Duration of films: CLEAR (3 minute loop) / FILL (15 minutes) / REVEAL (13 minutes)
CLEAR, FILL and REVEAL were commissioned by Harvestworks in NYC in 2003. CLEAR, FILL and REVEAL are silent Super 8 mm black and white films that have been transferred to video, edited with sound. Each film is a record of a live performance that took place in real time in a structure called a headspace that is essentially an installation for the human head. These filmed performance actions focus on the relationship between the body, the built environment and sculptural form.
CLEAR considers how what we see, speak and hear eventually impact what we think. FILL celebrates the potential of breath to create sculptural form and transform space. REVEAL follows a repeated action to a level of obsession while contemplating the search for love from oneself and a beloved.
EXHIBITION REVIEWS:
Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Artists Muse on America with Mostly Positive Results · by Regina Hackett, November 11, 2005.
The Village Voice: Statements and Strategies...· by Karen Rosenberg, August 27, 2003.
CLEAR, FILL and REVEAL were commissioned by Harvestworks in NYC in 2003. CLEAR, FILL and REVEAL are silent Super 8 mm black and white films that have been transferred to video, edited with sound. Each film is a record of a live performance that took place in real time in a structure called a headspace that is essentially an installation for the human head. These filmed performance actions focus on the relationship between the body, the built environment and sculptural form.
CLEAR considers how what we see, speak and hear eventually impact what we think. FILL celebrates the potential of breath to create sculptural form and transform space. REVEAL follows a repeated action to a level of obsession while contemplating the search for love from oneself and a beloved.
EXHIBITION REVIEWS:
Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Artists Muse on America with Mostly Positive Results · by Regina Hackett, November 11, 2005.
The Village Voice: Statements and Strategies...· by Karen Rosenberg, August 27, 2003.