Posts Tagged ‘Kota Ezawa’

Disclosure Posted on February 11, 2010 by Dodie Bellamy

When I visit SFMOMA I am both an outsider without status and an artist in my own right, with a peculiar variety of privilege. Being a writer, I’m not central to the Bay Area art scene, but I bisect with it in overlapping circles. If you know any curators, the first thing that you’ll realize is that in private they love to act out, to throw off the formal constraints of writing copy for catalogues and signage, or whatever they call those informative blocks of text that hang on the gallery walls, from which the first person in forbidden. In private they take enormous pleasure in disclosing, in writing the forbidden, getting all personal and critical and gossipy, throwing around the first person with abandon. Get them alone and they’re eager to extricate themselves from the official discourse of the museum, to show the human side of the process, all the insecurities and resentments and near catastrophes. They expose their feelings about their jobs, and how at times when rushing around the museum they’re stopped in their tracks by the wonder of a piece of art.

Even with my privilege, there’s something about art museums that makes me feel diminished, like I need to be on my best behavior: all those rules for participation, you can’t bring in any water, if you want to carry your backpack you have to carry it in front of you, don’t stand too close, don’t touch, and everywhere the noticing guards. The whole set up makes one long to act out, to do something naughty. In the late 90s I brought the students from the composition class I was teaching at the San Francisco Art Institute to the museum to write about Kara Walker’s room-sized installation No Mere Words Can Adequately Reflect the Remorse This Negress Feels… (1999).

Kara Walker

Kara Walker, No mere words can Adequately reflect the Remorse this Negress feels at having been Cast into such a lowly state by her former Masters and so it is with a Humble heart that she brings about their physical Ruin and earthly Demise, 1999

Their writing instructions were to subvert the objectivity of the essay form, and to narrate their unique experience of viewing Walker’s work, including the mood in the room, the behavior of other viewers, and how they were feeling that day. So my students took in Walker’s silhouettes depicting the violence of slavery and the sexual horror of the plantation, and used it as an opportunity to use the word “fuck” in their writing. They used it over and over again, like they were wallowing in their liberty. They were being silly and libidinal, yet they were making a point, for the word “fuck” does crumble the stuffy rigmarole of undergrad comp class culture.

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20 Bay Area Artists & Videos Posted on January 6, 2010 by Joseph del Pesco

In collaboration with Happenstand, last summer I compiled a provisional list of some of the most important living artists in the SF Bay Area to share with curator friends abroad and those visiting. It includes artists who have realized exhibitions at museums, solo shows at galleries, and experience outside California and in most cases the US. In other words it’s an attempt at a quantitative rather than qualitative survey. We called it Stance both as a play on the name Happenstand and the idea of taking a stance. Using the Stance artists as a starting point I searched YouTube, Vimeo and Google for videos related to these artists. Here’s what I found:

Marcopoulos_tour Shows_YBCA

talks

Kota Ezawa
Odessa Staircase Redux (start at 3:28)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAbAuh15Abo

Ari Marcopoulos
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBG1Iu1YWWg

Trevor Paglen
Blank Spots on the Map
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mApBa2qKVDM

Leslie Shows
Display of Properties
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-CIoZNkiDg

Aaron Gach
Center for Tactical Magic
http://vimeo.com/4585845

Discenza_DreamHome Greene_Consultation

works

Anthony Discenza
Dream Home
http://www.vimeo.com/1488393

Chris Sollars
C Red Blue J
http://www.vimeo.com/1909936

Packard Jennings
Mussolini Action Figure at Wal-mart
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0JnmXq-k6g

Josh Greene
Consultation
http://vimeo.com/1198912

Lubell_silent Murgida_(w)hole

previews / overviews

Sam Green
Utopia, Part 3: The World’s Largest Shopping Mall
http://www.pbs.org/pov/utopia/

Kamau Patton
Glass House
http://vimeo.com/4073532

Bernie Lubell
Silent
http://vimeo.com/7396296

Stephanie Syjuco
COPYSTAND: An Autonomous Manufacturing Zone
http://vimeo.com/7409004

Future Farmers
Free Soil Bus Tour
http://www.futurefarmers.com/tour2/busvideo.html

Jonn Herschend
Embrace of the Irrational
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNKnHj6nldM

Lucas Murgida
(w)hole
http://www.vimeo.com/5835719

Kuchar Blank_Herzog

legacy

Tom Marioni
Freehand drawing
http://www.vimeo.com/2800446

George Kuchar
I, An Actress
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOXpDCkOiCo

Bruce Conner
Ten Second Film
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/2638467/bruce_conner_ten_second_film/

Les Blank
Herzog Eats his Shoe
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSRN14ZcJQ4

Odessa Steps Posted on June 12, 2009 by Kevin Killian

Odessa Steps

Last month I got to play an iconic figure of cinema when the San Francisco-based artist Kota Ezawa recruited me, and dozens of others, for a forthcoming project. He was planning, he said, to recreate the famous “Odessa Steps” sequence of Sergei Eisenstein’s 1921 silent film Battleship Potemkin. I would play the old lady who gets her glasses broken.

Would I do it? Hell yeah! I have worked with Kota many times and always had a ball. He is one of the most imaginative and perceptive artists around. I trust his instincts more than I do my own, so even if I don’t understand why he wants what he wants, I generally fall in. And I embarrass him by telling him is he is my culture hero—a variation on the “science hero” of the Alan Moore comic books—or as they say in his native Germany, he is my “held.” When he confided years back that he planned on making a full length animation of the infamous “sex tape” of Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee, in which I would play the unctuous preacher who married them, I just said, where do I show up? A version of this animation, “Two Stolen Honeymoons Are Better Than One,” was part of the exhibition he presented at the SECA Award show at SFMOMA back in 2006.

Kota and Kevin

Putty in the hands of Kota Ezawa. Note the artificial gray in my hair.

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