INTERVIEW AGENCY An exercise that explores the interview format– as testimony or as a document – and the values associated with it: transparency/manipulation, neutrality/ideology and subjectivity/objectivity.
UntitledUnited States of America
29 Archival description results for United States of America
"These are my friends. My dead friends."
UntitledWith wit and savvy, Kalin combines text, graphics and flowers with musical and political quotation to comment on the disjuncture between a conservative, medicalized discourse that describes homosexuality as both "unnatural" and "dangerous," and the possibilities of liberation involved in embracing the criminality of the "unnatural." A quote from Angela Carter's Sadeian Woman ("Criminality may present itself as a kind of saintly self-mastery, an absolute rejection of hypocrisy"), disco music, and hothouse flowers serve as counterpoints to fundamentalist agit-prop about gay sexuality.
UntitledCover Girl Culture explores how the worlds of fashion, modeling, advertising and celebrity impact on our teens and young women. Who sets today's standards for beauty and how do these standards affect individuals and society? Who is responsible? Are there ways this can be changed' If so, who can/will change it?.
UntitledOn a business trip, George visits his friends in New York. Relics, memories, his mother in the Bronx. Available online until December 27th 2020. George Kuchar's videos are copyright of the Kuchar Trust and distributed in partnership with the Video Data Bank at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago
One of the tapes of Anne Charlotte Robertson’s five-year-old diary, a cathartic, devastating, delicate and meditative story. The extraordinarily frank and revealing self-portrait of an artist and a woman struggling to understand the dark desires and shadows that define her world.
Untitled"Rubbers prevent the spread of AIDS. Rubbers do not prevent the spread of AIDS."
UntitledThis piece continues Kalin's poetic and interpretative use of music married to vision, drawing on a range of images and textures to create a romantic reverie of a relationship between two men. With music by Annie Lennox (composition of Cole Porter) and on a quote from Virginia Woolf. Kalin's short video works function both as visual poems and as alternative music videos. With their astute conjunctions of image, music and text, these tapes respond to issues of sexuality and human interaction in the 1990s, more than a decade into the AIDS crisis. In finally destroy us, Kalin uses found film footage, home movies, and haunting pop music (Annie Lenox singing Cole Porter) to poignantly recall moments of love, shared and lost. The title is taken from Virginia Woolf: "But these meetings, these partings, finally destroy us."
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