Entries by Human Resources (392)

Friday
May252012

Starting Tonight, Friday May 25th - Performances of Breaking and Entering

 

Installation 22-27 May
Performances 25, 26 May at 8pm, 27 May at 7pm
Closing reception 27 May
tickets: https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/244080

“If first we can think about war as a machine of progress - it absolutely moves us forward in terms of technology, resource accumulation and territorial expansion - we see that war is an abuse of nature, first through its fundamental belief in technology (not necessarily opposing nature, but certainly questioning nature as bankrupt, or inadequate), and secondly through the covert agenda of resource accumulation (also a further fueling of technology).

The question of gender roles in relation to war in these terms is tricky. If we acknowledge that war is a primary trope of masculinity, and that during wartime, normative gender roles are re-inscribed, then perhaps the technological dimension of war preserves nature in a romantic and pastoral vision - as a site to conquer. If progress is a function of conflict, then nature would have to be fixed in an ideological position of inferiority and incompetence, something to conflict against and over-rule. War fuels progress in terms of technological development and capital accumulation - at the expense of the natural. Proponents of technology say that there is no such thing as the natural, which is akin to saying the slave is merely property.......”
Artist Arjuna Neuman

Artist Arjuna Neuman will present a gallery installation in response to an original text conceived by Kestrel Burley that explores the relationship between war, sexuality and pornography. A series of vignettes devised from the same text using post-dramatic performance techniques will take place during the exhibit, whereby performers will work to incorporate the environmental elements as “characters” in their performance. Audio and visual textures will transform the installation from a purgatorial space with the threat of action - into a theatrical space - a place of action.

It was of interest to both parties to operate outside of the theatrical norm, where a set designer generally operates in service to the vision of the director. Instead, Neuman would independently create an installation in response to the themes of the text, and would operate with an almost absolute degree of autonomy. In this way, he would participate in the project as almost a “co-writer” through his intuitive, visual interpretations of the text. The performances would take place in the final days of the exhibition, when the ensemble had spent time rehearsing in the installationand absorbing Neuman’s environmental elements.

Neuman naturally works with specificity and thoughtful attention to detail, going to great lengths to obtain materials that have relevant meaning, each object containing a story within itself. Theatre, by contrast, naturally uses bold visual strokes that depend on the suspension of reality to create illusion. Installation work is also experiential and environmental, whereas performance is most often experienced at a distance through a presentational format. The challenge of negotiating these approaches - of Neuman forced to consider the theatrical potential of his work while theatre is forced to acknowledge the present, the real, through object - has fostered a unique and multi-layered dialogue on the show’s themes.

Website: www.breakingandenteringla.com

Friday
May182012

Welcome to Teenage Wasteland of the Arts culminating exhibition

 


Opening reception FRIDAY MAY 18th 6-9 PM

Exhibition continues Saturday May 19th from 12-10 pm.

Participating Artists:
Max Wortman, Anais Hinojosa, Nina Arsenian, Andrew Becerra, Sam Hinsvark, Jacob Small, Val Koziak, Alisa Cacho-Sousa, and Finn West

Teenage Wasteland of the Arts is an artist collective for teens aged 14-19. The collective was founded by both teens and adults in September of 2011. Since January this year , members of the collective have met once a week for 2 hours at a time, at Human Resources, preparing work for this show.  All the work in the show is made by teen members of the collective.

We are currently in the middle of a fundraiser for the program –please check out our KICKSTARTER PAGE:

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1373562771/twa-dogma-2012

Our goal as an art collective is to create an inspiring, philosophical environment for teen artists to express their fears, dreams and nightmares, their hopes, angst and oppression, in a positive and safe way.  This February, members of Teenage Wasteland of the Arts wrote their own artist dogma, aptly named TWA DOGMA 2012, which has served as inspirational guidelines to frame the work made by the collective this spring.

For more information on the collective please visit our website:

www.wastelandofthearts.com

TWA DOGMA 2012

Every piece must have an element of collage

Work made under the dogma must be a time-based piece

Work must be explicit

Everyone must accept everyone else’s opinon/pages

Everyone is a real fascist

Art is not a means but an end

Art is not one or the other

DIT (do it together)

Binary thinking is prohibited

There is no sexuality

All rules must be broken

Art goes to museums to die – Art cannot breathe under glass

The process of meandering is necessary

We are post-post-modern

 

Saturday
May052012

tonight may 5th 7:30pm!!!

Performance #2 of Frozen Music/Pink Noise w/Alan Tollefson and Co. Experimental performance collaboration - dancers in trance.

Friday
May042012

May 4th, 5th, 11th, and 12th - Frozen Music/Pink Noise Alan Tollefson


Alan Tollefson
UBIKETAL
818.792.0788
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1837535535/frozen-music-pink-noise
atollefson@laverne.edu
Dancers in Trance Navigate Invisible Spaces Both Horrible and Beautiful All Before a Live Audience at Human Resources in Chinatown, L.A.

May 4th, 5th, 11th, 12th.

Los Angeles, CA -

UBIKETAL perform Frozen Music/Pink Noise, May 4th, 5th, 11th, &12th at 7:30.

Frozen Music/Pink Noise combines hypnosis, performance art, authentic movement and butoh, with the goal of interrogating interior states of being through movement and vocalizations, which reveal to the audience a \"negative space of an invisible architecture.\" The title Frozen Music refers to the quote: \"Ich nenne Architektur gefrorene Musik\" by Goethe that suggests architecture is frozen music. Ubik et al ask: What are the acoustics of that invisible building, where in the performers listen and move while in various states of hypnotic trance.

Frozen Music/Pink Noise a performance in 12 parts: foundation/ excavation/ ascension/ undergirding/ cantilever/ sheer/ reflection/ absorption/ sustain/ attack/ release/ decay; It is a new original work derived from workshops in a special process of improvisation while in trance. The ensemble of performers and designers developed this special process over a month long period of collaboration and it will be realized for the first time in the gallery before the audience. The principle creative artists of UBIKETAL (meaning: ubiquitous et al or: everywhere and everyone) include: Alan Tollefson, Michelle Lai, and Sarah Day, Max Baumgarten, Amara Gyulai, Jeff Worden, Dana Murphy, and Pearl Merril. Sound Design and accompaniment by Andy Sykora and Lighting design by Cameron Mock. Audience/performer separation will be minimal in this show as in environmental theatre with even some audience performer interaction. The setting will be the open space of the white cube/black box double with some scenic elements designed by Alan Tollefson.

The common denominator of the team UBIKETAL is intersubjective performance. Exploring ideas such as, witnessing, responsibility, language and embodiment. Performing in a trance achieved through a pre-performance ritual and guided visualization, in which each performer is prompted to find a specific personal interior location, or to begin a spontaneous dialogue with the unconscious through movement.

PinkNoise/Frozen Music is an intervention against habitual ways thinking and being. UBIKETAL hope to reintroduce the audience to a state of continual questioning while the unfamiliar unfolds.

After moving to Southern California Alan Tollefson was hired by the University of La Verne to teach Performance Art, Stage Craft and to be the Technical Director in the theatre arts department. Tollefson’s interest in theatre and construction has led to co-developing an experimental research group UBIKETAL that conceives projects in the rapidly growing field of Performative Architecture. Performative architecture explores the freedoms and limitations imposed on the individual by the built environment by testing performance through space design to gain a better understanding of how the body moves in space and how subjectivities are actualized. Performative architecture draws from the phenomenology of theatre and the physics of construction to develop a better understanding of embodied architecture and architectural metaphors that we live every day. Performative architecture uses the language of these metaphors to explore this system with both inside and outside, to redistribute power in system where subjectivities are situated within the built environment.

UBIKETAL is theorizing and realizing self-studying spaces as digitally reactive environments that use feedback systems to identify emergent behaviors. We are launching this endeavor with this project that galvanizes performance theorists and practitioners around the study of the unconscious as the archive of our embodied architecture. Our program Frozen Music/Pink Noise is a demonstration of our imagination let loose in the unconscious architectonic field.

humanresourcesla.com

Friday
May042012

May Update!

HUMAN RESOURCES CELEBRATES TWO YEAR ANNIVERSARY,
ANNOUNCES FOUR NEW DIRECTING MEMBERS

May 1, 2012
Today marks the two year anniversary of Human Resources' first official event, a May Day celebration at our former space on Bernard Street. Although so much has happened since then, it seems like just yesterday that Kathleen Kim wrote our institutional love letter; Corey Fogel performed Justin Timberlake's Dead and Gone solo on drum set and glockenspiel for 25 minutes and we all ended up singing along; My Barbarian burned cedar to cleanse the space; and Fritz Haeg introduced Working Artists and the Greater Economy (W.A.G.E.) with a letter written by Hollis Frampton to MoMA in 1973...

Since then, we have continued to vacillate between the popular and the obscure, the scholarly and the salacious, and to hold ourselves out as an institution while operating as the most informal cooperative. We told ourselves that it was only worth doing if we loved doing it. Along the way, we became a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and moved into the great hall on Cottage Home Street.

Thanks to all of the friends, artists, volunteers and participants that have helped Human Resourcesto find a home within the Los Angeles arts community.

On this occasion, we are very pleased to announce the addition of four new directing members toHuman Resources: Grant Capes, Jennifer Doyle, Chiara Giovando, and Catherine Taft.  Working alongside founding members Dawn Kasper, Eric Kim, Kathleen Kim, Devin McNulty, and Giles Miller, these additional members will bring new ideas, new networks, and new energy to the collective. With a core group of nine directing members, reflecting a broad range of interests and experience, Human Resources will more effectively organize its programming efforts, revisit its commitment to documentation and archiving, and continue to explore how an arts organization might most effectively serve … you.

About the new members:

Grant Capes works in post production for film and television, as well as live sound for performances. He formerly co-ran the Echo Park Art Gallery and Curiosity Shop (aka Echo Curio).

Jennifer Doyle is a Professor of English at UC Riverside. She works in performance and gender studies, and is the author of Sex Objects: Art and the Dialectics of Desire and the forthcoming Hold It Against Me: Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary Art. 

Chiara Giovando is an artist and curator. She has produced film and performance works for REDCAT Gallery, Tate Modern and the Whitney Museum. She was co-director of Hi Zero Festival of experimental music from 2005 – 2008 and part of the founding of Tarantula Hill in Baltimore MD.  She has records out on Ehse Records, Holy Mountain and Ecstatic Peace.  She performs her music both solo and in Duo with Daniel Higgs and Jenny Graf (Metalux). Her two short films, Proud Flesh and Archaic Smile have screened both nationally and internationally.

Catherine Taft is a critic, curator, and project specialist at the Getty Research Institute. Her writing appears regularly in publications including Artforum, ArtReview, Modern Painters, Metropolis-M, Mousse, and in exhibition catalogs in the U.S. and abroad. She is co-editor of the forthcoming book Double Issue: A Document of the Pacific Standard Time Performance and Public Art Festival (Fall 2012).

As part of our new structure, Human Resources will develop a new process for accepting, reviewing, and approving proposals for events and installations. Going forward, Human Resources will only consider proposals for installations that have been sponsored by a directing member.  If approved, that directing member will serve as a stakeholder during the life of the installation, acting as a bridge between the artists involved in the installation and the overall commitments and mission at Human Resources.  The same with events of all kinds—we encourage you to contact one of Human Resources’ directing members.

We look forward to many exciting developments as our new directing members continue to make their mark on our community and on HR.

About Human Resources:
Human Resources was founded by a team of creative individuals who seek to broaden engagement with contemporary and conceptual art, with an emphasis on performative and underexposed modes of expression. Human Resources is not-for-profit and seeks to foster widespread public appreciation of the performative arts by encouraging maximum community access. Human Resources also serves as a point of convergence for diverse and disparate art communities to engage in conversation and idea-sharing promoting the sustainability of non-traditional art forms.

Contact HR at:

info@humanresourcesla.com  
213-290-4752
humanresourcesla.com
410 Cottage Home St.
Los Angeles, CA 90012

Wednesday
May022012

Thursday May 3rd - Felix Goes to Hollywood

Join us for the first US presentation of:
UIQ: A SPACE ODDITY

A lecture / performance by Paris-based artists 
SILVIA MAGLIONI & GRAEME THOMSON 
(originally produced by Bétonsalon, Paris as part of the Otolith Group exhibition "A Lure a Part Allure Apart")

Following the publication in 1980 of Mille Plateaux, a work that for many marked the culmination of FElLIX GUATTARI’s intellectual adventure with Gilles Deleuze, Guattari began work on a film script for a science fiction movie, UN AMOUR d’UIQ. Initially developed in collaboration with filmmaker Robert Kramer, the script of UIQ (Universe Infra-Quark) was to occupy Guattari on and off for the next seven years. Influenced both by his work at the La Borde clinic and his engagement with radical politics, UIQ offers a blueprint for a subversive ’popular’ cinema. In desiring to make the film in the commercial arena as a sci-fi blockbuster, Guattari was effectively raising the stakes of his own political engagement, attempting to break into the dream factory to reconfigure patterns of collective unconscious desire.

For UIQ: A Space Oddity, artists and filmmakers Silvia Maglioni & Graeme Thomson consider how the development of the UIQ script appears amid a general resurgence of interest in science fiction in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It is around this time that sci-fi becomes a screen of projection and mourning for the scattered phantoms of disappointed revolutionary desire, in which the radical alterity of a political ’outside’ is increasingly projected no longer through the imaginary of collective struggle but in terms of encounters with alien intelligences or life forces. UIQ imagines a hyper intelligent infra-cellular life substance as capable of transmitting its nascent will through global communications networks, plugging into the precarious ‘desiring machines’ of a community of social and psychological outsiders. By placing echoes of the unfilmed script in relation to a montage of scenes from sci-fi films of the period – from Tarkovsky’s Solaris and Stalker, to Spielberg’s Close Encounters and ET through Demon Seed, The State of Things, Blade Runner, Videodrome, Starman and others – Maglioni & Thomson aim to isolate the singularity of UIQ in the virtual dimension of what it might have been and what it may yet become.

http://www.eastofborneo.org/pages/events

http://cargocollective.com/terminal-beach/UIQ-A-SPACE-ODDITY

Wednesday
May022012

May 4th, 5th, 11th, and 12th - Frozen Music/Pink Noise

Alan Tollefson
UBIKETAL
818.792.0788
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1837535535/frozen-music-pink-noise
atollefson@laverne.edu
Dancers in Trance Navigate Invisible Spaces Both Horrible and Beautiful All Before a Live Audience at Human Resources in Chinatown, L.A.

May 4th, 5th, 11th, 12th.

Los Angeles, CA -

UBIKETAL perform Frozen Music/Pink Noise, May 4th, 5th, 11th, &12th at 7:30.

Frozen Music/Pink Noise combines hypnosis, performance art, authentic movement and butoh, with the goal of interrogating interior states of being through movement and vocalizations, which reveal to the audience a \"negative space of an invisible architecture.\" The title Frozen Music refers to the quote: \"Ich nenne Architektur gefrorene Musik\" by Goethe that suggests architecture is frozen music. Ubik et al ask: What are the acoustics of that invisible building, where in the performers listen and move while in various states of hypnotic trance.

Frozen Music/Pink Noise a performance in 12 parts: foundation/ excavation/ ascension/ undergirding/ cantilever/ sheer/ reflection/ absorption/ sustain/ attack/ release/ decay; It is a new original work derived from workshops in a special process of improvisation while in trance. The ensemble of performers and designers developed this special process over a month long period of collaboration and it will be realized for the first time in the gallery before the audience. The principle creative artists of UBIKETAL (meaning: ubiquitous et al or: everywhere and everyone) include: Alan Tollefson, Michelle Lai, and Sarah Day, Max Baumgarten, Amara Gyulai, Jeff Worden, Dana Murphy, and Pearl Merril. Sound Design and accompaniment by Andy Sykora and Lighting design by Cameron Mock. Audience/performer separation will be minimal in this show as in environmental theatre with even some audience performer interaction. The setting will be the open space of the white cube/black box double with some scenic elements designed by Alan Tollefson.

The common denominator of the team UBIKETAL is intersubjective performance. Exploring ideas such as, witnessing, responsibility, language and embodiment. Performing in a trance achieved through a pre-performance ritual and guided visualization, in which each performer is prompted to find a specific personal interior location, or to begin a spontaneous dialogue with the unconscious through movement.

PinkNoise/Frozen Music is an intervention against habitual ways thinking and being. UBIKETAL hope to reintroduce the audience to a state of continual questioning while the unfamiliar unfolds.

After moving to Southern California Alan Tollefson was hired by the University of La Verne to teach Performance Art, Stage Craft and to be the Technical Director in the theatre arts department. Tollefson’s interest in theatre and construction has led to co-developing an experimental research group UBIKETAL that conceives projects in the rapidly growing field of Performative Architecture. Performative architecture explores the freedoms and limitations imposed on the individual by the built environment by testing performance through space design to gain a better understanding of how the body moves in space and how subjectivities are actualized. Performative architecture draws from the phenomenology of theatre and the physics of construction to develop a better understanding of embodied architecture and architectural metaphors that we live every day. Performative architecture uses the language of these metaphors to explore this system with both inside and outside, to redistribute power in system where subjectivities are situated within the built environment.

UBIKETAL is theorizing and realizing self-studying spaces as digitally reactive environments that use feedback systems to identify emergent behaviors. We are launching this endeavor with this project that galvanizes performance theorists and practitioners around the study of the unconscious as the archive of our embodied architecture. Our program Frozen Music/Pink Noise is a demonstration of our imagination let loose in the unconscious architectonic field.

humanresourcesla.com

Saturday
Apr282012

last day - Karl haendel solo exhibition

Final Day for
Oral Sadism and the Vegetarian Personality
on exhibition
12-6 pm

Thursday
Apr262012

Saturday April 28th - High Places, Pharoahs, LA Vampires, Suzanne Kraft, White Car

This Saturday! $5 at 9pm

Wednesday
Apr252012

Gallery Hours Today thru Saturday

Karl Haendel's Oral Sadism and the Vegetarian Personality on exhibition from today thru Saturday April 28th, 12-6 pm

Wednesday
Apr112012

Opening Saturday April 14th - Karl Haendel solo exhibition

Oral Sadism and the Vegetarian Personality
a solo exhibition by Karl Haendel
opening reception 7-10pm April 14th

Exhibition booklet designed by Tanya Rubbak to be freely distributed at opening reception

Friday
Apr062012

Tonight! Friday April 6th at 7pm - Eileen Myles and Chris Kraus read

Please join Eileen Myles and Chris Kraus as they read from their new books.

this is the most important thing in the world

I say aloud to everything

- Eileen Myles, author most recently of Snowflake/different streets, published by Wave Books, 2012.

In her first book of poetry since 2007, legendary poet, critic, and novelist Eileen Myles creates poet and poem anew as she pushed the boundaries of her craft ever closer to the enigmatic core.  Snowflake finds the poet awash in an extended and distressed landscape mediated by technology and its distortion of time and space.  In different streets, the poet returns home, to the familiar world of human connection.  Two books meet as one: more Eileen Myles, more indelible connection, more fleeting ecstasy.

Chris Kraus is the author of four novels and two books of art and cultural criticism.  Her next book, SUMMER OF HATE, will be published by Semiotexte in October.  She writes about Los Angeles art for Art in America and co-edits Semiotexte with Hedi El Kholti and Sylvere Lotringer.

Thursday
Mar292012

Friday April 6th 7pm - Eileen Myles and Chris Kraus reading

Please join Eileen Myles and Chris Kraus as they read from their new books.

this is the most important thing in the world

I say aloud to everything

- Eileen Myles, author most recently of Snowflake/different streets, published by Wave Books, 2012.

In her first book of poetry since 2007, legendary poet, critic, and novelist Eileen Myles creates poet and poem anew as she pushed the boundaries of her craft ever closer to the enigmatic core.  Snowflake finds the poet awash in an extended and distressed landscape mediated by technology and its distortion of time and space.  In different streets, the poet returns home, to the familiar world of human connection.  Two books meet as one: more Eileen Myles, more indelible connection, more fleeting ecstasy.

Chris Kraus is the author of four novels and two books of art and cultural criticism.  Her next book, SUMMER OF HATE, will be published by Semiotexte in October.  She writes about Los Angeles art for Art in America and co-edits Semiotexte with Hedi El Kholti and Sylvere Lotringer.



Friday
Mar232012

penny arcade tonight!  8pm!

Wednesday
Mar212012

Friday March 23rd - Penny Arcade in Los Angeles

Human Resources presents 

THE GIRL WHO KNEW TOO MUCH

, a combination performance and book party 
for Bad Reputation Performances, Essays, Interview 
Semiotexte

International Performance star Penny Arcade makes a rare appearance in 
Los Angeles at Chinatown’s Human Resources

This is Penny Arcade’s first performance in LA since 2007 except for a much loved guerilla appearance at Wildness in 2009. 

Expect an evening of the unexpected by the 
Queen of Underground Performance.

"

Combining the anarchy of Lenny Bruce with the pathos of Judy Garland, Penny Arcade is provocative, intellectually stimulating, perceptive and hilariously funny." The List UK

Penny Arcade presents new work in progress, drawing from three new works Longing Lasts Longer, about love and longing, Old Queen about growing up in the Gay counter-culture and Denial of Death Pt 1 about art, ambition and annihilation.

There will be three short 5 minute screenings including an excerpt from 
The Will and Testament of Quentin Crisp, an excerpt on Jack Smith and Academia and one another not yet chosen.

In 2010 Semiotexte published Bad Reputation, a hardcover book on the work of Penny Arcade focusing on her autobiographical trilogy La Miseria, Bitch! Dyke!Faghag!Whore! and Bad Reputation, with the full scripts of all three performances plays, various essays on her work and an interview with Native Agent editor Chris Kraus.

Bad Reputation the book will be available $20. Penny will be signing books after the performance

http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/notebook/2010/03/15/100315gonb_GOAT_notebook_als

Penny Arcade is a writer, poet and performance and theatre artist whose work has always focused on the other, the outsider in society and what brings us together as humans. La Miseria tackles race, class and homophobia, Bad Reputation deals with the art world and entertainment world’s comodification of the “Bad Girl” while rejecting women it deems dangerous,
Bitch!Dyke!Faghag!Whore! is Penny Arcade’s Sex and Censorship show which took on the American Culture War  as well as the mainstream’s view of the Aids Crisis giving a radical queer voice to it and turned the then largely PC art world on it’s head by becoming a mainstream commercial hit in 20 cities around the world, spearheading the pro sex feminist backlash and leaving the international neo performance art burlesque scene in it’s wake B!D!F!W! was retired in 1995 after touring for 3 years after an unprecedented year long run in NY 
For a performance art piece, in 1992-1993.
In 2006 B!D!F!W! was presented as the Platinum Feature at LA’s OUT FEST and has been in demand again, performing in New York 2007, San Francisco 2009, and Anchorage, Alaska 2011 and opening for an extended run in London in June 2012.

http://www.out.com/entertainment/theater/2011/04/04/ladies-we-love-penny-arcade

Saturday
Mar172012

Saturday March 17th - Dunes Record Release! Tonight!

Tonight 8-12pm

Sunday
Feb262012

Monday February 27th - David Getsy presentation and discussion w/Jennifer Doyle

David Getsy: "Second Skins: Nancy Grossman and the Binding of Genders" 
presented within the space of My Barbarian's "Broke People Baroque People's Theater." 

In the late 1960s, Nancy Grossman became notorious for making sculptures of heads bound tightly in leather. Often mistaken for depictions of gay male S&M practices, these works sought to convey personal and political frustration. She called them "self-portraits." Putting these iconic sculptures into the context of her earlier, but largely unrecognized, abstract assemblages made from leather, this talk will examine how Grossman's work engaged with questions of gender mutability through her use of leather to make new bodies from old skins.

David Getsy's presentation will be followed up with a seminar-style discussion led by Getsy and Jennifer Doyle.

Join us for this exploration of the overlap and gaps between feminist, gay, and queer art history!

Photos: Nancy Grossman, Ali Stoker, 1966-67; Installation view of Nancy Grossman: Heads at PS1, May 2011

Wednesday
Feb152012

Thursday February 16th - Female Trouble curated by Dirty Looks NYC

TOURING NEW YORK FILM SERIES SCREENS GENDERFUCK PROGRAM
IN CHINATOWN GALLERY WITH MANY, SPECIAL GUESTS
FEMALE TROUBLE

Artists Rick Castro, Zackary Drucker and Narcissister in person.
Thursday, February 16, 8:00 – 10:00 PM
Human Resources LA
410 Cottage Home St
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Suggested donation: $8

LOS ANGELES, CA: DIRTY LOOKS, a New York-based platform for queer experimental film and video, will screen FEMALE TROUBLE at Human Resources gallery during a month-long residency by arts collective, My Barbarian. FEMALE TROUBLE is a selection of works that explore & explode normative roles of femininity and gender. With pieces that span five decades, these artists queer female subject space via drag tactics, narrative juxtaposition and overt performativity, with approaches ranging from masquerade to mythic, performance document to exposé video zine.

Program:

Conrad Ventur, Mario Montez Screen Test, 2010
Patti Podesta, Stepping, 1981
Steven Arnold, Messages, Messages, 1968
Matthias Müller, Home Stories, 1990
Narcissister, Every Woman, 2010
Zackary Drucker, Fish, 2008
Vaginal Davis, Barbi Twins (excerpt dir. Rick Castro), 1993

With Mario Montez Screen Test, Conrad Ventur resubmits Jack Smith/Warhol Superstar Mario Montez to Warhol's screen test format some 45 years later. Patti Podesta writes of her video Stepping, "I wanted to make something about risk, about repetition and a sort of lulling into nonsense of a very dangerous situation." Steven Arnold won the Best New Director award at the Cannes Film Festival for his film Messages, Messages continuing in the tradition of Cocteau and Anger, following its singular protagonist through a psychosexual labyrinth of libidinal delights and genderfuck costumery.

Matthias Müller's Home Stories culls from classic Hollywood Woman's Films like Written on the Wind, Madame X and The Birds, re-editing footage shot off the t.v. to examine the finite gestures and the repetitive interplays of genre (and gendered) cinema.

Narcissister's Every Woman is a performance document in which the artist dresses herself in the slinky feminine attire, which she unspools from every bodily orifice imaginable, all to Chaka Khan's ubiquitous anthem, of course. A chapter from Vaginal Davis and Rick Castro’s Fertile La Toyah Jackson "Aksionist Video Magazine," Barbi Twins documents an incongruous sister duo's Los Angeles exploits and lively recollections in true reportage form.

Z Drucker's short video, Fish, is a self-described "matrilineage of cunty white woman realness."

About Dirty Looks:

Dirty Looks is a roaming series held on the last Wednesday of the month. Curated by Bradford Nordeen, Dirty Looks is a screening series designed to trace contemporary queer aesthetics through historical works, presenting quintessential GLBT film and video alongside up-and-coming artists and filmmakers. Filling a gap in the regular programming of Queer experimental work in the New York film community, Dirty Looks receives roughly 65-100 visitors per month. A salon of influences, Dirty Looks is an open platform for inquiry, discussion and debate.

“Deliver us from Daddy! Dirty Looks sets its sights on artist film and video that pierces dominant narratives, wanders with deviant eyes or captures the counter in salacious glares.”

Throughout February, Dirty Looks will embark on a West Coast roadshow, visiting arts institutions like Artists’ Television Access (Feb. 10), The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (Feb 12), the Hammer Museum (Feb. 14), Human Resources Gallery (Feb. 16), Grand Detour (Feb. 23) and universities like California College of Arts (Feb 9), Otis College of Art and Design (Feb. 20) and Pacific Northwest College of Art (Feb 21).

About the Human Resources:

Human Resources is a team of creative individuals which seeks to broaden engagement with contemporary and conceptual art, with an emphasis on performative and underexposed modes of expression. Human Resources is entirely volunteer run and seeks to foster widespread public appreciation of the performative arts by encouraging maximum community access. Human Resources also serves as a point of convergence for diverse and disparate art communities to engage in conversation and idea-sharing promoting the sustainability of non-traditional art form

About My Barbarian:

My Barbarian is a Los Angeles based collaborative group consisting of Malik Gaines, Jade Gordon and Alexandro Segade. The trio makes site-responsive performances and video installations that use theatrical play to draw allegorical narratives out of historical dilemmas, mythical conflicts, and current political crises. In February, the group will install elements of their “Broke Peoples’ Baroque People’s Theater” project in the gallery, including sculptural objects and videos that meditate on poverty and excess. The installation will additionally serve as a site for performances, screenings, and events during the exhibition’s run.

About the artists:

STEVEN ARNOLD was an artist, photographer, filmmaker, muse and model of Salvador Dalí’s, and the center of a Los Angeles circle reminiscent of Warhol’s Factory. His films provide a bridge between the early cross-gender experiments of Claude Cahun and Pierre Molinier and what Gene Youngblood termed the “polymorphous subterranean world of unisexual transvestism,” which he saw as a hallmark of the emerging “synesthetic cinema” of the 1960s. The screening also pays homage to an innovative—yet often overlooked—poet of the Beat Generation, Ruth Weiss, who stars in all the films.

RICK CASTRO is an independent filmmaker & photographer living in Los Angeles. Rick's work explores the world of fetish and fringes of sex culture. His work has been published in artist editions, exhibitions and institutions worldwide. He is the director of numerous films and videotapes, including Hustler White (co-directed with Bruce La Bruce), Hellion Heatwave, Fertile La Toyah Jackson, and Three Faces of Women.

VAGINAL DAVIS was born and raised in Los Angeles, but now lives in Berlin. She is an accomplished experimental filmmaker, visual artist and writer, who Hilton Als of The New Yorker has called "the poet laureate of Santa Monica Blvd." She has curated programs for many film festivals including Berlin and Sundance. She teaches performance at Lund University's Malmö Art Academy (Sweden). She is also the subject of academic elucidation by Jose Muñoz in Disidentifications: Queers of Color and the Performance of Politics and Jennifer Doyle in Sex Objects: Art and the Dialectics of Desire.

ZACKARY DRUCKER is a limp-wristed, switch queen/Los Angeles-based artist. Infusing elements of installation, performance, text, photography, and video, Drucker's work explores under-recognized aspects of queer history while simultaneously inscribing her own experience and position within it. Drucker reactivates Bruce Rodgers' The Queens' Vernacular , documents relationships and secret legacies, and challenges conventions of entertainment and drag performance, as well as existing art-historical representations of queer people. Oscillating between documentary, mythology, and personal narrative, the work is an overall novel exploration of gender as it is constructed, deconstructed, and experienced.

MATTIAS MÜLLER is a German experimental filmmaker and curator, often working in the field of found footage. From 1994 to 1997 he worked as Guest Professor at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt am Main (Germany), and from 1998 to 1999 at the Dortmund Fachhochschule. Since 2003 he is Professor for Experimental Film at the Academy of Media Arts (KHM), Cologne, Germany. For his films he has received numerous awards from many international festivals, including the American Federation of Arts Experimental Film Award in 1988, the Golden Gate Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 1996, the main award at the Internationale Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen in 1999, the Ken Burns “Best of the Festival“ Award at the Ann Arbor Film Festival in 2003, and the German Short Film Prize for Animation in 2006.

NARCISSISTER is a Brooklyn-based artist and performer. Her formative training took place at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center. In addition to performance work, Narcissister does collage, sculpture, video art, and photography. Her studio residencies include The Whitney Museum IS Program, The Woodstock Center for Photography AIR Program, and the Art in General Eastern European Residency Program. Narcissister has also worked extensively as a commercial artist, designing window displays and working as a stylist and art director.

PATTI PODESTA's career is a continuing investigation of the intersection of art and film. Together with artist Bruce Yonemoto, Ms. Podesta co-founded the video program at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE). In the early 90s, she began designing feature films and this has become the focus of her career, the synthesis of her interest in the sculptural and the temporal, in architecture and in color. She has designed for the original and acclaimed film "Memento," the HBO film "Recount," "Smart People," and "Bobby." Ms. Podesta's work in film and video has been screened throughout the United States and Europe including the Museum of Modern Art, the Rotterdam Film Festival, the American Film Institute National Video Festival, the Pacific Film Archives and recently at LACMA and the UCLA Hammer Museum. Her work was included in the Getty Museum's historic "California Video" exhibition and catalogue. Born in Los Angeles, Podesta received a B.A. from Pitzer College and an M.F.A. from Claremont Graduate School.

CONRAD VENTUR currently lives and works in New York. He received his MFA from Goldsmiths College, London (2008) and has recently exhibited at Forever & Today Inc. New York (2009), The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh (2009); P.P.O.W, New York (2009); 1/9 Unosunove Arte Contemporanea, Rome (2009); Architecture Annual, Bucharest (2008); Arti et Amicitiae, Amsterdam (2008); Louis Blouin Institute, London (2008); Invisible-Exports, New York (2008); Ludlow 38, Kunstverein Munchen Goethe Institute, New York (2008); Somerset House, London (2008); and Stockholm Konsthall, Sweden (2008), among other international solo and group exhibitions. In 2004, Ventur launched the contemporary art magazine USELESS.

 

Tuesday
Feb072012

My Barbarian’s Broke People’s Baroque Peoples’ Theater

"Object Opera (Rehearsal: Dance of the Sailors and Witches at the Fall of Carthage)," 2012

My Barbarian residency at Human Resources

February 11 – March 11, 2012
Opening reception: Saturday February 11, 7-10pm

“Artistic innovation
Patronized by royal advisors
Wasteful spending
In a time of destruction and war
Gods of Play! 1
Artificial dolphins
Spitting plumes
Of Aqua in fake island fountains
Infrastructure crumbles
As the pleasure palace rises”
- Gods of Play by My Barbarian

Human Resources presents My Barbarian’s Broke People’s Baroque Peoples’ Theater, a residency in the form of a gallery installation that includes new videos, sculptures, and a performance environment.  The project highlights the paradoxes of an art practice founded in critique, which nonetheless relies on economic forces that are worthy of serious criticism.  In this time of spectacle and disparity, excess and poverty, the baroque figures as an ornate frame that contains all of these extremes.  My Barbarian performs a variety of styles within this frame; camp drag, baroque opera, communist drama, countercultural performance and world theater all accumulate into a set of narratives that assimilate too much information.  Enacting this accumulation, the group developed characters such as “Shakuntala DuBois” and “Cassandra Wasserstein Shakespeare,” masked figures who are trapped within cyclical forces they can foresee but cannot change.

The exhibition includes new works that stretch My Barbarian’s material vocabulary. These include “Tapestries,” or stylized videos projected on cloth surfaces, “Oracles,” which are Junoesque totemic figures that attempt to tell the future, and a large-scale model of a baroque theater, which becomes a context for miniature performances.  Theatrical elements, including a series of original masks and dramatic lighting, fill out the colorful environment.  

Featuring these and other new works, Broke People’s Baroque Peoples’ Theater evolves out of a 2011 performance at the Kitchen, New York and a 2010 workshop and installation at Grand Arts, Kansas City, where the project was initiated as a part of artist Emily Roysdon’s Ecstatic Resistance exhibition.  These versions used live interactions to present the absurdities of the American financial crisis as a performance of wastefulness, trashiness and class warfare. 

Following the mission of Human Resources, and the notion of excess, My Barbarian’s installation will also serve as a venue for several related screenings, events and performances throughout the residency. 

Based in Los Angeles since 2000, My Barbarian has performed and exhibited internationally.  Solo exhibitions have included Participant Inc. (NYC), Hammer Museum (LA) and Museo El Eco (Mexico City).  Performance sites have included the Kitchen, New Museum, Whitney Museum, (NYC), LACMA, MOCA, REDCAT, (LA), Power Plant, (Toronto), De Appel (Amsterdam), El Matadero (Madrid), Galleria Civica (Trento), Peres Projects (Berlin) and Townhouse Gallery (Cairo).  The group was included in Performa 05 and 07, the 2006 and 2008 California Biennials, the 2007 Montreal Biennial, and the 2009 Baltic Triennial, and has appeared in group shows at the Studio Museum in Harlem, ICA Philadelphia, Hyde Park Art Center Chicago, MOCA Miami, Den Haag Sculptuur, Museum Het Domain, CCA Tel Aviv, Anton Kern Gallery in New York, and many others.  My Barbarian has received grants from Creative Capital (2012), Art Matters (2008), and the City of LA Cultural Affairs Department (2010).  Their work has been discussed in the New Yorker, New York Times, LA Times, Artforum, Art in America, Frieze, various international newspapers, and in José Muñoz’s Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity.  My Barbarian is Malik Gaines, Jade Gordon, and Alexandro Segade.

______

1 - Kristiaan P. Aercke, Gods of Play: Baroque Festival Performances as Rhetorical Discourse (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1994).

"Shakuntala DuBois," video still, 2012

Thursday
Jan262012

Friday and Saturday January 27th and 28th - Pacific Standard Time

A Pacific Standard Time Performance and Public Art Festival Event
Commissioned by the Getty and LA><ART

FRIDAY, January 27th
8-10pm

OPENING NIGHT / LIVE PERFORMANCES

Sheree Rose begins at 8pm (durational all night main space)
Raquel Gutierrez and Jeanne Cordova 8:15pm (main space)
Oscar Santos (w/ Alex Black, Samuel Vasquez, Karen Centerfold, Alice Cunt, Paloma Parfrey, Rafael Esparza, Allen Bleyle, Larissa James / Organizer: Oscar Santos / Psychic Director: Asher) 8:45pm (backroom storage space)
Tyler Matthew Oyer 9pm (main space)
Larissa Brantner James 9:30pm (main space)
Chiara Giovando 9:45pm (main space)
TJO 10pm (main space)

HUMAN RESOURCES UPSTAIRS GALLERY PRESENTS …
MEETINGS

a collaboratively curated exhibition
with works by ...
Karen Lofgren, Laurel Frank, Molly Larkey, Larissa Brantner James, Dylan Mira, Juliana Paciulli, Fette Sans, Mariah Garnett, Kate Hoffman, Alison Zukovsky and Marija Gaies

SATURDAY, January, 28th
2:30-5pm "casual" artist talk 'discussions on performance and politics and so much more'
Dino Dinco, Dorit Cypis, Dawn Kasper, Jennifer Doyle, A.L. Steiner, Megan Hoetger, Eve Fowler

Project information at:

reset0000.com