America Is Hard to See

May 1–Sept 27, 2015


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Get Rid of Yourself

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The two alternating programs on view in this chapter respond to the shifting cultural and political climate of America’s recent past. Program A presents works that cleverly engage forms of popular entertainment, advertising, music, dance, and technology. Works by artists such as Alex Bag, Tony Oursler, and Ryan Trecartin reflect a post-MTV era of lo-fi visual effects and disjointed editing, while those by Loretta Fahrenholz, Luis Gispert, and Jacolby Satterwhite use slick techniques to picture a remixed, science-fiction inflected future.

Program B is organized around politically driven works, which deal with themes including mass media’s role in shaping social and cultural consciousness; the politics of race, gender, and sexual identity; and the potential perils of global capitalism. Get Rid of Yourself, a video by the artist collective Bernadette Corporation, takes the anarchist protests at the 2001 G8 summit in Genoa, Italy, as an opportunity to examine decentralized, anonymous political resistance and its rhetoric. The protesters’ call to “get rid of yourself” speaks to the futility of individual action and the general feeling of instability at the beginning of the new millennium (something that was heightened when the artists were editing the video in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks). Videos by artists like Tala Madani and Richard Serra confront us with their candor, while works by Kevin Jerome Everson, Sharon Hayes, and Wu Tsang address history and memory from more personal perspectives.

These two programs alternate and cycle through each day. Program A is screened first on Mondays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, and Program B is screened first on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays.

Below is a selection of works from this chapter.

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KALUP LINZY (B. 1977), CONVERSATIONS WIT DE CHUREN V: AS DA ART WORLD MIGHT TURN, 2006

Kalup Linzy (b. 1977), Conversations Wit de Churen V: As da Art World Might Turn, 2006. Video, color, sound, 12:09 min. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Film, Video, and New Media Committee 2009.134 © 2015 Kalup Linzy

Encompassing performance, video, music, writing, and directing, Kalup Linzy’s art probes the socioeconomic structures of high and low culture with equal parts earnestness, resourcefulness, and wit. After studying at the University of South Florida and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, in 2002 Linzy began producing Conversations Wit de Churen, an episodic video series that continued for over a decade. The work focuses on the emotional lives of a host of female characters, all played by the artist in drag. These narratives play with the rope of daytime television soap opera—with its melodrama, plot twists, and cliffhanger endings—and make reference to the long-running soap operas All My Children and As the World Turns. The story is set in the American South, and each character speaks with a distinct dialect in a voice-over that is slowed down or sped up to create masculine and feminine tones. The multiple layers of Linzy’s performance—histrionic acting, affected speech, blonde wigs, and tight dresses—result in direct commentaries on gender, race, sexuality, and class.

Conversations Wit de Churen V: As da Art World Might Turn follows a promising young painter, “Katonya” (played by Linzy), as she stages her first solo gallery exhibition. Made shortly after Linzy himself experienced his first art-world successes, the video parodies the rise, fall, and ultimate return of a hopeful emerging artist. Linzy’s subsequent videos and performance have investigated the structures of celebrity and pop culture and include collaborations with personas such as musician Michael Stipe and actor James Franco, among others.

Excerpted from Whitney Museum of American Art: Handbook of the Collection (2015), p. 233. Published by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; distributed by Yale University Press.


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