Show Listing
MIA presents HUMAN ANIMAL (Pasadena)
MIA screening, HUMAN ANIMAL
Friday, September 28 - 7PM
Armory Center for the Arts
145 N. Raymond Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91103
New Series Screens Video Art & Experimental Films
This month's MIA event takes place on September 28th at 7PM and features performance based video art exploring relationships with the body, sexuality and sculpture. The program will begin with a selection of short performances, followed by a six-part performance documentation, Pre-human, Post-human, Inhuman from Teri Frame where she sculpts clay applied to her own head, transforming herself. The six parts of the performance, Simians, Early Humans, Hybrids, Proportions, Races & Post-humans each explore how Western ideas about the body have changed over time using familiar imagery from both the arts and sciences.
Sara Holwerda's Chair Dance II starts as a conventional burlesque-style chair dance which evolves into a exploration of self-defense and dramatized combat. In The Obsession, Lauren Cross tears at her hair, sculpting it into one style after another, exploring perceptions of beauty. Diane Dwyer's Thumb Wars sets the camera on a pair of hands encased in rubber gloves attempting a thumb war while covered in a liquid that makes the scene both visceral and intimate. In Way To Go!, Rachelle Beaudoin does push ups over a cake which she takes a bite of each time her face nears. in Mating, Jamie Sneider replicates the mating dance of a male Superb Bird of Paradise (Lophorina superba) wooing its female subject.
By special arrangement, the screening will also include a modified version of Heather Cassils' Fast Twitch/Slow Twitch, part of her larger body of work, Cuts: A Traditional Sculpture in which the artist undertook a regime of body building combined with a specialized diet to sculpt her body to its maximum capacity. The work speaks directly to Eleanor Antin's Carving: A Traditional Sculpture and Lynda Benglis' Artforum Magazine intervention while linking them to performative practices associated with the production of hyper-masculine and transgendered bodies.
The MIA series began in June of 2012, founded by video artist Alanna Simone to promote the work of artists who use the moving image. Every 4th Friday the MIA series screens video art, experimental films, performance art, essay films and animation from local and international artists at the Armory Center for the Arts, 145 North Raymond Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91103. Each program is organized around a theme and lasts a little over an hour. A donation of $5 is suggested.
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