is a four channel feature film entitled, North of South, West of East which was commissioned by Ballroom Marfa as part of a show called Autobody, curated by Neville Wakefield. These four narrative films play simultaneously in symphony. Danluck is represented by the Renwick Gallery.

Kota Ezawa
Brawl, 2008
digital animation transferred to 16mm, sound
Edition of 10
4:11 min

Brawl, 2008 is a 16mm animated film of a fight at a Pistons-Pacers basketball game that began with a foul and a cup of beer thrown from the stands and ended with the suspension of 9 NBA players. Accustomed to tracking the linear movement of the ball through the court, the televised video feed jerkily shifts and pans and zooms throughout the arena to show multiple points of conflict simultaneously unfolding. Ezawa describes the scene as reminiscent of a Rubens painting, for instance The Battle of the Amazons, 1598, where tension is dispersed across the surface. He layers multiple audio recordings into the film’s soundtrack, mixing the voices of the announcers with the sounds of players and audience coming from the stadium floor and catacombs.

Kota Ezawa transforms seminal moments in media history into vector-based images and animations reminiscent of classic cartoons. The resulting imagery, somewhere between Andy Warhol and South Park, is then re-presented in a number of formats including video, film and slide projection as well as lightbox, etching and collage. Ezawa’s material ranges in source from the iconic to the obscure, from commerce to politics, to entertainment and art: from the televised footage of the reading of the verdict in the O.J. Simpson trial through Richard Burton’s and Elizabeth Taylor’s on/off-screen marital strife John Lennon, Susan Sontag and Joseph Beuys speaking publicly on art as political protest, to the assassinations of two American presidents and the home videos of celebrities. Kota Ezawa was born in 1969 in Cologne, Germany. He studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, Germany, San Francisco Art Institute and Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA. He has had solo exhibitions at Matrix,

Jesper Just
Sirens of Chrome, 2010
RED transferred to Blu-ray
Edition of 7 + 2 AP
12:38 min

Excerpted from ‘Sirens of Chrome’: Jennifer Frias, Associate Curator, UCR Sweeney Art Gallery.
Gender and identity come into play as Just re-imagines the role of women to contradict mainstream pop-culture’s association with men and cars – the archetypal relationship between object and desire. In classical Hollywood cinema, as feminist film theorist, Laura Mulvey defined it; women are almost always represented in a sexualized way in order to appeal to a male audience. The spectator is in a masculine subject position and the woman as the object of desire. Just defies this argument in creating a reversal of roles where the women are the protagonists exhibiting two modes of the male gaze – the voyeur and the fetishist.

Just presents his unconventional storytelling with conventional elements of slick Hollywood films by exploring the dynamics of African-American women and defying their portrayal in mainstream cinema. Just has said, in making Sirens, he wanted to challenge the long list of films that depicted African-American women as one-dimensional sexual beings, savages and lascivious. From Birth of a Nation in the early 1900s to the “Blaxploitation” films of the 1970s, Black women were type-casted as carnal and promiscuous, often as prostitutes or “jezebels.” According to Just, the actresses in the video were allotted the opportunity to tamper into the persona of their role. In essence, the actresses took control of their portrayal by either confronting the associations with Black women cinema stereotypes or appropriating the identity commonly conveyed by the opposite sex. While the physical presence of a male figure is non-existent in the storyline, the women become lead figures embodying their being in a masculine domain.

Jesper Just’s films create a world in which both the viewer and the protagonist oscillate between dominance and submission. Having made over a dozen films since graduating from the Danish Academy of Art in 2003, Just’s work is characterized by romance-soaked narratives and a shared sense of mood, atmospheric milieus. Just’s pictures are notably conjured through the manipulation of both social and cinematic convention; his use of appropriation mutates to bend the conventions of mainstream Hollywood productions while building from their structure. Heavily influenced by film noir aesthetics, Just reveres the films of iconic directors such as Bob Fosse, Lars von Trier, Alfred Hitchock, David Lynch and Elia Kazan. Here, Just’s influences assist in informing visual tones through stylized sets and wistful music, elements as equally important to the films as the characters seen within them.

Shot on a variety of film stock, including 16 mm and 35 mm, Just’s works are rich with the textures of the medium. Just’s significant production value and international access to lush spaces and surrealistic backdrops yield epic works crafted with seductive cinematic charge.

Jesper Just was born in 1974 in Copenhagen, Denmark and lives and works in New York, NY. His work is in the collections of the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburg, PA; the Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark; the Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden; the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Tate London, London, UK and Sammlung Julia Stoschek, Germany among others. Just’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit, Michigan, The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, Portugal; the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.

Film stills and film courtesy of the artist and James Cohan Gallery, New York/Shanghai; Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin, Paris and Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen. Copyright © Jesper Just 2010

Ryan McGinley
Entrance Romance (it felt like a kiss), 2010
color video, sound,
3:30 min

In Entrance Romance (it felt like a kiss) Ryan McGinley presents famous fashion model Carolyn Murphy (best known as the flawless face of Estée Lauder) with exquisitely drawn-out frames that showcase her most minute expressions as she endures actions of love and violence. Glass-shard explosions and gas-fueled flames are illuminated by soft golden light and set to a blissful soundtrack of meditative chanting. The result is a commingling of chaos and control as cinematic play and thrill-seeking collide with fleshly innocence and vulnerability. Just as the artist’s most well known photographs capture a youthful sublime within the boundless American landscape, Entrance Romance is a sumptuous portrait of enduring American adventure.

Ryan McGinley
Friends Forever, 2010
color & black and white video, sound,
5 min

Friends Forever presents a portrait of two young bands, Smith Westerns and Girls, and their fans. Shot at Pitchfork Music Festival 2010, McGinley closely observes details of the live performances with a fan’s adoring eye, his lens awash with atmospheric blurs and kaleidoscopic light amidst the sonic haze of warm, psychedelic guitars and reverb-loaded percussion. Friends Forever is an evolution of McGinley’s deep interest in the genre of rock photography, as seen in his 2006 photographs of fans at Morrissey concerts.

Youth, liberation and the joy of losing yourself in the moment are elements that feature throughout Ryan McGinley’s work, from his early roots in documenting the urban adventures of his downtown Manhattan friends to his subsequent cross-country travels in utopian environments throughout America to his most recent studio portraits. McGinley’s elaborate and rigorous process of photo-making creates moments of breathtaking beauty: naked feral kids poised in ecstatic abandon. The lack of clothing and other contemporary signifiers along with the archetypical landscapes give the photos a sense of timelessness in which the viewer can project his or her own story.

Over the years McGinley’s work has evolved from documenting reality toward creating settings where the situations are choreographed. The process of carefully staging and directing ‘happenings’, often in beautiful rural landscapes, is increasingly more cinematic in tone, while retaining the spontaneity of his early work.

Ryan McNamara
The Latest in Blood and Guts, 2009
black and white digital video with sound
5 min

Thirty five years ago in July, a newsreel jammed and could not be played during the Sarasota, Florida morning news program Suncoast Digest. Chubbuck, the host, brushed the glitch aside and said, “In keeping with Channel 40’s policy of bringing you the latest in blood and guts, and in living color, you are going to see another first-attempted suicide.” She then pulled out a .38 revolver from a bag of puppets she kept underneath her desk and shot herself behind the ear.

In one sense, The Latest in Blood and Guts is a memorial for the late newscaster Christine Chubbuck; it is also a rehearsal of Ryan McNamara’s childhood dream to be a variety show host. The video proposes a reenactment of trauma towards a therapeutic resolution that results in macabre parody. The friction between what the person portrays themselves as and what they are, dancing or dying, comically questions the distinction between life and death, and the paradoxical lifelessness of the moving image.

Ryan McNamara creates situation-specific works that collectively form an expanded view of participation within art production. His works involve other artists, viewers and dance professionals as collaborators. Created before and during after the performative events, photography and objects are integral to McNamara’s practice. He forms a uniquely social discourse, developing events that break with traditional notions of performance and embrace realism and interaction as necessary aspects of viewing experience. The participants themselves are central to the primary activity or action and McNamara is the engaged enabler of a situation he has authored with an undefined final outcome.

Welcoming uncertainty, McNamara has enthusiastically and intentionally pursued temporary and collaborative projects as diverse as biennial exhibitions, museum benefits, and one night performances in a variety of public and private spaces resulting in a truly fluid practice that intertwines the art community, social networks and technology.

Takeshi Murata
Infinite Doors, 2010,
digital video, color, sound
2:04 min

Infinite Doors draws on the determined staying power and unremitting stimulation of prize-oriented game show culture. Utilizing clips from The Price is Right, Murata edits a kinetic series of prize unveils. Unrelenting audience applause and an excessively animated announcer make the clip at once comical and peculiar. The superfluity of reward and overload of visual cues become absurd in their excess and begin to smother the very excitement they are meant to induce.

Takeshi Murata was born in 1974 in Chicago, IL. He graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1997 with a B.F.A. in Film/Video/Animation. Murata produces extraordinary digital works that refigure the experience of animation. His innovative practice and constantly evolving processes range from intricate computer-aided, hand-drawn animations to exacting manipulations of the flaws, defects and broken code in digital video technology. Whether altering appropriated footage from cinema (B movies, vintage horror films), or creating Rorschach-like fields of seething color, form and motion, Murata produces astonishing visions that redefine the boundaries between abstraction and recognition.

Murata has exhibited at The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas; Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, California; Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, Japan; Peres Projects, Los Angeles; Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, New York; Eyebeam, New York; FACT Centre, Liverpool, UK; Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; New York Underground Film Festival; Smack Mellon, Brooklyn, Foxy Production, New York, and Deitch Projects, New York, among others.

Rashaad Newsome
The Conductor, 2005-2009
six-part video installation with sound
Dimensions variable
6:18mins

Rashaad Newsome’s “The Conductor (Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi)” and “The Conductor (Primo Vere, Omnia Sol Temperat),” are the first and second parts of an ambitious six- part video installation that sets Carl Orff’s “Carmina Burana” against a video montage of expressive hand gestures extracted from popular rap videos, and a musical background of hip-hop beats. As Orff’s iconic oratorio opens with “O Fortuna,” a closely edited sequence of bejeweled gestures appears to conduct the music.

Rashaad Newsome was born in New Orleans, Louisiana where he received a B.A. in Art History at Tulane University before studying Film at Film Video Arts NYC as well as music production and programing at Harvestworks NYC . Newsome has exhibited nationally and internationally at such creditable institutions and Galleries as: The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; PS1MoMA, New York, NY; The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, NY; Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford Connecticut; Centre Pompidou, Paris; ar/ge Kunst Galerie Museum, Bolzano, Italy; Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow, Russia and Galerie Stadpark, Krems, Austria. Recent awards include: 2012 Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award, New York, NY, McColl Center for Visual Art Artist Residency, Charlotte, North Carolina, 2011, Artist in Residence, Pilchuck Glass School, Seattle, Washington; 2010 The Urban Artist Initiative individual Artist Grant, UAI, New York, NY; 2009 Rema Hort Mann Foundation, Visual Arts Grant, New York, NY and 2009 BAC Community Arts Regrant, New York, NY.

Martha Rosler,
God Bless America, 2006
One channel video
1 min

In this video work, Rosler presents a short but incisive statement. A Mechanical toy figure dresses as an American soldier plays “God Bless America” on a trumpet. The camera pans down, revealing that the toy’s camouflage-clad trouser leg has been rolled up to uncover a mechanism that looks uncannily like a prosthetic limb.

Martha Rosler has been an important figure in art since the 1960’s, contributing ground-breaking works in media including video, photography, installation, performance, photo-text and critical writing. Her work addresses social life and the public sphere, often staking out feminist and anti-war positions. She has been included in numerous international exhibitions, most recently the Singapore Biennale; WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, PS1 in Queens, and other venues; UnMonumental at The New Museum in New York; Documenta 12; and Skulptur Projekte Münster; and Ambitions d’Art at Institut d’Art Contemporain in Villeurbanne, France.

Among Rosler’s best-known works are her photomontages from the series Bringing the War Home: House Beautiful (1967-72), which combines war scenes with images of domestic comfort and high design. In the wake of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, Rosler revisited the photomontage format, but reflecting the new spaces and technologies of war and its representations, in such works as Prospect for Today, Point and Shoot, and Invasion (2008).

Mungo Thomson
Untitled (TIME), 2010
DVD color video, silent
2:31 min

Mungo Thomson’s Untitled (TIME) flips through every cover of Time Magazine, from the first to the present, at a rate of one image per frame, 24 frames per second (i.e. 24 Time Magazine covers per second). This video can be seen as a study in cultural history done almost subliminally, as each viewer instantaneously recognizes specific images and text.

Mungo Thomson was born in 1969 in Woodland, California, and lives in Los Angeles and Berlin. He attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 1994, and received an MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 2000. His work has been featured in solo exhibitions at Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles; Gavlak Gallery, Palm Beach; John Connelly Presents, New York; the Kadist Art Foundation, Paris; GAMeC, Bergamo, Italy; and the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. Recent group exhibitions include those at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Menil Collection, Houston; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Vancouver Art Gallery; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Thomson’s work has also been shown in several biennial exhibitions, including 12th Istanbul Biennial in Istanbul, Turkey; the 2008 Whitney Biennial in New York; the 2008 Le Havre Biennale in Le Havre, France; and the 2004 California Biennial at the Orange Country Museum of Art, Newport Beach. Writings on his work have appeared in publications such as Artforum, Frieze, Flash Art, and Uovo.

Dara Friedman Double-bill

Dara Friedman
Musical 2007-2008
High-definition digital video
48 min

Dara Friedman’s video Musical plays upon the vitality of city life, especially on the crowded streets of midtown Manhattan, where unexpected and memorable encounters can be a daily occurrence. Friedman, who notes that she wants to “turn the volume up on the song that’s going on in your head as you’re walking down the street,” is interested in blurring the traditional separation between art and life, and between artist and audience. Like pebbles thrown into a lake,each performance causes a ripple effect that lasting a moment before the city returns to business-as-usual.

Dara Friedman
Dancer, 2011
Super 16mm film transferred to HD video, black & white, sound
25 min

Dancer documents a series of dances that took place on the streets of Miami. In the film, the performers have two dance partners: the camera and the city. The dancers, over 60 in all, represent a range of styles and ages – classical, street, ethnic and improvised. Movement was developed with choreography for and with the camera in hand. The work is in black and white, filmed with a hand-cranked Bolex in Super 16mm. The camera allows itself to be led, the film frame delineating the parameters of the stage, and the barrel lens sometimes catching the movement merely out of the corner of its eye. Inspired by the late Pina Bausch (1940-1990), Dara Friedman is not necessarily interested in “how people move, but rather, what moves them”. Performances are enmeshed with the soundtrack which paces the film throughout its 25 minute running time.

Dara Friedman is best known for her film and video installations, in which she employs techniques of Structuralist filmmaking to depict the lushness, ecstasy, and energy of everyday life. She often distills, reverses, loops, or otherwise alters familiar sounds and sights, drawing attention to the distinct sensory acts of hearing and seeing. Whether her work portrays a series of narrative fragments or a single evocative scene repeated over and over, Friedman heightens the emotional impact by cutting directly to the film’s climax in order to, as she puts it, “get to the part you really care about.”

Born in 1968 in Bad Kreuznach, Germany, Dara Friedman now lives and works in Miami. Her work has been featured in solo exhibitions at Miami Art Museum (2012, 2001); The Whitney Museum of American Art (2010) Gavin Brown’s enterprise, New York (2011, 2007, 2002); The Kitchen, New York (2005); The Wrong Gallery, New York (2004); Kunstmuseum, Thun, Switzerland (2002); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2002); and SITE Santa Fe, New Mexico (2001). Friedman attended University of Miami, School of Motion Pictures (MFA); The Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London; Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main, Germany; and Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York. Her work is included in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and the Museum of Modern Art, New York among many others.

Artprojx Cinema in New York 2011 – report

In ADA Gallery, Adam Christensen, Adrian Paci, Adrian Shaw, Alastair Frazer, Alfred Leslie, Allan Stone Gallery, Andrew Edlin Gallery, Andrew Lampert, Art, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Artupdate, Aukje Dekker, Ben Kingsley, Ben Rivers, boyleANDshaw, Brent Green, Carolyn Monastra, Charlesworth, Chelsea, Christina Benz, Christina Wilson, Cinema, Dani Leventhal, David Blandy, David Gryn, David Raymond Conroy, Delphine Perrot, Diego Lama, Dinu Li, Ed Atkins, Edith Marie Pasquier, Elaine Byrne, Emily Richardson, Erik Schmidt, Ezra Johnson, Film, Film and Video, Film and Video Umbrella, Filomena Soares Gallery, Fleisher/Ollman, Frederick Hayes, George Kuchar, HC Berg, Jaime Davidovich, Jakob Boeskov, James Richards, Jasiek Mischke, Jem Cohen, Jennifer Levonian, Jeremy Deller, Jeremy Deller + Chrissie Iles, Jesper Just, Jessica Langley, Jessica Voorsanger, Jessie Mott & Steve Reinke, Joao Pedro Vale, Johan Grimonprez, John Zieman, Jordan Baseman, Karen Azoulay, Kasper Sonne, Kristian De La Riva, Laure Prouvost, Lewandowski & Mann, Luciano Zubillaga, Lucky PDF, Luis Gispert, Lux, Lynne Marsh, Maria Marshall, Marie Losier, Marion Coutts, Mark Leckey, Martha Rosler, Mary Reid Kelley, Matt Calderwood, Matthew Boyle, Matthew Day Jackson, Mounir Fatmi, New York, Nick Laessing, Nicolas Provost, Oliver Pietsch, Patricia Lennox-Boyd, Patrick Coyle, Performance Art, Phil Coy, Pilar Corrias, Ralitza Petrova, Richard Sides, Ruth Paxton, Screenings, Shoja Azari, Shona Illingworth, Sidsel Christensen, Simon Pope, Sterling Ruby, Susanne Vielmetter, SVA Theatre, Tadashi Moriyama, Takeshi Murata, Terry Smith, The Armory Show, Una Knox, Video, Video Art, VOLTA NY, You Know on 12/03/2011 at 4:10 pm

Artprojx Cinema at The SVA Theatre, NY

The Artprojx Cinema at the SVA Theatre project was a great success. Many artists, students, collectors, curators and other gallerists attended the large number of screenings throughout the week. We had wonderful feedback about showing films within the context of the cinema. Sales and gallery introductions were reported back to us at the art fair, as well as offers to the artists for further screenings and exhibitions. We were very pleased with the visual and sound quality of the screenings, also with many attending artists, galleries and curators who had never seen their work in such an impressive cinematic environment.

Artprojx Cinema posters

The value and awareness of the screenings extends to the vast local and global audience who were made aware of the project and programme but who could not attend.

Artprojx Cinema - full house

We had many meetings throughout the week with other major International Art Fairs, who were all impressed by the quality and depth of the programme and the project in general. A general thread had been that the screening of artists’ film and video is complicated and that Artprojx Cinema provides one of the best solutions to many of the screening problems faced by galleries and the art fairs.

As a result Artprojx Cinema has been invited to work on many other similar projects with Art Fairs and Galleries worldwide.

Contact: David Gryn or Poppy Gordon Lennox at artprojxcinema@gmail.com to discuss your project.

Artprojx Cinema

Artprojx Cinema at Night

 

GALLERIES AND THEIR SELECTED ARTISTS:
• ADA Gallery, New York – George Kuchar • Allan Stone Gallery, New York – Alfred Leslie • Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York – Brent Green • Filomena Soares Gallery, Lisbon – João Pedro Vale • Fleisher/Ollman, Philadelphia – Jennifer Levonian • Fredericks & Freiser, New York / Pilar Corrias, London / Susanne Vielmetter, Los Angeles – Mary Reid Kelley • Galleri Christina Wilson, Copenhagen – Jesper Just • Galeria Lucia de la Puente, Lima – Diego Lama • Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki – HC Berg • Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna / Galerie Carlier-Gebauer, Berlin – Erik Schmidt • Gowen Contemporary, Geneva – Nick Laessing • Johansson Projects, Oakland – Tadashi Moriyama • Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Dublin – Elaine Byrne • LTMH Gallery, New York – Shoja Azari • Nettie Horn, London – Oliver Pietsch • Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, New York – Ezra Johnson • Number 35 Gallery, New York – Frederick Hayes • Peter Blum Gallery, New York – Matthew Day Jackson / Adrian Paci • Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago – Luis Gispert • The Cynthia Corbett Gallery, London – John Zieman / Christina Benz • V1 Gallery, Copenhagen – Jakob Boeskov  • V1 Gallery, Copenhagen / Charles Bank Gallery, New York – Kasper Sonne •


PUBLIC ART ORGANIZATIONS AND CURATORIAL PROJECTS – SELECTED ARTISTS:
• Ben Rivers / Edith Marie Pasquier – Adelaide Bannerman, London boyleANDshaw, London • Brent Green / Carolyn Monastra / Dan Torop / Jem Cohen / Jessica Langley & Ben Kinsley / Karen Azoulay – Carolyn Monastra & Megan Cump, New York • Jaime Davidovich / Andrew Lampert / Kristin Lucas / Cynthia Maughan / Takeshi Murata / Martha Rosler – Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), New York  • Simon Pope – Film & Video Umbrella and Olympic Delivery Authority, London  • Aukje Dekker / Kristian De La Riva / Luciano Zubillaga / Ralitza Petrova – Filmarmalade, London  • Phil Coy – FLAMIN (Film London Artists’ Moving Image Network), London • David Blandy / Dinu Li / Emily Richardson / Lynne Marsh / Matt Calderwood – Kim Burgess-Driver Collection, London  • Ed Atkins / David Raymond Conroy / Mark Leckey / Laure Prouvost / James Richards / Mark Aerial Waller – LUX, London  • Marie Losier, New York  • Jessica Voorsanger – Peckham Space, London  • Jeremy Deller & Chrissie Iles / Johan Grimonprez / Maria  Marshall / Mounir Fatmi  / Ruth Paxton – tank.tv, London  • Terry Smith, London  • Adam Christensen / Alastair Frazer / Charlesworth, Lewandowski & Mann / Chris Clarke / Jasiek Mischke / Lucky PDF / Patricia Lennox-Boyd / Patrick Coyle / Richard Sides / Sidsel Christensen – The Woodmill, London  • Dani Leventhal / Jessie Mott & Steve Reinke / Michael Gitlin / Nicolas Provost / Sterling Ruby – Video Data Bank, Chicago  • Aura Satz / Jordan Baseman / Marion Coutts / Shona Illingworth – Wellcome Collection, London  • Alex Noyer / Alex Dunn / Rob Wilton / Stuart Birchall – You Know Limited, London •

Artprojx Cinema New York Map – March 1-6

In Adam Christensen, Adrian Paci, Adrian Shaw, Alastair Frazer, Alfred Leslie, Allan Stone Gallery, Andrew Edlin Gallery, Andrew Lampert, Art, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Artupdate, Aukje Dekker, Ben Kingsley, Ben Rivers, boyleANDshaw, Brent Green, Carolyn Monastra, Charlesworth, Chelsea, Christina Benz, Christina Wilson, Cinema, Cynthia Maughan, Dani Leventhal, David Blandy, David Gryn, David Raymond Conroy, Delphine Perrot, Diego Lama, Dinu Li, Ed Atkins, Edith Marie Pasquier, Elaine Byrne, Emily Richardson, Erik Schmidt, Ezra Johnson, Film, Film and Video, Film and Video Umbrella, Filomena Soares Gallery, Fleisher/Ollman, Frederick Hayes, George Kuchar, HC Berg, Jaime Davidovich, Jakob Boeskov, James Richards, Jem Cohen, Jennifer Levonian, Jeremy Deller, Jeremy Deller + Chrissie Iles, Jesper Just, Jessica Langley, Jessica Voorsanger, Jessie Mott & Steve Reinke, Joao Pedro Vale, Johan Grimonprez, John Zieman, Jordan Baseman, Karen Azoulay, Kasper Sonne, Kristian De La Riva, Kristin Lucas, Laure Prouvost, Lewandowski & Mann, Luciano Zubillaga, Lucky PDF, Luis Gispert, Maria Marshall, Marie Losier, Marion Coutts, Mark Aerial Waller, Mark Leckey, Martha Rosler, Mary Reid Kelley, Matt Calderwood, Matthew Boyle, Matthew Day Jackson, Mounir Fatmi, New York, Nick Laessing, Nicolas Provost, Oliver Pietsch, Patricia Lennox-Boyd, Patrick Coyle, Phil Coy, Pilar Corrias, Ralitza Petrova, Richard Sides, Ruth Paxton, Shoja Azari, Shona Illingworth, Sidsel Christensen, Simon Pope, Sterling Ruby, Susanne Vielmetter, SVA Theatre, Tadashi Moriyama, Takeshi Murata, Terry Smith, The Armory Show, Una Knox, Video, Video Art, VOLTA NY, You Know on 23/02/2011 at 12:28 am

Artprojx Cinema at the SVA Theatre, New York
in association with The Armory Show & VOLTA NY

MARCH 1-6 2011

screenings of artists’ films & videos

SVA Theatre, 333 West 23rd Street between 8th & 9th Avenues

C and E Train is on the corner

This March at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea, New York, Artprojx Cinema, a new art fair collaborative venture is launching initially with The Armory Show and VOLTA NY, screening daily from March 1-6, a program of over 100 artists’ films from over 20 participating galleries alongside an exciting public program of artists’ films from leading international arts organizations and curators.

Artprojx Cinema is FREE

Artprojx Cinema Program to download and print

For more information contact:
David Gryn: +44 (0)7711 127 848

Poppy Gordon Lennox: +44 (0)7881 953 794

artprojxcinema@gmail.com

see related links:

Artprojx Cinema

Film London

The Armory Show

SVA

Soho Shorts

VOLTA NY

Artupdate

FAD (David Gryn interview by Ben Austin)

Delphine Perrot

Nicole Klagsbrun

Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI)

You Know Ltd

Video Data Bank

The Woodmill

Tank TV

ADA Gallery

number 35 gallery

Peckham Space

videoart.net

Charles Bank Gallery

Artlog

wooloo

events.org

Visual Artists Ireland

mutualart.com

chrishenryclarke

This Week In New York

The L Magazine

e-flux