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High
Performance: The First Five Years, 1978 – 1982
Organized by guest curator
Jenni Sorkin
Opening reception
Saturday 1 February 2003, 6 to 8 pm
1 February - 30 March
2003
This project is part of Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions' special
25th Anniversary Series
PRESS CONTACT: Julie
Deamer
Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions presented "High Performance: The First Five Years,
1978-1982" from 1 February - 30 March 2003. An opening reception
occurred on Saturday 1 February 2003, 6 to 8 pm. This exhibition
was part of Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions' special 25th Anniversary
Series.
"High Performance:
The First Five Years, 1978-1982" was organized by Jenni Sorkin
and reconsiders the first international magazine devoted exclusively
to live performance art. Based in Los Angeles, High Performance
magazine ran as a quarterly from 1978-1997. The magazine provided
a forum for both local and international artists, many of whom in
the years beyond the 1970s and early 1980s became known as prominent
and highly influential artists.
Utilizing material from
the High Performance archive, housed in Santa Monica, CA, as well
as from the artists themselves, the exhibition examines the first
five years of the magazine’s history through correspondence,
layouts, photographs, videos, artists’ books, and other objects.
With its radical, non-commercial status, performance art was, for
much of the 1970s, an unrecognized discipline flourishing in both
New York and Los Angeles, and Western Europe. Assembling performance
documentation from a wide range of established and emerging artists,
High Performance offered coverage to artists whose practices often
challenged the boundaries, conventions, and silences of the established
art world. Through live, body-based works, artists engaged experiences
of autobiography, catharsis, and social injustice, challenging the
ideological separations between art and life.
Operating on an open
submission policy from its founding in 1978 until 1982, the magazine
was a crucial publication that provided the necessary critical conditions
needed to create and sustain an audience for the new genre. Through
the publication of artists’ texts, the magazine documented
the performance art movement at its inception, and in the recent
years after many key works had been completed. The magazine featured
15-80 artists per issue, providing a breadth and depth of materials
previously unseen. A significant document, High Performance is a
historical archive of seminal artists, but also a testament to passionate
practice and independent activity. Artists included in this exhibition
are Nancy Buchanan, Chris Burden, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Kim Jones,
Suzanne Lacy, The Lesbian Art Project, Paul McCarthy, Linda M. Montano,
Gina Pane, Rachel Rosenthal, Carolee Schneemann, Barbara T. Smith,
the Waitresses, and others.
Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions’ programming in 2003, the year the organization
turned twenty-five, was comprised of presentations that brought
together artist alumni from this institution’s rich history
and younger artists whose careers are burgeoning. A conceptual continuum
with the organization's founders was emphasized as well as the legacy
of this organization, founded to champion the presentation of new
art and art forms. High Performance’s crucial early coverage
of LA's performance art scene documents, in tandem, a seminal period
in Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions own history; nearly half
of the artists featured in this show are alumni of Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions, and many of the projects documented occurred under
its auspices.
Founded the same year,
in 1978, on the same principle, to provide a forum for new and innovative
art that challenges artistic conventions, High Performance and Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions share a vital history. Fittingly,
the institution’s 25th Anniversary Series will be launched
by "High Performance: The First Five Years, 1978-1982,"
followed in May by the presentation of "Small Skyscraper,"
a new sculptural/architectural work by renowned Los Angeles artist
and alumni Chris Burden.
In conjunction with "High
Performance: The First Five Years, 1978 - 1982," Irene Tsatsos
organized a performance series called "The Rebirth of Wonder"
that featured new work by Los Angeles artists.
Jenni Sorkin is an independent curator and freelance critic who
has written for numerous art magazines and journals. The exhibition
originated as an MA thesis exhibition at The Center for Curatorial
Studies Museum, Bard College, in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.
She is at work on a book about High Performance magazine and other
art publications of the 1970s.
Admission to Los Angeles
Contemporary Exhibitions is free with a recommended donation of
$3.00 ($2.00 students, members free). Gallery hours are Wednesday
- Sunday 12 - 6 pm, Friday 12 – 9 pm. Call 323.957.1777 for
parking information, directions, and additional information.
Support for Los Angeles
Contemporary Exhibitions and this program came from the Andy Warhol
Foundation for the Visual Arts, California Arts Council, California
Community Foundation Arts Funding Initiative, City of Los Angeles
Cultural Affairs Department, Getty Grant Program, Thornton S. Glide,
Jr. and Katrina D. Glide Foundation, the LEF Foundation, Los Angeles
County Arts Commission, and the members of Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions.
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