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The
Rebirth of Wonder
LOS ANGELES, February
2003 – In February and March Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions
presented a series of performances, concerts, readings, and video/film
that documented performative activity entitled "The Rebirth
of Wonder." The series featured a diverse group of artists
working in a variety of time-based media, with the use of the body
as a key component of much of the content of the work. This project
was organized by Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions’ Director/Curator
Irene Tsatsos.
"The Rebirth of
Wonder" accompanied an exhibition entitled "High Performance:
The First Five Years, 1978-1982". The exhibition, organized
by guest curator Jenni Sorkin, consisted of documentation of and
detritus from performances that were documented in High Performance,
the first international performance art magazine. Interestingly,
many of the artists whose performances were included in the "High
Performance" show presented work at Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions, and of those performances half actually took place
here or under our auspices.
The performance series
and the exhibition reflected each other well -- one being historical
and retrospective, the other a forward-looking series of fresh work
and new ideas by artists who are emerging and based in Los Angeles.
Below
the Belt
15
February, 7-9 pm, $5
An audio/clash/performance with Juan Capistran,
Ricardo Espinoza, Carlos "Ghetto Blasta" Mendoza, and
Mario Ybarra
This
evening was a vibrant, dynamic melding of sound, music, and live
action by four artists who employ (among other things) a DJ sensibility
in their work. The presentation/live action/sound melded high- and
low-tech, featuring eclectic elements including instruments made
from materials as diverse as old Atari computers and plastic cups,
turntables (old and new), sampled sound, spoken word, and more.
The Girl
Was Saved
22 February, 7-9 pm,
$5
Durational performance by Lauren Hartman
and Curt LeMieux
In "The Girl Was Saved," Hartman and LeMieux
combined living tableaux with formal drawing and sculptural elements
to dissect the four words that comprise the work’s title.
These still, contemplative installations delved into language to
retrieve buried images, stimulating the viewer’s curiosity
and luring one into the work’s suggestive narratives.
Canadian Rain
26
February through 8 March
(reception Saturday 1 March 6-8 pm)
Video projection by Trisha Donnelly
A
black-and-white video projection that documents an attempt to produce
rain in a distant Canadian forest. The viewer is presented with
a picture of the artist enacting a beat sequence that creates rain
in Canada. Also on display was a piece entitled "Blind Friends,"
a photograph of Trisha’s blind friends on the beach. The artist
told them to walk into the wind and then away from the wind. The
subjects felt as though the wind surrounded them and became disoriented.
They began walking as if they were wandering on the beach
Tom
Thumb
A story written and read by Derrick Jefferson
and...
8
March, 7 pm, $5
My Dear Sweet Organs Cords, Violet Adjustment After Kusama,
Livers in My Belly, and Descriptive Memories
Stories written and read by Pam Strugar
Derrick
Jefferson offered a hilarious yet painful account of an apparently
regular but ultimately delusional guy who happens to be sitting
next to Tom Cruise in a diner on La Cienega. The guy awkwardly discloses
personal information and, under the assumption that by sharing counter
space they have become confidants, he expects Tom Cruise to do the
same.
Pam Strugar
offered a shocking series of autobiographical, poetic/prose narratives
about surgical procedures, violence, sex, defiance, and social questions.
Dude
Dogg
15
March, 7-9 pm, $5
Multi-media concert
performance by Dude Dogg with Gerald Davis, David Deany, and Charles
Irvin (pictured above)
The
members of Dude Dogg are visual artists that wear dog costumes as
they perform rock 'n' roll covers in a style that is excitingly
sloppy, exuberant, raw, and energetic.
Butterfly
of the Mountains
19 March through 30 March
(reception Thursday 20 March 6-8 pm)
screening times: 6:00, 6:45, 7:30
Video projection by Alicia Beach
"Butterfly of the Mountains", shot on black and white,
super eight film, documents the painting process for Alicia Beach's
Psychosomatic Epiphanies Series (to be shown at Rosamund Felsen
Gallery from 22 March through 19 April 2003). In it, the painter,
debilitated by a broken leg, uses a rope and pulley contraption
to create 10' by 13' paintings, in the form of Rorschach ink blot
drawings, on the floor. She applies paint between two sheets of
paper, while one is suspended above her. This half, she then lets
down, compresses, and hoists up and open, like a sail, to reveal
an abstract, symmetrical image. The grainy and silent film, while
stylistically reminiscent of performance and action painting work
from the ‘50s, ‘60s, and ‘70s, characterizes her
style of painting as a delicate, sensual, internal, balancing act.
Yet, her endeavor, given the physical challenge and presence of
mind necessary (to avoid ripping the paper or letting the paint
dry) also likens to a one-legged mariner's risky and treacherous
sea voyage. And, by virtue of its scale, the psychological test
assumes a daunting task for the abstract painter, imbuing her romantic,
soul-searching and spiritually transcendent ideals with the egotistically
humbling psychoanalytic process.

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