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  • Interview with Joan Semmel

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Selected Videos

 
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  • Ann Liv Young, Snow White (excerpt)
    An excerpt from Ann Liv Young's performance Snow White.
  • HBO Preview Trailer for True Blood: Season Two.
    3:06
    An HBO preview trailer for True Blood: Season Two.
  • Spalding Gray, Swimming to Cambodia (excerpt)
    Spalding Gray
    An excerpt from Spalding Gray's Swimming to Cambodia.
  • Charlie White, OMG BFF LOL (“Bathroom” excerpt)
    Charlie White's video OMG BFF LOL from his “Girl Studies” series.
  • Luciana Achugar performance at Klaus von Nichtssagend
    2007, 9 minutes 41 seconds
    Choreographer Luciana Achugar at Klaus von Nichtssagend gallery in a performance on September 8, 2007.
  • CI08 Interview with Haegue Yang
    Carnegie Museum of Art
    2008
    From the Carnegie Museum of Art: “Haegue Yang‘s art resists a defining medium, engaging instead with a range of means, from wall drawing to books, sculpture, installation, moving image, and photography. The oblique self-analysis that Yang uses as both strategy and substance in her ”placeless“ art is symptomatic of someone who has lived for many years outside of her native country and whose life and work entail the high-mobility and in-transit condition common to many contemporary artists operating internationally. This acute sense of provisional belonging—being at home in what is foreign and feeling foreign in what is home—lends Yang’s work a hair-trigger sensitivity for the inflections of quotidian experience as well as public and private territories. She has described her practice in terms of a poetic activism. Three Kinds (2008) employs commonplace objects such as venetian blinds, lights, and mirrors to create an atmosphere of dramatic intimacy. Though the specific point of conceptual departure remains obscured—Yang relates this and similar installations to abstract portraits of various individuals from Asian and European history—the interaction of the elements might be seen as a stand-in for human relations.”
  • Rirkrit Tiravanija, JG Reads, 2008 (trailer)
    2008, 10 hours, 6 minutes
    A trailer for Rirkrit Tirvanija‘s JG Reads, 2008. Originally debuted at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise in New York, 11/22/2008 – 12/20/2008. A 500 Words interview with John Giorno can be found on Artforum.com here.
  • Fischli & Weiss, Der Lauf Der Dinge (The Way Things Go), 1987, Part 2
    30 minutes
    Part Two of Fischli & Weiss's Der Lauf Der Dinge
     
    Part One is here.
     
    Part Three is here.
  • The making of David Cronenberg's Crash.
    8:46
    From the 1997 Criterion Collection laserdisc for Crash (1996). Interviews with J. G. Ballard, David Cronenberg, James Spader, Holly Hunter, Elias Koteas, and Deborah Kara Unger.
  • Christopher Hitchens gets waterboarded
    Vanity Fair
    performance documentation
    Vanity Fair's documentation of writer Christopher Hitchens being waterboarded.
  • R.J. Cutler, The September Issue, 2009 (clip)
    0:41
    A clip from R.J. Cutler's documentary The September Issue.
  • Chris Marker, Sans Soleil, 1983. (Excerpt)
    3:56
    A brief excerpt from Chris Marker's classic film Sans Soleil.
  • Neill Blomkamp, Alive in Joburg, 2005
    6:24
    Neill Blomkamp's 2005 short Alive in Joburg
  • Charlie White, OMG BFF LOL (“Mall” excerpt)
    2008
    Charlie White's cartoon OMG BFF LOL from his project “Girl Studies” 2008.
  • Mark Dion at Bartram Gardens, Philadelphia
    2008
    Mark Dion returns to Bartram Gardens after the first leg of his journey following in the footsteps of John Bartram.
  • David Barison and Daniel Ross, The Ister, 2004. (Excerpt)
    9:01
    An excerpt from David Barison and Daniel Ross's film, The Ister.
  • Matthew Barney and Richard Flood discuss the Cremaster cycle (Part 3 of 5)
    Artist Matthew Barney and curator Richard Flood discuss Barney's Cremaster films. This is part three of five parts. For the others, click the following links:
     
    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4
    Part 5
  • Leo Villareal in his studio
    Cool Hunting
    “Our 65th video visits New York-based light sculptor Leo Villareal in his Chelsea studio a week before his third solo show in Manhattan inaugurates the new Gering & López gallery. Leo walks us through his latest three sculptures that he‘s exhibiting, including ”Hive,“ an interactive piece, ”Field,“ which is a massive sunset-like work of shifting colors and a piece like ”Origin“ based on Newtonian physics. We also get a peak at the custom software Leo uses to program his mesmerizing patterns of light and get a sampling of other large-scale outdoor installations he’s completed.”
  • Jérôme Bel, The Show Must Go On (excerpt)
    Jérôme Bel
    An excerpt from Jérôme Bel's The Show Must Go On.
  • Interview with artist Alexandra Bircken
    Stedelijk Museum
    2008
    In early 2008, Alexandra Bircken exhibited a series of new works at the Stedelijk Museum's Docking Station under the title of “UNITS.” This video contains an interview with the artist and footage from the exhibition.
  • Ann Liv Young, American Crane Standards, 2002 (excerpt)
    Ann Liv Young
    2002
    Ann Liv Young, American Crane Standards 2002.
  • Charles Atlas and Michael Clark, Hail the New Puritan, 1985-86 (intro excerpt)
    Charles Atlas
    1985-86, video, 84 minutes (original)
    The introductory sequence for Charles Atlas's video featuring Michael Clark, Hail the New Puritan. Charles Atlas reflects on his work with Clark here.
  • Matthew Barney and Richard Flood discuss the Cremaster cycle (Part 5 of 5)
    Artist Matthew Barney and curator Richard Flood discuss Barney's Cremaster films. This is part five of five parts. For the others, click the following links:
     
    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4
    Part 5
  • General Hospital episode featuring James Franco and Kalup Linzy.
    3:35
    General Hospital episode featuring James Franco and Kalup Linzy. Aired July 23, 2010.
  • Terry Richardson on the snapshot
    Belvedere
    An excerpt from an interview with photographer Terry Richardson
  • Harmony Korine, Trash Humpers, 2009. Trailer
    0:47
    A trailer for Harmony Korine's Trash Humpers.
  • “Swoon: Swimming Cities of Switchback Sea”
    Scribe Media
    2008
    “Swimming Cities of Switchback Sea by Swoon is a floating art performance, a project that took the efforts of seventy-five collaborators and a year to produce. The boats, or floating sculptures, were assembled and shipped to Troy, New York, stopping by various towns along the river for impromptu performances.”
     
    This video, timed to coincide with the opening of her newest exhibition in New York, features interviews with Swoon and with Jeffrey Deitch.
  • Martin Creed, Work No. 850, 2008 (interview and footage)
    2008, performance
    TateShots talks with Martin Creed about his project at Tate Britain, Work No. 850, which consists of runners dodging visitors as they sprint through the gallery as fast as they can. It happens every thirty seconds, jolting this normally serene space for an instant.
  • Interview with Joseph Beuys (1972)
    Willoughby Sharp interviews Joseph Beuys in 1972.
  • “Artist's Studio: John Chamberlain”
    Plum TV
    From Ovation TV: “Arne Glimcher, one of the foremost gallerists and contemporary art dealers in the world, presents this series on great living artists. This episode focuses on American pop artist John Chamberlain.”
  • Dara Birnbaum, Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman, 1978–79
    Dara Birnbaum
    1978
    Dara Birnbaum's seminal 1978 video.
  • Julian Schnabel on 60 Minutes, December 7, 2008
    12 minutes
    Morley Safer profiles Julian Schnabel on this episode of 60 Minutes.
  • Willoughby Sharp's “Reappearance” at Mitchell Algus Gallery, Part 1
    James Kalm
    “A brief recording of Willoughby Sharp's exhibition ”Reappearance“ documenting his career as a performance artist. Beyond the works pictured, Sharp has, for over forty years, been a constant presence on the New York art scene. Perhaps best known for his innovative melding of performance and technology, he was instrumental in bringing Joseph Beuys to the attention of America, expounding the practice of conceptual art with his publication of Avalanche, establishing video as high art, running a cutting-edge gallery during the East Village epoch, and curating important exhibitions at major museums and institutions. Featuring interviews with Willoughby Sharp and Mitchell Algus.”
     
    Willoughby Sharp passed away on December 17, 2008.
  • Miguel Gutierrez, Everybody, 2007 (excerpt)
    Miguel Gutierrez
    The “Ecstasy” section from Miguel Gutierrez's performance Everybody.
  • Elmgreen & Dragset, video clip from Memorial for Homosexual Victims of Nazism
    2008
    A clip from Thomas Vinterburg‘s film (shot by Robby Müller) of two men kissing, a component of Germany’s national memorial for homosexual victims of National Socialism. The opening of the memorial, designed by artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset, was covered on Artforum.com’s diary.
  • Interview with Jamie Isenstein
    Mads Lynnerup
    2007
    An interview with Jamie Isenstein. Interview conducted by Mads Lynnerup on December 10th, 2007.
  • Matt Mullican performs under hypnosis at Tate Modern
    January 2007; 4:52
    Artist Matt Mullican under hypnosis at the Tate Modern in January 2007. An interview with Mullican while under hypnosis appears in the January 2009 issue of Artforum. The interview is available here.
  • Matthew Barney and Richard Flood discuss the Cremaster cycle (Part 4 of 5)
    Artist Matthew Barney and curator Richard Flood discuss Barney's Cremaster films. This is part four of five parts. For the others, click the following links:
     
    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4
    Part 5
  • Cindy Sherman in her studio in 1986
    State of the Art
    This video is an excerpt of an episode of State of the Art, a series of documentaries about the visual arts in the 1980s. Filmed in Europe, the United States, and Australia in 1985-6, the six programs feature many key artists including Cindy Sherman, Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Antony Gormley, Hans Haacke, Eric Fischl, and Joseph Beuys.
  • “Mea Culpa” by Brian Eno and David Byrne
    Bruce Conner
    1981
    “Mea Culpa” is a track from Eno and Byrne's album My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts (1981). The late artist Bruce Conner made this film to accompany the song.
  • Fischli & Weiss, Der Lauf Der Dinge (The Way Things Go), 1987, Part 3
    30 minutes
    Part Three of Fischli & Weiss's Der Lauf Der Dinge.
     
    Part One is here.
     
    Part Two is here.
     
  • Richard Kelly, The Box, 2009. Trailer
    2:09
    The trailer for Richard Kelly's The Box (2009).
  • Trailer for Objectified (2009)
    Gary Hustwit
    A peek at the upcoming design documentary Objectified, by Gary Hustwit, the director of Helvetica. The trailer features the voices of Jonathan Ive, Andrew Blauvelt, Marc Newson, and Karim Rashid. The song is “I Like Van Halen Because My Sister Says They Are Cool” by El Ten Eleven.
     
    Objectified premieres at film festivals and events worldwide starting this March, more info here.
  • Peter Liechti, Kick That Habit, 1989 (excerpt)
    An excerpt from Peter Liechti‘s film Kick That Habit (1989). Jim O’Rourke selected this film for his Top Ten in the January 2009 issue of Artforum. To see the whole list, click here.
  • CI08 Interview with Vija Celmins
    Carnegie Museum of Art
    2008
    From the Carnegie Museum of Art: “Characteristically rendered in muted tones, blacks, and whites, Vija Celmins‘ paintings and drawings explore the farthest reaches of restraint and representation. Her art seeks to understand the limits of human experience through imagery that points toward uninhabitable, desolate, and unbound beauty—the ocean, the desert, and the night sky are subjects that appear repeatedly in her paintings. Yet it is photographs rather than actual natural expanses that form the direct basis for her work. The Night Sky paintings derive from details of flat pages from magazines—the horizonless starry depths have been imperfectly ”scanned“ and translated by Celmins onto the canvas in a way that implies a seductively held tension of surface and depth, detail and illusion. In a process the artist has compared to masonry or brickwork, she laboriously deposits and constructs, sands, or erases the monochromatic pigments ”to fix the image in the memory.“ The Night Sky works openly invite myriad connotations from philosophical meditations on humanity’s place in the cosmos to starry allusions to the ”final frontier“ in television and cinema.”
  • CI08 Interview with Sharon Lockhart about Pine Flat
    Carnegie Museum of Art
    2008
    From the Carnegie Museum of Art: “Blending rigorous aesthetic concerns with an anthropologist‘s sensibility to community engagement and observation, Sharon Lockhart uses film and photography to create poignant, beautiful, and intimate portraits. She carefully manipulates formal elements as she explores certain concepts with regularity: portraiture, the relationship between photography and film, and the combination of fictive or choreographed performances with unscripted, intimate moments. The film Pine Flat and the accompanying color photographs ”Pine Flat Portrait Studio“ (both from 2005) present a spare, meditative series of filmic and photographic portraits of a group of children the artist came to know during her nearly four-year stay in Pine Flat, California. Pine Flat is a two-part film focusing on children and adolescents interacting in the sublime landscape surrounding this small rural community. Its determinedly languid pace engages the viewer in a self-conscious reflection on the process of looking and offers a meditation on the subjective experience of time, particularly as an aspect of children’s lives.”
     
    To read Sharon Lockhart‘s “1,000 Words” interview, published in the February 2000 issue of Artforum, click here.
     
    To read Brian Sholis’s review of Lockhart's film Lunch Break (2008), click here.
  • A Conversation with Alex Coles & Jorge Pardo
    Otis College
    2008
    From the video's producer: “A conversation with Alex Coles, Chair of Fine Arts at Otis College of Art and Design and contemporary artist Jorge Pardo. Among the subjects discussed is Art/Design and Design/Art. Also shown and discussed are several structures and interiors by Pardo.”
  • Charlie White, OMG BFF LOL (“Bedroom” excerpt)
    Charlie White's cartoon OMG BFF LOL from his project “Girl Studies” 2008.
  • Jacob Ciocci, The Peace Tape, 2008
    4:02
    Jacob Ciocci's 2008 video The Peace Tape.
  • Fischli & Weiss, Der Lauf Der Dinge (The Way Things Go), 1987, Part 1
    30 minutes
    Part One of Fischli & Weiss's Der Lauf Der Dinge
     
    Part Two is here.
     
    Part Three is here.
  • Jeff Krulik, Heavy Metal Parking Lot, 1986 (trailer)
    A trailer for Jeff Krulik's 1986 film Heavy Metal Parking Lot. Andrew Hultkrans covered a conversation with Krulik at Light Industry in January 2009. His piece can be found here.
  • A short documentary about Larry Clark
    Jamie Winterstern
    2006
    Larry Clark discusses his life and work, featuring clips from Kids (1995) and Wassup Rockers (2005). Directed by Jamie Winterstern.
  • Michael Clark and The Fall, Lay of the Land (1984 performance footage)
    Michael Clark
    1984, performance footage
    Footage of Michael Clark‘s dance troupe performing with The Fall for their song “Lay of the Land” during a 1984 performance at the Old Grey Whistle Test. Excerpts from Artforum’s feature on Clark are available online here.
  • Augusta Palmer, The Hand of Fatima, 2009. (Trailer)
    1:53
    The trailer for Augusta Palmer's documentary The Hand of Fatima (2009_.
  • Documentation of Peter Coffin's UFO project
    Peter Coffin
    2008
    From Peter Coffin‘s studio: “This summer a U.F.O. was built and flown over the Baltic Sea and into the Gulf of Gdansk where it was witnessed by onlookers whose sightings were captured on cell phone cameras, camcorders, digital cameras, 35 mm SLRs. The photographs and videos are not unlike classic U.F.O. documentation; they are grainy, blurry, and may appear to be of skeptical origin. While the U.F.O. in these photos is real, this familiar documentation initiates inclinations toward curiosity, skepticism or belief.
     
    ”In 1958 Carl Jung wrote, ’Flying Saucers, A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Sky‘ arguing that an increasing rate of U.F.O. sightings, could be understood as a corollary effect of the eras pervasive atomic fears. Jung’s theory is that extreme social unrest and psychological stress may manifest U.F.O sightings as a ‘uniting symbol’ in the collective unconscious. The rampant armament of nuclear nations, war, poverty, religious fanaticism and other social scares fluctuate with the frequency of U.F.O. sightings. Jung‘s prompt postulated that the rate of sightings reported must have been endemic of a larger social phenomena, a ’projection-creating fantasy‘ giving shape to broader psychological experience.
     
    “It is a fact that the frequency of U.F.O. sightings is higher during times of war. A faith in rational reasoning is disturbed in these times and can result in the conviction of abstract notions of reality such as spiritualism, or fantasy. This project initiates a harmless encouragement to consider such phenomena and perhaps even consider how or why our consciousness adapts the way that it does. By facilitating sightings and potentially belief, this project encourages a kind of thinking that escapes the comfort of ordinary perspective. With respect to this project, just as the purpose of art is to ’wash the dust of daily life off our souls‘ according to Pablo Picasso, it is also ’the lie that enables us to realize the truth.'”
  • “Scribble Drawings”
    MASS MoCA
    2008
    “Sol LeWitt: A Wall Drawing Retrospective, opened November 16, 2008 at MASS MoCA.”
  • Mary Heilmann interview
    Crown Point Press
    2008
    From the video's producer: “Artist Mary Heilmann talks about etching, video games, Renaissance perspective, and keeping the bourgeoisie happy.”
  • Trailer for Eric Bricker’s Visual Acoustics (2009)
    2:16
    Trailer for Eric Bricker’s Visual Acoustics (2009)
  • “California Video”
    The Getty Center
    “California Video” (March 15, 2008–June 8, 2008) at the Getty Center featured the work of fifty-eight artists, duos, and collectives including Ant Farm, John Baldessari, Brian Bress, Nancy Buchanan, Chris Burden, Allan Kaprow, Mike Kelley, Suzanne Lacy, Bruce Nauman, Martha Rosler, Bill Viola, and William Wegman.
  • Obama's weekly address, November 15, 2008
    The first of Barack Obama's weekly addresses broadcast on YouTube. In the January 2009 issue of Artforum, novelist Lynne Tillman offers some considerations on this and other broadcasts by Obama. For more details, click here.
  • “Design Matters: Live with Lawrence Weiner”
    Debbie Millman
    2008
    An interview with Lawrence Weiner by Debbie Millman.
  • Trailer for Lars von Trier, Antichrist, 2009.
    1:55
    The trailer for Lars von Trier's Antichrist.
  • “Brownie Husband” sketch featuring Tina Fey on Saturday Night Live.
    1:31
    “Brownie Husband” sketch featuring Tina Fey on Saturday Night Live.
  • CI08 Interview with Mark Manders
    Carnegie Museum of Art
    2008
    From the Carnegie Museum of Art: “Since 1986, Mark Manders has been engaged in an ongoing project he refers to as ”Self-Portrait as a Building,“ mapping his artistic persona through site-specific renegotiations of physical materials in space. Taking the shape of sculptures, installations, and drawings, these subtle rearrangements of existing and invented forms fuse specific and seemingly incongruous elements—figures, animals, archaeological fragments, everyday objects, and architectural components—into a new visual language. Room with Clothes, Belt and Contact Lenses (1992-2008) is the title of a sculptural installation consisting of multiple works. In the largest work, Continuous Livingroom Scene (2007-2008), two figures appear split down the middle and arranged with wooden beams and plates, while a third, abstracted figurative ”fragment“ is discernible only by its mop of hair. Chair (2003) is a ”found“ object as its title suggests, while Assignment (2008) is an odd accumulation of the artist's clothes, shoes, contact lenses, and money. Also on view, Fox/Mouse/Belt (1992) is a poignant floor sculpture of two incongruous beings arrested mid-leap. Bound together by a leather belt and placed on the floor, the animals are frozen in an indeterminable moment in time. Within each object and from one installation to the next, Manders expresses the potential for symbiotic relationships between disconnected or opposing parts.”
  • David Byrne conversation with Jeff Koons in 1975
    Jamie Dalglish
    1975, documentation
    1975 video recorded by artist Jamie Dalglish of David Byrne having a conversation with Jeff Koons at 52 Bond Street. Via paintings + drawings and Art Fag City. © Jamie Dalglish
  • Stefan Sagmeister interview
    Hillman Curtis
    2008
    Hillman Curtis films Sagmeister at his recent exhibition, titled “Things I have learned so far.”
  • Alva Noto's Neue Stadt (Skizze 8), 2001
    Carsten Nicolai
    2001
    The video for Alva Noto/Carsten Nicolai's Neue Stadt (Skizze 8), 2001.
  • Bernadette Corporation, Get Rid of Yourself, 2003. (Excerpt)
    9:12
    An excerpt from Bernadette Corporation's 2003 video esssay Get RId of Yourself.
  • John Cage, 4'33", 1952. Performed by David Tudor
    David Tudor performs John Cage‘s 4’33", 1952 in 2006.
  • George Brecht, Drip Music, (performance)
    George Brecht's Drip Music performed at Tate Modern in May 2008 during the UBS Long Weekend.
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