Hedvig Aannestad Iost: INTERWEAVE (2024) Video installation
 

CLOWDY REFERENCES

 

 

Kathy Acker

Claude Cahoun

Shu Lea Cheang

Sergei Eisenstein

Max Ernst

Valie Export

Hilmar Fredriksen

Mary Kelly

Lucy Lippard

Adrian Piper

Yvonne Rainer

Olga Ravn

Martha Rosler

Carolee Schneemann

Elaine Sturtevant

Joan Jonas

Lynne Tillman

Amalie Smith

Lynne Hershman

 

 

Kommunikasjonstykke /Communication Piece

 

Installasjon, 1979

 

Hilmar Fredriksen

 

Notat fra en tekst om HF

 

"Kroppen som hylster" HF

"The body as a holster" HF

Kroppen som oppbevaringsted, beholder, skattekiste og tornekrans

 

CLOWDY NOTES


>> Klara

>> Morten

Bodddies, Downloaded, Konvoluttet 

 

A response from KiT students as a state of mind and bodddies — troubled, enchanted, shaken, loaded, recorded, surveilled, moving or on standstill, dancing, sleeping. A state of the moment, of art. Across media. An open invitation with surprise answers. Future Selves… from the corporal to the virtual. To be developed. Bodddies as carriers, of memories and data. Uploaded, Downloaded. Still not perfect. Even with three ddds.

 

An exhibition at Galeri KiT, June 21 - 30.


METAMORPH, upLOADED Bodies
Meta.Morf 2024 explores the physical and technological body caught between virtual ecstasy and digital obesity, and the tension that arises within the liminal space of virtual and physical reality.

BILL TRAYLOR

 

Adrian Piper

 

Funk Lessons (1982-84)

 

Funk Lessons on See This Sound   ...imparting of a physical language listening by dancing...

 

Visual Art Source, Michael Shaw on Adrian Piper.

 

Tanya Zimbardo on Adrian Piper`s Funk Lessons.

Adrian Piper

The Barbie Doll Drawings (1967)

NO-BODY

NOBODIES

 

> Denise Ferreira da Silva

 

A BODY OF WORK

WORK BODIES AT

BENCH

Paul Cortot

art with the body

as an actor

without being

present


Mark Manders on the decision to become an artist
I was also extremely fascinated by the fact that I wore shoes and that my feet had become so week after undergoing such a long evolutionary process and that they could no longer do without the protection afforded  by my shoes.


... how humanity had arrived at the human world through innumerable decisions and how the body related to this...      about Selfportrait as a building

“In the first place, I never learned to draw.” Sergei Eisenstein, Ex-Stasis, 1932.

Stuart Liebman, Naum Kleiman´s Eisenstein on Paper in Artforum.

 

Yvonne Rainer: Where is the passion? Where is the politics? Lecture at MIT, April 07, 2014.

THE NOTION OF COLLAGE

Folding things into the same frame that don’t necessarily belong to each other

and could this relate to our body-discussions?


In the case of Yvonne Rainer: Dance and a lecture on economy, while making dance-moves

Martha Rosler: Body Beautiful, or Beauty Knows No Pain (1966-72)

“Could a naked woman be at the same time a producer of images and an image?”

Mary Kelly 


Mary Kelly _ a pdf about her work, interviews, texts etc.


Thesis: Defining the Body-Object of Minimalism: Yvonne Rainer and the 1960s by Tom Hastings.

This thesis explores the ways in which Yvonne Rainer’s manipulation of the body was bound up with minimal sculptors’ examinations of the object. Reading across texts, statements, and practices of a range of artist-critics at work through the 1960s, including Rainer, Lucy Lippard, Robert Morris, Donald Judd, Rosalind Krauss, Susan Sontag, and Barbara Rose, it seeks to identify points of transfer between critical approaches to dance and sculpture that were, on the surface and in the literature, answerable to different sets of concerns. Rather than draw a superficial analogy between the viewer’s traversal of the gallery and the activity of the dancer, this movement is considered with recourse to the metonym, a linguistic trope that signals a set of active, moving procedures embedded in the specificity of the text


Overflooding imagery

Image overflooding

We have become the hoarders and gatherers

the collectors of imagery

A desperation for not a life in the digital but for the everlasting, extravagant and indeed constant stream of newly glossedimages formed and shaped and tangled and created 

 

Everybody wants to be somebody

Nobody wants to be any      body for some other body

Schneeman's Doubt:

SOURCE

 AS A SOURCE - TRANSMITTER/RECEIVER - MEDIUM

 

How does the body get into your work?

A BODY ABCDAIRE

representation 

image

trace

print

presence

absence

voice

smell 

control

workout

abstraction

essence

necessity

absolute

exchangeable

copy

 

 

ART AND THE OBSOLESCENE PODCAST

 

Net art pioneer Shu Lea Cheang, interviewed by Emma Dickson. Together they discuss the conservation of Shu Lea’s piece Brandon (1998-1999), how the remnants and ephemera of creative practice lives in archives, institutional link rot, and Shu Lea’s fruitful decades long collaboration with a programmer whom she’s never met.


Links from the conversation with Shu Lea
> Shu Lea’s website: https://mauvaiscontact.info
> Brandon: http://brandon.guggenheim.org/
> Restoring Brandon: https://www.guggenheim.org/blogs/checklist/restoring-brandon-shu-lea-cheangs-early-web-artwork
> Emma's website: https://emmadickson.info
> Emma’s walkthrough of Brandon: https://youtu.be/qq2_t3U_f9U
> Emma's TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@__emmadickson


reading corporeal - fabrics - new pessimism?



https://www.amaliesmith.dk/thread-ripper?lang=en


https://artreview.com/byung-chul-han-how-objects-lost-their-magic/


https://www.moma.org/collection/works/96093?artist_id=2486&page=1&sov_referrer=artist


https://www.artpapers.org/amanda-grae-platner-its-still-not-me-its-you/


https://www.artsatl.org/qa-amanda-grae-platner-makes-sense-of-the-world-through-paint-and-performance/


https://www.artpapers.org/of-oysters-roaches-and-new-pessimism-in-hong-kong/





Shu Lea Cheang

Note taking 29.04.24 

Klara

Open call - text, reply to Meta-morf

 

A wish to keep our bodies offline, to stay under the cloud, staying offline, performance and material based, material of references on overhead? in a performance where someone changes the images and texts, projected up on the clouds. 

ArtsATLHow did you discover performance art?

Platner: My idea of performance developed in 2013 when I was diagnosed with a chronic illness. I thought to use my body because that’s what I was feeling the most challenged about. I was trying to understand my body and deal with the loss of time, the inability to control my body and not being able to predict what the next day would bring.

 

https://www.artsatl.org/qa-amanda-grae-platner-makes-sense-of-the-world-through-paint-and-performance/

Hej… !


I koppling till Meta-Morf biennalen 2024 ska studenterna vid Kunstakademiet i Trondheim arrangera en utställning i Galleri KIT. Vi planlägger att använda flera längder tyg till att klä in galleriet för att projicera bilder på och transformera rummet och känslan av det. Därför kontaktar vi nu teatrar, dansstudios och museum för att se om det finns tyg från tidigare produktioner som vi kan ta över eller låna. 


Har ni möjligtvis tyg på ert lager?


Med vänliga hälsningar 

Klara Lager Sandberg


 

Maritea Dæhlin er en kunstner som jobber og bor i Norge og Mexico. Hun er spesielt interessert i atferdsmønstre, emosjoner, ritualer og møter. Arbeidet hennes spenner fra teater, video, performance, lyd og scenetekst. Kunstnerskapet hennes er preget av det lekne, ikke-lineære og til tider absurde.

Sleep Locks the Bones is a sound performance where text and voice stand at the center in a collective experience around the theme of sleep. Audiences, in small groups, are invited to settle into a comfortable position, relax and then listen to a voice that fails to do just that: to relax. The piece intertwines language, rhythms, narratives, and dreams, creating a vibrant scenic auditory landscape.

 

https://www.mariteadaehlin.com/projects/sleeplocksthebones

 

"Sleep" is the theme that ties it all together. Sleep as a metaphor for a place where we can completely let go, feel safe, give space to our subconsciousness and dreams. But also an invocation of its opposite: being completely awake, so much so that you continuously read the world around you.

 

 

Notater møte Kunstarken 2904

morten

In Work Week Performance (Bipartisan), artists Amanda Grae Planter and Hasani Sahlehe worked together to transform the 20x 20x 20 gallery space.  They worked sixteen hours a day, for five consecutive days.  There was no conversation about the process, or the desired outcome, only that both artists agree to work towards a successful piece.  There was no verbal communication during the performance. 

 

The two artists took turns, creating one mark per turn.  For each artist the choice of material, and tool will be made by the other artist.  During a turn, one artist considered what they would like the next mark to be, prepared a tool (example, load a paintbrush with paint), then hand it to the other artist to create the mark.

  

This performance was an exploration in trust, expectations, and loss of control.  Both artists desired the piece to be successful.  However, their individual ideas of success, and how to accomplish that goal were different, creating tension, conflict, and resolution- developing and crescendoing through a body language repertoire that evolved over the week. What emerged was visual jazz.

https://www.mirandakyle.art/bipartisan

Art dealing with bodily function.

 

Mental landscapes

 

 

artworks printed in originalsize