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The filmmaking team behind the queer cinema classic "By Hook or By Crook" (2002), Silas Howard and Harry Dodge stop by. Also, documentary filmmaker Nancy Buirski returns for her 4th visit to discuss her new film "Desperate Hours, Dark City and the Legend of Midnight Cowboy" which opens at FIlm Forum on Friday, 6/23.
Bluets van Maggie Nelson Deze week pakten we een moderne klassieker van de planken: Bluets van Maggie Nelson. Luister hoe Lola en Suzanne zich een weg proberen te banen door Nelsons poëtische, filosofische, en autobiografische proposities over haar relatie met de kleur blauw. Wil je meekletsen met Lola en Suzanne? Laat het ons weten op Instagram, Twitter en Facebook en gebruik #RadioSavannah. Voor (lees)tips en fanmail zijn we ook te bereiken op info@savannahbay.nl. De Radio Savannah theme song werd gemaakt door Guflux. Het logo is gemaakt door Rike Blom. Meer lezen van Maggie Nelson? We got you! Sinds ‘Bluets' van Maggie Nelson in 2009 verscheen, verwierf het een cultstatus. Het oogstte lof, won prijzen en vestigde haar eigen genre: dat van de literaire, associatieve, persoonlijke essayistiek. Het uitgangspunt is een fascinatie met de kleur blauw. In een mozaïek van 240 korte teksten (‘proposities') met thema's als verlangen, kunstenaarschap, alcohol, vrouwelijke seksualiteit, plezier en pijn, cirkelt Nelson rondom die betekenisvolle en prachtige kleur. De verteller beschrijft onder andere het pijnlijke einde van een liefdesrelatie en een ernstig ongeluk van een goede vriendin. Ze onderzoekt wat de waarde is van kunst en schoonheid in tijden van groot verdriet. De lezer blijft betoverd achter: hoe is het mogelijk dat iemand in woorden zo dicht bij het onzegbare kan komen? ‘Bluets' is een rauwe, poëtische, onvergetelijke leeservaring. Vind het boek hier [NL] en hier [EN] in de webshop. In deze genderbending memoires komt cultuurcritica Maggie Nelson met frisse, krachtige en hoognodige overpeinzingen over seksualiteit, verlangen en ‘familie', en de beperkingen en mogelijkheden van zowel de liefde als de taal. In De Argonauten staat een liefdesgeschiedenis centraal: de relatie van de auteur met de kunstenaar Harry Dodge. Nelson laat ons van binnenuit zien hoe het is om verliefd te worden op Dodge, die genderfluïde is. Ze neemt ons mee op de lange weg van een zwangerschap, en ze toont ons de ingewikkelde en de mooie kanten van een gezin dat afwijkt van de norm. Nelson pleit voor radicale individuele vrijheid en de waarde van de zorg voor een gezin – je zou het de strijdkreet kunnen noemen van dit oorspronkelijke, wijze boek dat geen onderwerp schuwt en geen concessies doet. De Argonauten stond op de ‘Beste boeken van 2015'-lijsten van onder andere de Chicago Tribune, The New York Times, The New Yorker, San Francisco Chronicle, Flavorwire, The Irish Times, Kirkus, Los Angeles Times, NPR, Publishers Weekly en The Guardian. Het boek is genomineerd voor de National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism 2016. Vind het boek hier [NL] en hier [EN] in de webshop. Maggie Nelson's third collection of poems combines a wanderer's attention to landscape with a deeply personal exploration of desire, heartbreak, resilience, accident, and flux. Something Bright, Then Holes explores the problem of losing then recovering sight and insight - of feeling lost, then found, then lost again. The book's three sections range widely, and include a long sequence of Niedecker-esque meditations written at the shore of a polluted urban canal, a harrowing long poem written at a friend's hospital bedside, and a series of unsparing, crystalline lyrics honoring the conjoined forces of love and sorrow. Whatever the style, the poems are linked by Nelson's singular poetic voice, as sly and exacting as it is raw. The collection is a testament to Nelson's steadfast commitment to chart the facts of feeling, whatever they are, and at whatever the cost. Vind het boek hier in de webshop. Onderstaande boeken van Maggie Nelson kun je hier bestellen via ons betselformulier: -- Shiner (2001) -- The Latest Winter (2003) -- Jane: A Murder (2005) -- The Red Parts: A Memoir (2007) -- Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (2007) -- The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning (2011)
Subscribe to Quotomania on Simplecast or search for Quotomania on your favorite podcast app!Maggie Nelson was born in 1973 and grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. She received a BA from Wesleyan University in 1994 and a PhD from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York in 2004. She is the author of the poetry collections Something Bright, Then Holes (Soft Skull Press, 2007), Jane: A Murder (Soft Skull Press, 2005), The Latest Winter (Hanging Loose Press, 2003), and Shiner (Hanging Loose Press, 2001).Nelson has also published several works of lyrical prose, including The Argonauts(Graywolf Press, 2015), which received the 2015 National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism, and Bluets (Wave Books, 2009). Of Bluets, the poet Rob Schlegel writes, “The result not only defies easy categorization, but also leans toward Walter Benjamin's famous declaration that all great works of literature either dissolve a genre or invent one.”Nelson has also received fellowships from the Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts, among others. She currently teaches at the California Institute of the Arts. She lives in Los Angeles with her partner, the artist Harry Dodge.From https://poets.org/poet/maggie-nelson. For more information about Maggie Nelson:Previously on The Quarantine Tapes:Maggie Nelson on The Quarantine Tapes: https://quarantine-tapes.simplecast.com/episodes/the-quarantine-tapes-048-maggie-nelsonDanielle Spencer about Nelson, at 10:05: https://quarantine-tapes.simplecast.com/episodes/the-quarantine-tapes-172-danielle-spencer“Maggie Nelson”: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/maggie-nelsonBluets: https://www.wavepoetry.com/products/bluets“An Interview with Maggie Nelson”: https://believermag.com/an-interview-with-maggie-nelson/
In this episode, artist and writer Harry Dodge reads from My Meteorite, or Without the Random There Can Be No New Thing (Penguin Press, 2020). Perhaps best known as a sculptor, Dodge writes from inside the artist's life and the sometimes inchoate density of a studio practice. Tracking us through cosmic patterns and material grapplings as they intersect with family, work, and grief, this first book gives us a genre-defying memoir that succeeds, as well, as art writing. Harry Dodge is an American visual artist and writer. He was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2017, and his sculpture, drawing, and video work has been exhibited at many venues nationally and internationally, including JOAN (LA, 2018), Tufts University Art Gallery (2019), Grand Army Collective (Brookyn, 2017), and the Armory Center for the Arts, Pasadena (2016). His first book, My Meteorite, was published by Penguin Press in 2020. We wish to thank Jacob Irish (Editor), Mitra Shreeram (Assistant Producer), and Chris Andrews (Sales Director and Podcast Design). Thanks especially to Harry Dodge for his contribution to this season. And thank you to Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery for their support.
In this episode, artist and writer Harry Dodge reads from My Meteorite, or Without the Random There Can Be No New Thing (Penguin Press, 2020). Perhaps best known as a sculptor, Dodge writes from inside the artist's life and the sometimes inchoate density of a studio practice. Tracking us through cosmic patterns and material grapplings as they intersect with family, work, and grief, this first book gives us a genre-defying memoir that succeeds, as well, as art writing. Harry Dodge is an American visual artist and writer. He was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2017, and his sculpture, drawing, and video work has been exhibited at many venues nationally and internationally, including JOAN (LA, 2018), Tufts University Art Gallery (2019), Grand Army Collective (Brookyn, 2017), and the Armory Center for the Arts, Pasadena (2016). His first book, My Meteorite, was published by Penguin Press in 2020. We wish to thank Jacob Irish (Editor), Mitra Shreeram (Assistant Producer), and Chris Andrews (Sales Director and Podcast Design). Thanks especially to Harry Dodge for his contribution to this season. And thank you to Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery for their support.
In this special Artist Takeover, we welcome award winning director (Transparent, Pose, Dickinson) Silas Howard in conversation with celebrated writer and visual artist Harry Dodge. Long time friends and collaborators they discuss among other things working together on their film By Hook or By Crook about their experience in San Francisco’s queer community. They open up the show speaking about how narrative can be a powerful tool in films as the plot will closely overlap with activism.Plus,they discuss how representation is almost always disappointing- Sila’s meteoric rise as a trans filmmaker and we listen as Harry reads an excerpt from his new book, My Meteorite: Or, Without the Random There Can Be No New Thing. Tune in as Harry and Silas explain why Covid is the perfect opportunity to realize that we are all interconnected in society. ----------------- LAUNCHLEFT OFFICIAL WEBSITE https://www.launchleft.com LAUNCHLEFT PATREON https://www.patreon.com/LaunchLeft TWITTER https://twitter.com/LaunchLeft INSTAGRAM https://www.instagram.com/launchleft/ FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/LaunchLeft --------------------- LaunchLeft is an alliance of left-of-center artists, a label, a podcast, a curation engine. LaunchLeft Podcast hosted by Rain Phoenix is an intentional space for Art and Activism that enlists famed creatives to launch emerging bands. LaunchLeft begins with music, but ultimately aims to launch left-of-center artists in all creative fields. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Is love a force akin to gravity? A kind of invisible fabric which enables communications through space and time? Artist Harry Dodge finds himself contemplating such questions as his father declines from dementia and he rekindles a bewildering but powerful relationship with his birth mother. A meteorite Dodge orders on eBay becomes a mysterious catalyst for a reckoning with the vital forces of matter, the nature of consciousness, and the bafflements of belonging. Structured around a series of formative, formidable coincidences in Dodge’s life, My Meteorite journeys with stylistic bravura from Barthes to Blade Runner, from punk to Pale Fire. It is a wild, incandescent book that creates a literary universe of its own. Blending the personal and the philosophical, the raw and the surreal, the transgressive and the heartbreaking, Harry Dodge revitalizes our world, illuminating the magic just under the surface of daily life. _______________________________________________ Produced by Maddie Gobbo & Michael Kowaleski Theme: "I Love All My Friends," a new, unreleased demo by Fragile Gang.
This week, we're joined by Felicia Angeja Viator, author of To Live and Defy in LA: How Gangsta Rap Changed America. Eric, Kate and Medaya talk with Felicia about the rise of gangsta rap in Los Angeles, the sounds and culture that defined the era, the artists and performers who rose to stardom, and how we still see the effects of that sound in music today. Also, artist Harry Dodge, author of My Meteorite, returns to recommend Crudo A Novel by Olivia Laing This is the ninth episode in our series on LA and Southern California writers, artists and filmmakers. This episode of the LARB Radio Hour is supported in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency. Learn more at www.arts.ca.gov. Any findings, opinions, or conclusions contained herein are not necessarily those of the California Arts Council.
This week, we're joined by Felicia Angeja Viator, author of To Live and Defy in LA: How Gangsta Rap Changed America. Eric, Kate and Medaya talk with Felicia about the rise of gangsta rap in Los Angeles, the sounds and culture that defined the era, the artists and performers who rose to stardom, and how we still see the effects of that sound in music today. Also, artist Harry Dodge, author of My Meteorite, returns to recommend Crudo A Novel by Olivia Laing.
What better way to break out of the stay-in-place doldrums, and reflect on this transformational moment, than to consider the role of the random in the creation of the new with one of our most brilliant shape-shifters, artist Harry Dodge. Kate, Medaya, and Eric speak with Harry from four different locations across Southern California on the occasion of the publication of his first, already-heralded, book, My Meteorite. Harry talks about what motivated him to write, how he arrived at a form that interweaves memoir-like accounts with extended philosophical reflections - and, of course, the content of those reflections. The imagination of Harry Dodge is an exciting place; and your random encounter with this podcast just might inspire new approaches to our new reality. Also, Garth Greenwell, author of Cleanness, calls in to recommend The Gift by Barbara Browning. This is the eighth episode in our series on LA and Southern California writers, artists and filmmakers. This episode of the LARB Radio Hour is supported in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency. Learn more at www.arts.ca.gov. Any findings, opinions, or conclusions contained herein are not necessarily those of the California Arts Council.
What better way to break out of the stay-in-place doldrums, and reflect on this transformational moment, than to consider the role of the random in the creation of the new with one of our most brilliant shape-shifters, artist Harry Dodge. Kate, Medaya, and Eric speak with Harry from four different locations across Southern California on the occasion of the publication of his first, already-heralded, book, My Meteorite. Harry talks about what motivated him to write, how he arrived at a form that interweaves memoir-like accounts with extended philosophical reflections - and, of course, the content of those reflections. The imagination of Harry Dodge is an exciting place; and your random encounter with this podcast just might inspire new approaches to our new reality. Also, Garth Greenwell, author of Cleanness, calls in to recommend The Gift by Barbara Browning. This is the eighth episode in our series on LA and Southern California writers, artists and filmmakers. This episode of the LARB Radio Hour is supported in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency. Learn more at www.arts.ca.gov. Any findings, opinions, or conclusions contained herein are not necessarily those of the California Arts Council.
Harry Dodge’s My Meteorite: Or, Without the Random There Can Be No New Thing shifts its scale from the cosmos to viruses.
"Je n'arrivais pas à survivre, à transitionner dans mon milieu d'origine", raconte Ettore dans l'épisode 24 d'Extimité. Ce migrant italien, étudiant, illustrateur, poète, et travailleur du sexe y évoque notamment : . (03:00) Son enfance solitaire en Italie où il a très tôt voulu exprimer sa transidentité : "Dire que je suis un garçon à ma mère est l'un de mes tous premiers souvenirs.". (19:30) Ses différents coming-out et premiers contacts avec la communauté queer. (26:00) En quoi sa queerness influe sur sa classe sociale. (36:00) Les violences possibles dans les soirées queer : "Je me rends compte à quel point il faudrait mettre un peu beaucoup de féminisme dans le monde gay !" . (51:00) Ses dessins et ses poèmes. (57:00) Le travail du sexe en tant qu'homme transgenre : "Quand je travaillais comme vendeur en boulangerie, j'étais beaucoup plus souvent mégenré par mes client.e.s. et questionné sur mon identité. Maintenant que je suis travailleur du sexe, mon corps dans sa transidentité la plus visible n'est pas du tout remis en question, c'est assez beau et empouvoirant.". (1:05:30) Sa relation au maquillage. (1:09:00) Ses ami.e.s queers qui sont sa famille choisie et lui donne de la forceCe podcast est une création originale de Douce Dibondo et Anthony Vincent.Pistes sonores diffusées :. "It's ok to cry" — SOPHIE. "Main bitch" — M¥SS KETA. "Smisurata preghiera" — Fabrizio De AndréLes 5 recommandations culturelles d'Ettore : . "Night sky with exit wounds", recueil de poèmes de Océan Vuong, son poète préféré. . "Clarity", album de Kim Petras, sa plus récente obsession . "Euphoria", une série américaine "qui décrit de façon si belle et pertinente tellement de situations vécues sur ma propre peau". . "Tangerine" (2015) de Sean S. Baker, "film drôle et kitsch qui aborde sans voyeurisme et avec plein de justesse, la prostitution, la transidentité, et l'amitié entre soeurs trans.". "By Hook or By Crook" (2001), de Harry Dodge et Silas Howard, "un film réalisé par deux réalisateurs trans qui se mettent eux-même en scène" Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Join us this month's book club as we discuss Maggie Nelson's queer memoir The Argonauts! Overview Maggie Nelson’s 2015 book The Argonauts combines theory and memoir in a successful attempt to prove that the political is personal. Combining queer theory, feminism, a bit of Marxism, a dollop of psychoanalysis, heaps of gender theory, and a healthy dose of highfaluting post-structuralism, Nelson undertakes an odyssey like the mythic Argonauts not in pursuit of any Golden Fleece but a record of the self’s permutations and the difficulties with understanding others when all of our experiences appear so diverse. Nelson’s writing comfortably rests between the informality of a blog and the professionalism of a tenured professor. Her writing rests in this golden mean by suffusing her text with quotes as wide-ranging as Ralph Waldo Emerson to Judith Butler, Michel Foucault to her partner Harry. Rather than introduce each zinger of a quote like an academic paper she cites the quote in italics while identifying its author in the margins. The effect works splendidly and renders the reading experience with heady but fluid results. The narrative consists of two stories, Nelson’s pregnancy where she faces her femininity in lurid but intimate detail, and her husband Harry Dodge’s gender reassignment where their body becomes slowly transformed in intense but exciting ways. Positioned between these two are their children, one Nelson slowly becomes more acquainted with, the other a new life force growing inside our author. The title of the book references Roland Barthes, Nelson quoting “the phrase ‘I love you’ is like ‘the Argonaut renewing his ship during its voyage without changing its name.’ Just as the Argo’s part may be replaced over time but the boat is still called the Argo, whenever the lover utters the phrase ‘I love you,’ its meaning must be renewed by each use…” The Argonauts mission is one that attempts to locate meaning in a world where meaning seems to take away our freedom. Nelson finds that even in alienated modernity “the inexpressible is contained – inexpressibly! In the expressed.” The read is a deeply engaging one for anyone even remotely interested in gender or queer theory, and makes what for many people is deeply unsettling, familiar, funny, but most importantly, unflinchingly honest. -Jordan Finn Show Notes Music this show provided by the Big Sky Trio. Check out their album Short Stories on Spotify or wherever you get music! To see more arty stuff by our funky collective of ne'er-do-wells visit waste-division.org Also if you're interested in subscribing to our monthly independent art distro visit our Patreon page! Podcast produced by Phillip Griffin. Graphic by Cooper Malin.
Anna Craycroft and Harry Dodge consider the legacy of Black Mountain College and talk about sociality and learning, didactics and museum display, and inherent tensions within art education.
In our fourth episode of Broadside, we discuss the play Love Person written by Aditi Brennan Kapil and currently playing at Park Square Theatre in St. Paul. For Broadside Book Club, we review Maggie Nelson's book The Argonauts, and for Broadside Film Skool we review Harry Dodge and Silas Howard's film By Hook or By Crook.
Tender Points (Timeless/Infinite Light) The Argonauts (Graywolf Press)Tender Points is a narrative fractured by trauma. Named after the diagnostic criteria for fibromyalgia, the book-length lyric essay explores sexual violence, gendered illness, chronic pain, and patriarchy through the lenses of lived experience and pop culture (Twin Peaks, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, noise music, etc.).Praise for Tender Points""Tender Points does precisely what people are always saying can't be done—it combines a moving, distilled, literary journey with advocacy and even pedagogy, here about trauma, chronic pain, patriarchy, and more. Call it "écriture féminine en homme," if you want (as Berkowitz does, with acid wit)—but whatever you call it, this is firm, high-stakes speech speaking truth to power, radiating beauty and fierceness from its inspiring insistence and persistence."—Maggie Nelson"'Trauma is nonlinear,' writes Berkowitz. I am impressed by the sensing form she makes. That has the day in it, as well as the night. The body, that is, in variable settings, frames and weathers. The stairs that 'climb up my arms and neck.' The 'I am bitterly jealous of people who can always go back to being a barista for a while.' This book is a kind of clutching and being there for real, and that is what I like. A book. That takes up. A visceral form."—Bhanu Kapil"Tender Points is one of those books that feels necessary. It takes on rape culture and cops and doctors, the whole long history of who gets to speak and how, who gets heard and who doesn't and why not. I wish this book wasn't as necessary as it is, but I'm so grateful to Amy for writing it."—Stephanie YoungAmy Berkowitz is the author of Tender Points (Timeless, Infinite Light, 2015). Her work has also appeared in Dusie, Textsound, Where Eagles Dare, and VIDA's Reports from the Field series. In 2014, she was a Writer in Residence at Alley Cat Bookstore & Gallery. She lives in a rent-controlled apartment in San Francisco, where she is the founding editor of Mondo Bummer Books and the host of the Amy's Kitchen Organics reading series. , . . Maggie Nelson's The Argonauts is a genre-bending memoir, a work of "autotheory" offering fresh, fierce, and timely thinking about desire, identity, and the limitations and possibilities of love and language. At its center is a romance: the story of the author's relationship with the artist Harry Dodge. This story, which includes Nelson's account of falling in love with Dodge, who is fluidly gendered, as well as her journey to and through a pregnancy, offers a firsthand account of the complexities and joys of (queer) family-making. Writing in the spirit of public intellectuals such as Susan Sontag and Roland Barthes, Nelson binds her personal experience to a rigorous exploration of what iconic theorists have said about sexuality, gender, and the vexed institutions of marriage and child-rearing. Nelson's insistence on radical individual freedom and the value of caretaking becomes the rallying cry of this thoughtful, unabashed, uncompromising book.Praise for The Argonauts"What a dazzlingly generous, gloriously unpredictable book! Maggie Nelson shows us what it means to be real, offering a way of thinking that is as challenging as it is liberating. She invites us to 'pay homage to the transitive' and enjoy 'a becoming in which one never becomes.' Reading The Argonauts made me happier and freer." --Eula Biss"Maggie Nelson cuts through our culture's prefabricated structures of thought and feeling with an intelligence whose ferocity is ultimately in the service of love. No piety is safe, no orthodoxy, no easy irony. The scare quotes burn off like fog." --Ben Lerner "There isn't another critic alive like Maggie Nelson--who writes with such passion, clarity, explicitness, fluidity, playfulness, and generosity that she redefines what thinking can do today. Indeed, I come away from The Argonauts with a heady, excited sensation of having seen unveiled a new era of embodied, soulful rumination. Her impeccable sentences destroy doxa and gleefully remake the body politic; her prose seems air-borne, like an Argus-eyed levitator in touch with the divine. Buoyant, Nelson soars through art and philosophy and her own experiences with reckless mastery and insurrectionary ease--a virtuosity born of deep reflection and fearless trust in what literature, at its best, can do." --Wayne Koestenbaum"In The Argonauts, Maggie Nelson turns 'making the personal public' into a romantic, intellectual wet dream. A gorgeous book, inventive, fearless, and full of heart." --Kim Gordon"The Argonauts takes us on delicious journey into the real life intimacies and intricacies of queer love, sex, literature, and motherhood. Maggie Nelson's honesty, intelligence, humor and great writing transform what society might deem a radical, non-traditional lifestyle into the new desirable. A fucking gem of a book that touched and tickled all my sweet spots."--Annie Sprinkle"Once again, Maggie Nelson has created awe-inspiring work, one that smartly calls bullshit on the places culture--radical subcultures included--stigmatize and misunderstand both maternity and queer family-making. With a fiercely vulnerable intelligence, Nelson leaves no area un-investigated, including her own heart. I know of no other book like this, and I know how crucially the culture needs it." --Michelle Tea Maggie Nelson is the author of nine books of poetry and prose, many of which have become cult classics defying categorization. Her nonfiction titles include the New York Times bestseller The Argonauts (Graywolf Press, May 2015), The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning (Norton, 2011; named a New York Times Notable Book of the Year), Bluets (Wave Books, 2009; named by Bookforum as one of the top 10 best books of the past 20 years), The Red Parts: A Memoir (Free Press, 2007), and Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (U of Iowa Press, 2007); her poetry titles includeSomething Bright, Then Holes (Soft Skull Press, 2007) and Jane: A Murder (Soft Skull, 2005; finalist for the PEN/ Martha Albrand Art of the Memoir). She has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in Nonfiction, an NEA in Poetry, a Literature Fellowship from Creative Capital, and an Arts Writers Fellowship from the Andy Warhol Foundation. She holds a Ph.D. in English Literature from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and has taught literature and writing at the New School, Pratt Institute, and Wesleyan University. Since 2005 she has been on the faculty of the School of Critical Studies at CalArts. She lives in Los Angeles.
Between The Covers : Conversations with Writers in Fiction, Nonfiction & Poetry
An intrepid voyage out to the frontiers of the latest thinking about love, language, and family. Maggie Nelson binds her personal experience, the story of her relationship with the fluidly-gendered artist Harry Dodge, to a rigorous exploration of what iconic theorists have said about sexuality, gender, and the vexed institutions of marriage and child-rearing. The Argonauts […] The post Maggie Nelson : The Argonauts appeared first on Tin House.
Universo vídeo inicia una nueva línea de trabajo, con la que el Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial se propone presentar una investigación en torno a este medio, presentando obras realizadas desde los años 60 hasta la actualidad. (04.02.2011-04.04.2011). El espectador debe contemplar Historias cinéticas como un viaje discursivo por algunas de las intervenciones creativas y las prodigiosas visiones que han caracterizado el uso que los artistas han hecho del vídeo y de los medios digitales. Se exponen, en un diálogo recíproco, dos piezas por cada una de las décadas que median entre los años 60 y los 2000. Artistas: Dara Birnbaum, Harry Dodge & Stanya Kahn, Joan Jonas, Kristin Lucas, Takeshi Murata, Bruce Nauman, Nam June Paik & Jud Yalkut, Raindance, Pipilotti Rist y Leslie Thornton.