Afleveringen

  • This episode of Performance Talks is a conversation with Rachel Helm and Rachel Churner from the Carolee Schneemann Foundation, recorded at Schneemann's home in upstate New York.

    In this conversation, We talk about the complexities of preserving the artist's home, a nearly 300 year old structure, as well as the intricacies of representing an artist who had such a strong presentation and idea of self through an archive, and their plans of turning her home into a residency.

    Rachel Helm is the manager of the Carolee Schneemann Foundation and steward of Schneemann’s home in New Paltz, NY. Prior to her relocation to the Hudson Valley, Helm worked in public libraries in Missouri and Kentucky.

    Rachel Churner is the director of the Carolee Schneemann Foundation. Churner is also an art critic and editor, whose writings have appeared in Artforum and October magazine, among other publications. She was a recipient of the 2018 Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant and is the editor of multiple books, including, The New Television (no place press, 2024); Hans Haacke (MIT Press, 2015), and two volumes of writings by film historian Annette Michelson (MIT Press, 2017 and 2020). She currently teaches at the Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts at the New School.

    The Carolee Schneemann Foundation is dedicated to preserving and promoting the legacy of Carolee Schneemann (1939–2019). Schneemann was a pioneering artist whose work spanned a range of media, including painting, film, video, dance and performance, installations, and writing. Her art is known for its radical formal experimentation and critical investigations of subjectivity, the erotic and taboo, images of atrocity, and the social construction of the female body. Established by the artist in 2013, the Foundation advances the understanding of Schneemann’s work through scholarship, exhibitions, and publications. Over the next few years, the Foundation will establish a residency program at Schneemann’s home in upstate New York in order to support artists whose work shares Schneemann’s commitment to new methods of aesthetic experimentation. For more information on The Carolee Schneemann Foundation, please visit their website.

    The intro is a fragment of an interview by Robert Haller with Carolee Schneemann from 1973, accessed at the archives of the Carnegie Museum of Art.

    Stay tuned for more episodes coming this Winter.

    The research for this series was generously supported by the Mondriaan Fund and the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts.

    Design by Katharine Wimett.

    Research assistance by Dylan Sherman.

  • This episode of Performance Talks is a conversation with the General Manager of Live Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Limor Tomer.

    Tomer earned both her B.A. and M.A. from The Juilliard School. For 10 years, she performed professionally as a classical pianist in solo and orchestral performances throughout the U.S. and Europe. While at The Met, Tomer expanded and branched out the museum's performance program into exciting new arenas.

    In this conversation, we speak about what it looks like to program live work at a historical museum, the interaction between architecture and performance, and the evolution of live art programming at the Met, which started as the 'lectures and concerts' department, contained within it's auditorium, but now encompasses all performing arts, which visitors can encounter throughout the museum.

    Follow Limor:

    https://www.instagram.com/limor_tomer

    Stay tuned for more episodes coming this Fall.

    The research for this series was generously supported by the Mondriaan Fund and the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts.

    Design by Katharine Wimett.

    Research assistance by Dylan Sherman.

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  • For this episode of Performance Talks I had the pleasure to interview the New York-based curator and Co-Director of Centre Pompidou Jersey City, Charles Aubin.

    Aubin started his career at Centre Pompidou in Paris, served as Senior Curator and Head of Publications at Performa, and was recently hired as Co-Director of Centre Pompidou Jersey City (scheduled to open in 2026) in a full circle moment.

    Working at Performa for more than a decade, the artists he curated work by are almost too numerous works to name: Madeline Hollander, Jérôme Bell, Danielle Dean, and Franz Erhard Walther. A few years ago, he started an oral history project focussing on Yvonne Rainer's choreographic work since her return to dance in 1999.

    In our interview, we delve into Charles' origins as a curator and speak to the challenges of gathering first hand accounts of Yvonne’s 21st-century works.⁣

    Follow Charles:

    https://www.instagram.com/charles_aubin

    Stay tuned for more episodes coming this Fall.

    The research for this series was generously supported by the Mondriaan Fund and the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts.

    Design by Katharine Wimett.

    Research assistance by Dylan Sherman.

  • On September 29 at 99 Canal, writer and editor David Velasco and performer and producer Nile Harris, joined Jeanette Bisschops for a conversation on 'Sarah Michelson,' the 2017 book edited by Velasco and published by MoMA as part of their Modern Dance series.

    They were joined by a crowd of performance devotees and, in a surprise appearance, Sarah herself. In the recorded discussion, the group talks about the contested process of making the book, the value of dance writing, and how they came to be obsessed with Sarah's work in the first place.

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    Nile Harris

    Nile Harris is a performer and director of live works of art. He is currently working on commissions with Performance Space New York and the Chocolate Factory Theater and serves as an Artistic Leader at Ping Chong and Company. His recent work includes ‘this house is not a home’ (2023) an improvised play about American nationalism starring performers Crackhead Barney & Malcolm-X Betts which premiered at Abrons Arts Center and later restaged a part of the Under the Radar Festival.

    Sarah Michelson

    Born in Manchester, England, and based in New York, since the 1990s Michelson has created performances that examine the nature of dance as a discipline through its historical, physical, and intellectual rigor. Her recent work has incorporated painting, video projection, sound, and installation.

    David Velasco

    David Velasco was editor in chief of Artforum from 2017 to 2023 and before that worked as an editor at the website for twelve years. In 2016 he was the creator of and series editor for “Modern Dance,” published by the Museum of Modern Art, which has produced three books: Sarah Michelson (ed. David Velasco), Ralph Lemon (ed. Thomas [T.] Jean Lax), and Boris Charmatz (ed. Ana Janevski). In October 2023 he was dismissed from the magazine after publishing an open letter from cultural workers calling for a ceasefire in Gaza. He lives in New York where he is at work on a book.

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    99 Canal is a project run by artists, for artists

  • This first episode of Performance Talks is a conversation with writer and editor David Velasco

    He brought dance on to the pages of Art Forum during his six year stint as editor-in-chief at the magazine and was the editor of Modern Dance, a series of monographs on contemporary choreographers, published by MoMA. His writing on dance and performance is some of the best out there. In this conversation, Velasco speaks about the importance of integrating dance and theater history into the visual art canon, finding his voice as a writer and the excitement and difficulties of evoking a performance or choreography through text.

    The MoMA Modern Dance Series:

    https://store.moma.org/products/sarah-michelson-modern-dance-series-paperback

    https://store.moma.org/products/boris-charmatz-modern-dance-series-paperback

    the monograph on Ralph Lemon is unavailable prior to his upcoming major exhibition at MoMA PS1, opening November 14, 2024

    Follow David:

    https://www.instagram.com/davidmvelasco/

    Stay tuned for more episodes coming this Fall.

    The research for this series was generously supported by the Mondriaan Fund and the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts.

    Design by Katharine Wimett.

    Research assistance by Dylan Sherman.