FINA MIRALLES, RELACIONS, RELACIÓ DEL COS AMB ELEMENTS NATURALS. EL COS COBERT DE PALLA, 1975
PERFORMANCE Megan Christiansen PERFORMANCE Megan Christiansen

FINA MIRALLES, RELACIONS, RELACIÓ DEL COS AMB ELEMENTS NATURALS. EL COS COBERT DE PALLA, 1975

Her practice reconfigures the concept of the artistic, within the multiplicity of attitudes that blur what traditional historiography had encompassed under the heading of Conceptual art. The history of art has ascribed Miralles’ production to the Conceptual, Land art or even feminism, without attending to the breadth and complexity of her ideas, which challenge the limits of those labels…

Read More
CAMERON A. GRANGER, DREAM DROP DISTANCE
Megan Christiansen Megan Christiansen

CAMERON A. GRANGER, DREAM DROP DISTANCE

In Dream Drop Distance, Granger uses the histories embodied in karaoke and soul train lines to weave us a new possible future on the other side of disaster. Two custom karaoke booths and their playlists invite visitors to undertake impromptu duets with one another, opening themselves up to the indeterminacies of encounter…

Read More
RAGNAR KJARTANSSON, THE VISITORS, 2012
PERFORMANCE, FILM Megan Christiansen PERFORMANCE, FILM Megan Christiansen

RAGNAR KJARTANSSON, THE VISITORS, 2012

Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson’s nine-screen installation The Visitors was filmed at the historic Rokeby farm in upstate New York. Kjartansson invited a group of friends to stay with him for a week at the ethereal, yet decrepit estate, culminating in the ambitious performance…

Read More
YOKO ONO, CUT PIECE, 1964
PERFORMANCE Megan Christiansen PERFORMANCE Megan Christiansen

YOKO ONO, CUT PIECE, 1964

Ono gave her first performance of Cut Piece (1964) in Kyotoin July 1964. She sat motionless on stage in a traditional Japanese feminine position, and invited members of the audience to cut a piece of her clothing away…

Read More
CAROLEE SCHNEEMAN, INTERIOR SCROLL, 1975/77
PERFORMANCE Megan Christiansen PERFORMANCE Megan Christiansen

CAROLEE SCHNEEMAN, INTERIOR SCROLL, 1975/77

The message I read for Interior Scroll is from the feminist texts in Kitch's Last Meal. The image occurred as a drawing; this image seemed to have to do with the power and possession of naming-the movement from interior thought to external signification, and the reference to an uncoiling serpent, to actual information (like ticker tape, rainbow, Torah in the Ark, chalice, choir loft, plumb line, bell tower, the umbilicus, and tongue)…

Read More