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NAME Readymade

May 15, 2010
7:00 pmto10:00 pm

Janez Janša, Janez Janša & Janez Janša

NAME Readymade

lecture performance

with

Wu Ingrid Tsang & Juliana Snapper

“Burrow awhile and build”

a detrivore’s motet by Juliana Snapper

Can you imagine a few years ago 3 established American artists joining the Republican Party and then legally changing their names to George W. Bush? And since then bringing the name of the US President to museums, and festivals, exhibiting next to Robert Gober or Barbara Kruger, showing work next to Meg Stuart and Nature Theater of Oklahoma, presenting video alongside Bruce Nauman?
compactspace gallery invites you to NAME Readymade, the presentation of the “Name changing” gesture perpetrated by three Slovenian artists who, in 2007 officially changed their names to the Slovenia’s economic-liberal, conservative prime minister at the time, Janez Janša.
All three of the Janez Janšas’ private and public affairs, their performances, writiings and exhibitions – in a word, their entire lives – have been conducted under this name ever since. As an extension of their current exhibition at Location One in New York, Janez Janša will take you through a series of artistic, political, administrative and mediatic actions performed by himself together with Janez Jansa and Janez Jansa. Works exhibited in this show (valid ID cards, passports, credit and bank cards, driving licences, birth and marriage certificates, and so on) are generated by the reality itself

“When the three artists changed their names to Janez Jansa, they in fact adopted a critical stand to the state… in which until recently all posts seemed occupied as it were by a single person - Janez Jansa. […] Through the multiplication of Janez Jansa’s name, the function of the prime minister has assumed, within this specific artistic action, a similar position as the Campbell soup cans in Andy Warhol’s works.” (Zdenka Badovinac, Name Readymade, October 2008)

“Now what? …Here we reach a contradiction – the very contradiction of the world of art. A readymade as a work of art is something inauthentic; it is the very proof of inauthenticity: with a readymade, the “aura” disappears. In your case, however, the precondition for this readymade is its authenticity in everyday life – its credibility and authenticity. If somebody bought this work of art, they would be buying it as an authentic piece, together with its functional ‘readymade’ value.” (Lev Kreft, Name as Readymade, An interview with Janez Janša, Janez Janša and Janez Janša, NAME Readymade, October 2008)

Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa and Janez Jansa cut right in the midst of their own realities and the reality of the space and time, in which they work. For this purpose they used procedures typical for art - transformation, translation, representation and mimicry. They turned around the classical relational scheme between art and life as it was developed in the 20th century. Art in the previous century was redefined by way of reality entering into artistic contexts without mediation (so that Badiou can define the 20th century as the passion for the real), while Jansa, Jansa and Jansa want to achieve the opposite so that their methods cut deeply into their material lives and the lives of those around them.
Produced by Aksioma – Institute for Contemporary Art
Supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia and the Municipality of Ljubljana.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT:

NAME Readymade - THE EXHIBITION
Curator: Zdenka Badovinac
http://www.aksioma.org/name
Name as Readymade
An interview with Janez Janša, Janez Janša and Janez Janša by Lev Kreft
www.aksioma.org/interview_kreft.html
NAME Readymade - THE BOOK
Museum of Modern Art Ljubljana, Oct. 2008
www.aksioma.org/name_book

BIOGRAPHY OF THE LECTURER

Janez Janša (b. 1970, Bergamo, Italy) is a conceptual artist, performer, and producer who graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts of Milan, Italy. His work has strong social connotations and is characterized by an intermedia approach. He is co-founder and director of Aksioma, Institute for Contemporary Art in Ljubljana. His first public artistic project was the urban installation I Need Money to Be an Artist, which was presented first in Ljubljana, Slovenia (1996) and then in Venice, Italy (1997). In 2001, he established (with I. Štromajer) Problemarket.com – the Problem Stock Exchange, a virtual platform on which shares of companies dealing with problems are floated. The following year, Janša produced machinaZOIS, an electro-mechanical patron that financially supports contemporary artists and artistic productions. He then started development of DemoKino – Virtual Biopolitical Agora, a virtual parliament that, through topical filmic parables, provides the voters with the opportunity to decide on issues that are becoming the essence of modern politics – the questions of life. In 2005, Janša established the platform RE:akt!, which examines the media’s role in manipulating perceptions and creating (post)modern historical myths and contemporary mythology. A part of this platform is the project Mount Triglav on Mount Triglav by Janez Janša, Janez Janša, and Janez
Janša. Parallel to these socio-political projects, Janša investigated the field of virtual reality and neurofeedback technologies, and from 2000 to 2002, he developed and performed (with Darij Kreuh) Brainscore – Incorporeal Communication, a performance for two operators acting in a virtual reality environment through their avatars. Between 2004 and 2007, he lead the project Brainloop, an interactive performance platform that allows the subject to navigate a virtual space merely by imagining specific motor commands. Janez Janša is also co-editor (with Ivana Ivkovic) of the textual and pictorial reader DemoKino – Virtual Biopolitical Agora, published by Maska and Aksioma in 2005.

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Wu Ingrid Tsang & Juliana Snapper
“Burrow awhile and build”
detrivore motet for 1 or more voices by Juliana Snapper

Imagine for a moment that a symphonic work is a block of wood; a thing of many layers woven together into a beefy whole. Now imagine holding one in your hands and finding snakey tunnels that push through one end of the wood to the other, occasionally crossing one another. They are the pathways of termites — which represent our voices in this piece. Now that you see them, these lines are all you see (are all you will hear). They undermine the very matter of the whole, consigning the wood itself to the background, while exposing hidden aspects of its tone and texture.

“Burrow awhile and build” is a parasitic musical operation that feeds on densely layered instrumental compositions, titan symphonic masterworks. Each new vocal melody is pieced together by advancing note-by-note through the bulky, part-stacked orchestral scores while disregarding the integrity of any single part from one musical moment to the next (as in Violin I or piano or tuba III). The temporal flow, pitch and rhythm are all sung as marked but the melodic pathway each voice draws is erratic because it is bitten from many different instrumental lines as it progresses. Something of the nature of the composition stays animated, while the rest of it frowns in silence.

Likely Stories and other sides (in San Diego)

May 7, 2010
6:00 pmto10:00 pm

Why not make another trip to San Diego for…

From Jacuzzi jets and irrigation ditches to dust storms and dead falcons, Glenna Jennings new exhibition Likely Stories and other sides sheds an altogether new light on the small border town of Jacumba, CA.

Known for its curing mineral waters, Jacumba was a thriving vacation spot in the 1920s. Thanks to various economic factors, including the construction of Interstate 8 in the 60s and the high-cost border wall in the 90s, Jacumba has become a peaceful if troubled enclave rather than a prosperous, overrun Mecca.

Since 2008, Jennings and her art collaborators have spent a lot of time in this spa town, moving back and forth over the boundaries that constitute insider vs. outsider research and art. Using an outdated analog technique popular for beer advertisements and kitschy wall decor, Jennings has customized a set of kinetic lightboxes manufactured in China with her own photographic documentation of the town. The result combines sculpture and photography in a manner that collapses the mundane and the sublime, loading spectacle with the charge of social and historical content.

Though Jennings touches on the trope of the U.S. / Mexican border, her work is more concerned with the eclectic histories of social phenomena like hydrotherapy and contemporary theories of the everyday. Both her written and visual works combine personal narratives with public cultures and information, creating a palimpsest that celebrates and questions the very nature of ‘The Story.’ Believing Michel DeCerteau’s assertion that “every story is a travel story,” she examines Space and Place in a context of alternating movement and repose.

Jennings’ book of the same title is an art object in itself, composed of images and ‘ficto-critical-creative-non-fiction’ writings. London-based designer Claire Waterworth (who spent a very inspiring New Year’s holiday with Jennings in Jacumba) is completing the book design for its July debuts in San Diego, Los Angeles and London.

As an artist, writer, curator, educator and director of the LA-Geneva art collective compactspace, Jennings keeps the rules to a minimum and the possibilities at an overflow. Her work has been exhibited throughout the U.S., Europe and Mexico, and will be featured in the upcoming exhibition Here Not There at MCASD (curated by Lucia Sanroman). Jennings is a native of East County, San Diego, where navigated a landscape of cheerleaders, chaparral, monster trucks and horses.

Likely Stories and other sides will be on display at the UCSD Visual Arts Facility Gallery from Tuesday, May 4th to Friday, May 7th. Please join the artist and her cohort for a reception on May 7th from 6-10pm. The celebration will feature a “marcuzzi party” in honor of the late philosopher and UCSD professor Herbert Marcuse.

She would like to thank the management of Jacumba Hotel Spa and Resort, Professor Lesley Stern, Giant Photo, San Diego Plastics, and the residents of Jacumba for their many contributions to her exhibition and book. All of these people have made her process possible on a very local and human level.

Mommy, Mommy #7: One Thousand and One Mommies!

April 4, 2010
7:30 amto9:30 am

Mommy, Mommy! keeps chugging forward.
Come join us for another fabulous night of fate, destiny, and literary madness.

Mommy, Mommy #7: One Thousand and One Mommies!

Sunday, April 4, 2010 at 7:30 p.m.

(Easter Sunday! Rumors are flying that the Easter Bunny may make an appearance…)

compactspace (next to Pussy n’ Pooch) / 105 E. 6th Street / Los Angeles, 90014

michaela walsh / mathew timmons / catherine lamb / glenna jennings

michaela walsh completed her mfa in creative nonfiction and her ma in theology, ethics in culture from the university of iowa in 2003. she is currently pursuing a phd in communication studies at the university of california, san diego. walsh’s work explores the physical space of the US/Mexico border as a biopolitical zone of classification, a site of inclusion and exclusion, entrance and exit, as a prolonged threshold that marks a place of entering or beginning, but also a point where physiological and psychological effect begins to be produced. her work has been published in the iowa journal of cultural studies and the human communication review. when she isn’t doing research, you can find her on the soccer field or at the water trying to skip stones.

Mathew Timmons is a writer, curator and critic in Los Angeles. He is the General Director of General Projects at various locations including Outpost for Contemporary Art and The Ups & Downs, an installation series, at workspace. He also is the editor of Insert Press and co-curator of Late Night Snack (w/ Harold Abramowitz). His works include CREDIT (Blanc Press) and LIP SERVICE, a chapbook published by Slack Buddha Press. Forthcoming works include: The New Poetics (Les Figues Press), his micro-book collaboration with Marcus Civin, a particular vocabulary (P S Books), and a chapbook, Lip Music (By the Skin of Me Teeth). His work may be found in various journals, including: P-Queue, Holy Beep!, Flim Forum, The Physical Poets, NōD, PRECIPICe, Or, Moonlit, aslongasittakes, eohippus labs, Area Sneaks, Artweek and The Encyclopedia Project.

Catherine Lamb is a music composer and violist, working from the traditions of American Experimentalism, Just Intonation, and Indian Dhrupad. She is interested in delicate attention to layers of sound and their shadows, intimacy, and the condition of the being. She intuitively works through mathematical forms, typically involving an opening from a central tone into a spectrum of tones and shades. At times she works with words and has been exploring the voice. Her most influential teachers have been James Tenney, Michael Pisaro, and Mani Kaul. She is currently living in Los Angeles, CA.

Glenna Jennings’ work relates directly and tangentially to cheerleaders, guns, bearded men, working class spas, the subtle intricacies of identity and the shifting definitions of Space and Place. As a photographer, writer, curator and educator, she keeps the rules to a minimum and the possibilities at an overflow. Jennings completed her first novella, Granite, and the accompanying photo series, Raskolnikov last year with a grant from the UCSD Division of Arts and Humanities. She is currently finishing her first book, Likely Stories and other sides. Her artwork is represented by Luis de Jesus Seminal Projects in Los Angeles and will be included in an upcoming show at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. She is completing her MFA in Visual Arts at UCSD in a few very long weeks and will continue running the compactspace Art Collective in LA for as long as the universe allows.

Mommy, Mommy! is a project of Les Figues Press: a nonprofit, literary press dedicated to creating conversations between readers, writers and artists.
It is curated by Teresa Carmody, Janice Lee, & Anna Joy Springer.

UC San Diego Open Studios

April 10, 2010
3:00 pmto8:00 pm

JOIN us in SAN DIEGO for…

Whether constructing a massive decomposing stalactite from iron and fiberglass, recording a pirated copy of Avatar onto a virtual rotating sphere, or painting vibrant portals leading to the past’s sexy future, the visual artists of UCSD’s highly praised MFA program have practices spanning a wide range of disciplines that evoke a dialogue of remarkable currency.The artists’ works range from technological investigations and information visualizations to social interventions and material practices, all the while questioning and creating relationships with art history, critical theory, visual studies, art activism, and public culture.

More info at http://ucsdopenstudios.com/2010/

Benshi Performance by Jaime Cortez

March 19, 2010
8:00 pmto10:00 pm

Jaime Cortez’s writing has appeared in over a dozen anthologies. He edited, among others, Virgins, Guerrillas & Locas, and the comix anthology Turnover, a finalist for Independent Book Publishers Award. Jaime also wrote and illustrated the groundbreaking graphic novel Sexile, about a transgender Cuban refugee.  His multidisciplinary visual art encompasses drawing, sculpture, mixed media and hybrid practices. His art has been shown at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Berkeley Art Museum, Oakland Museum, Southern Exposure, The Lab, Intersection for the Arts and Galeria de la Raza.

Read more about Jaime HERE

feeling Feelings Extended for LAAS reception

January 23, 2010
6:00 pmto9:00 pm

LAST CHANCE to see feeling Feelings

Reception in conjunction with:

Los Angeles County Art Show Downtown Galleries Tour

Saturday, January 23rd

6-9pm