Tag Archives: MoCA LA

ART TALK: MICHAEL SMITH AT MoCA LA

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Mike’s World: Michael Smith & Joshua White (And Other Collaborators)
Published by The Blanton Museum of Art
Edited by Annette DiMeo Carlozzi. Introduction by Annette DiMeo Carlozzi. Text by Michael Smith, Mike Kelley, Jay Sanders, Ingrid Schaffner, Regine Basha.

MICHAEL SMITH

May 8, 2014 | 7PM – 9PM

USC Graduate Lecture Series

MoCA Ahmanson Auditorium | 250 South Grand Ave. Los Angeles

Raised in Chicago, Michael Smith graduated from Colorado College in 1973 with a degree in painting and the beginnings of an extensive network in New York’s creative community, gained while participating in the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 1970 and 1973. Smith’s older brother, Howard, was an abstract painter as well, and his example greatly influenced the young artist. But Smith was also intrigued by the performance art of Vito Acconci, William Wegman, and Richard Foreman, among others involved in avant-garde pursuits. Soon after graduation, he began watching comedy acts at The Pickle in Chicago with an eye for developing his own performance style. In contrast to many of his contemporaries, who explored minimalism, feminism, repetition, ritual and endurance in their works, Smith wanted to entertain. In 1975 he gave his first public performance, called Comedy Hour, in his own studio and in 1978-1980 he began working with video. 

During the first two decades of his career, Smith performed in fine art and popular venues alike. His is an extensive performance and exhibition history that begins in the late 1970s, with venues as varied as Franklin Furnace, The Kitchen, Caroline’s Comedy Club, CBGBs, Dance Theatre Workshop, Cinemax, the Whitney, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, the New Museum, the Pompidou Center, and, in recent years, sites in São Paolo, Copenhagen, Milan, and London, among others. 
 
Since 1979, the majority of Smith’s work has centered on his extraordinarily prescient and sympathetic character, the naïve and somewhat inept Everyman, Mike, who is the focus of this exhibition. Smith’s other recurring performance persona is Baby Ikki, whose bizarre and precipitous infancy is marked by conspicuous facial hair, oversized diapers, and undersized sunglasses. To elaborate these performances, which were created both for the stage and for video, Smith has generated a huge corpus of work, collaborating with a wide range of artists in many media. In addition to the time-based works, he and his collaborators have broken new ground in immersive installation art, and, working solo, he has produced several artists books and an impressive corpus of drawings and sketches that detail the creative process. Many of these were published recently in MICHAEL SMITH Drawings: Simple, Obscure and Obtuse (NY: Regency Arts Press, 2007). 
 
Throughout his career, Smith has been actively engaged as a lecturer, critic, artist, and instructor at a number of prestigious institutions, among them Yale University, the Royal Danish Academy, and UCLA. Smith currently serves as Associate Professor of Studio Art at the University of Texas at Austin, where he has been teaching performance art since 2001. In 2007 Smith received The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation award and The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) honored both he and Joshua White for their multi-disciplinary work; Smith has received numerous other fellowships and awards, including those from the MIT Center for Advanced Visual Studies (2005-6), Art Matters Inc (1996, 1990, 1987), the National Endowment for the Arts (1991, 1983, 1982, 1978), and the Guggenheim Foundation (1985).
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Michael Smith, Sears Class Portraits, Spring 2009
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William Wegman and Michael Smith, World of Photography, 1986
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Michael Smith and Mark Fischer, It Starts at Home, 1982

OUT THERE: JOHN DIVOLA AND MARIUS ENGH IN CONVERSATION WITH DOROTHÉE PERRET

John Divola, from Zuma Series, 1977-1978. Courtesy of artist.

John Divola, from Zuma Series, 1977-1978. Courtesy of artist.

In PARIS, LA #11, John Divola, Marius Engh and Dorothée Perret discuss current practice, form, history, and the importance of ambiguity in art.

In 2013, John Divola‘s work was featured in a career-spanning series of exhibitions, titled As Far As I Could Get. It was on view at three Southern California institutions – the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the Pomona College Museum of Art, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The exhibition at LACMA is still on view until July 6, 2014. Divola’s Zuma Series was also featured in the landmark 2011 survey Under the Big Black Sun: California Art 1974-1981 at the Museum of Contemporary Art in downtown L.A. His images of abandoned beach shacks, featured in issue #11 of PARIS, LA, remain among the most influential – and appropriated – works of 20th Century photography.

Marius Engh is an artist from Norway who shows in galleries across Europe. At the time of his conversation with John Divola and Dorothée Perret he was enjoying his first extended stay in Los Angeles. How objects tell us stories through layers of space and time is the focus of his work.

 

Marius Engh, Lead, Follow or Get the Hell Out of the Way, 1-3/1-14, 2008. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Emanuel Layr (Photo by Ralf Kliem)

Marius Engh, Lead, Follow or Get the Hell Out of the Way, 1-3/1-14, 2008. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Emanuel Layr (Photo by Ralf Kliem)