Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Performance At The Whitney Museum


                 For our fifth class field trip we visited the Whitney Museum. The exhibit we viewed was called the "Rituals of rented island" which contained documents of performing arts in New York. The works of art were influenced by the forces which were found in time period that the artist lived through which were cultural, social, and political forces. Since the artists were from New York, the U.S. involvement in war had an effect on some of their work. Also, cultural and social differences between the people that lived through these times had an impact on their performances. There were three documented performances that caught my attention when looking through the exhibit.
         The first documented performance I viewed was by The Kipper Kids called "Performance at the kitchen" (1978). The video showed the performers being hostile too one another but clumsiness would make their stunts back fire and make their actions hysterical. The description of Kipper's performances seems to infer that it is a political reference. The realistic violence portrayed in a funny way. In a way, it mocks the issues having to do with religion and social rituals. Their bodies are used to express pain these issues cause.
          The second documented performance that caught my attention was By Michael Smith titled "Baby Ikki" (1978). The video was of a man dressed and acting like an infant in the street. He had a diaper, baby like clothes, and baby toy props. The man would walk back and forth actin as a baby would act in the environment of their house or anywhere else. He would sit down in the middle of the street and crawl around while a car would stop. A crowd would surround him while he would throw tantrums, even if he was being laughed at he would not lose character. I think this shows a social reference due to in society grown-ups would have childish moments or would act childish on purpose. Seeing this performance live would give me a better understanding in seeing the expressions of the audience.
          The last performance that interested me in a way is titled, Shake!DaddyShake!" by Julia Heyward. I really didn't understand it because I viewed it for a short amount of time but I saw Julia shaking her hands and then eventually saying Shake Daddy Shake. I would think it’s a social reference too because from the short clip I saw it seemed like sudden burst of random words. I would definitely get the performance if I were to see it live.  
          I learned to understand that the performances of these New York artist referred to political, cultural, and social forces. These few examples that I mentioned showed some references to these forces. After this experience I now have some sort of idea in identifying if a performance was inspired by the events of the time period. 

Kipper Kids
"Performance At The Kitchen"
Video B/W 56min
1978

Michael Smith
"Baby Ikki"
1978

Julia Heyward
"Shake! Daddy! Shake!"
Recorder
1976

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

LES Galleries Reaction

              Last week's trip to LES galleries was an interesting experience to me. The LES galleries were different from that of Chelsea's but also had its similarities. Although the artist in LES are not really recognized as much as the artists from Chelsea the artworks are great. These younger artist can become well known in he near future from my opinion from looking at the galleries. There were three galleries that impressed me that were fond in orchard street. 
              The Bosi Contemporary gallery found in 48 orchard street presented works from Dean Dempsey. The space in this gallery was much larger then most of the other found in the LES. It Seemed more neat as in cleaner and the works looked better presented. Although it was one of the larger spaces its still small compared to those of Chelsea. The work by this artist was similar to Phil Collins work in the Chelsea gallery, where there were artworks that advised the audience that there is explicit content. 
               The next two galleries that caught my attention were the Lesley Heller work space and Mckenzie Fine Art located in 54 & 55 Orchard street. The works were definitely different from Chelsea's galleries and the space was a lot smaller. The work in the Lesley Heller's gallery presented installations and the work in Mckenzie Gallery displayed paintings that look like pictures from outer space, the design and color just grabbed my attention. Chelsea's galleries did not really interest me as much as he works found in the LES. 
               I believe the area had a lot to do with my reactions to the galleries. The neighborhood where the Chelsea Galleries were located seemed abandoned yet if one was to walk a couple of streets they would find a lot of clothing stores and restaurants. Looking at a area like this I expected more in the art works but as for the LES galleries, the area was run down, small businesses in between galleries, small streets, and people actually lived on the apartments on top of the galleries. Looking at this area I wasn't expecting much and was impressed more because the work was modern.