08.29.2012, 03:53 PM | #1 |
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As a tribute to the influential American artist, Mike Kelley (1954-2012), Tate Modern hosts a two-day survey of videos by and with Kelley, to coincide with the opening of a new display in the Poetry and Dream collection wing, featuring Kelley’s 1994 installation Channel One, Channel Two and Channel Three and documentation of his early performance works.
Kelley’s art is rooted in abjection, ritual and cunning ambiguity. It lays bare mechanisms of representation and communication, revealing cultural blind spots through the use of vernacular language and imagery, particularly drawing on American crafts and subcultures. His layered imagery, hijacked from sources as diverse as folk and outsider art, DIY manuals, comics, genre fiction, spiritualism, Ufology, pop psychology, punk, glam and psychedelia, is fused together through the use of a broad range of media, including drawing, performance, video, photography, painting, sculpture, sound, installation and writing. These elements are never simply appropriated, nor dissected in the manner of detached social commentary. From his early paintings and performances made while a student at CalArts to increasingly complex sculptures and multimedia installations, Kelley’s work confronts the viewer with unexpected associations and sabotages expectations, often to tragicomic effect. This attitude is also evident in his video works, from the early The Banana Man (1983), where Kelley poses as the character of a kids’ TV show he has never seen, to the epic Day is Done (2005-06), a stage musical entirely derived from photographs of costumed people found in high school yearbooks and originally planned to have a running time of 24 hours. The programme equally demonstrates Kelley’s penchant for collaboration, through the inclusion of videos made together with Ericka Beckmann, Tony Conrad, Bob Flanagan and Sheree Rose, Paul McCarthy, Tony Oursler, Anita Pace, Raymond Pettibon, Michael Smith, Bruce and Norman Yonemoto, and Cary Loren, founding member with Kelley of Detroit’s seminal noise band Destroy All Monsters. With thanks to the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts, Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI) and Cary Loren. Friday 31 August, 12.00–21.00 Mike Kelley, Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #36 (Vice Anglais), 2011, 25:14 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #36b (Made in England), 2011, 27:58 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, The Judson Church Horse Dance, 2011, 70 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Michael Smith, A Voyage of Growth and Discovery, 2010, 1 hr 30 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, Day Is Done, 2005–2006, 2 hr 49 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, The Bridge Visitor (Legend-Trip), 2004, 17:53 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #1 (Domestic Scene), 2000, 29:44 min, b&w, sound Mike Kelley, Runway for Interactive DJ Event, 2000, 48:23 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, Superman Recites Selections from ‘The Bell Jar’ and Other Works by Sylvia Plath, 1999, 7:19 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Sod and Sodie Sock (Vienna Cut), 1999, 17:38 min, colour, sound Saturday 1 September, 12.00–22.00 Mike Kelley, Cross Gender/Cross Genre (Parts 1 and 2), 1999, 1 hr 59:06 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Out O’ Actions, 1998, 4:25 min, colour, sound Cary Loren with Destroy All Monsters, Strange Früt, 1998, 1 hr, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Fresh Acconci, 1995, 45 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, Tony Oursler and Anita Pace, Pole Dance, 1997, 1997, 31:18 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Heidi, 1992, 62:40 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Heidi’s Four Basket Dances, 1992/2001, 15 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, Bob Flanagan and Sheree Rose, 100 Reasons, 1991, 6:41 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Ericka Beckman, Blind Country, 1989, 19:57 min, colour, sound Raymond Pettibon, Sir Drone, 1989, 55:37 min, colour, sound (feat. Mike Kelley and Mike Watt) Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Family Tyranny (Modeling and Molding), 1987, 8:08 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy, Cultural Soup, 1987, 6:55 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley and Bruce and Norman Yonemoto, Kappa, 1986, 26 min, colour, sound Tony Oursler, EVOL, 1984, 28:58 min, colour, sound (feat. Mike Kelley) Tony Conrad with Mike Kelley, Beholden to Victory, 1980–83, 26 min, colour, sound Mike Kelley, The Banana Man, 1983, 28:15 min, colour, sound http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate...te-mike-kelley |
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08.31.2012, 07:15 AM | #2 |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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Nice one. Thanks Stu.
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08.31.2012, 12:10 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Thanks. I'll definitely go to tomorrow's screenings. Only wish I'd found out about today's one in time.
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08.31.2012, 12:23 PM | #4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: London, UK
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Thanks for this Stu. A cycle up to the Tate tomorrow is in order...
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