Fountain Terrace in Bryant Park
New York
6th Avenue and 41st Street

Kate Gilmore
dal 9/5/2010 al 13/5/2010
8:30 am - 6:30 pm
WEB
Segnalato da

Kellie Honeycutt


approfondimenti

Kate Gilmore



 
calendario eventi  :: 




9/5/2010

Kate Gilmore

Fountain Terrace in Bryant Park, New York

Public Art Fund presents a striking five‐day performance‐based artwork in the midtown oasis of Bryant Park. 'Walk the Walk' is a dynamic sculptural peace activated by a group of women's walking, stomping, shuffling and marching on the roof of an eight‐foot‐high cubic structure from 8:30 am to 6:30 pm.


comunicato stampa

For five days this May, Public Art Fund will present a striking new performance‐based artwork in the midtown oasis of Bryant Park. Walk the Walk by artist Kate Gilmore is a dynamic sculptural and performance‐based artwork activated by a group of women’s walking, stomping, shuffling and marching on the roof of an eight‐foot‐high cubic structure. Like typical office workers, the artwork’s participants represent a variety of physical builds and types, all clothed in simple yellow dresses and beige pumps. These women will walk, march and stomp atop the temporary structure from 8:30 am to 6:30 pm for five days straight.

Acting out their "work" in an area densely populated by office buildings, Gilmore’s performers transform the workday into a visual spectacle and dissonant symphony. Public Art Fund Director and Chief Curator Nicholas Baume observes: "In Walk the Walk, the office cubicle has morphed into a room‐sized open structure. No longer confined by it, Gilmore’s office troupe has literally raised the roof, making it center stage for their visually and acoustically startling performance." Bright yellow walls beckon passersby inside, providing a multi‐sensory experience. Once inside, visitors will be enveloped by the reverberations of the stomping feet overhead – inserting them into a dramatic, improvisational audio piece.

Walk the Walk is part celebration but also part protest piece. The structure is painted the same color as the women’s dresses, branding the participants to fit their surroundings. Attempting to challenge the physical and psychological systems that regulate our working lives, Gilmore takes internal struggles and makes them public. Even those unable to experience the work in person will have access via online video footage available on the Public Art Fund’s website at http://www.publicartfund.org.

Drawing attention to, and celebrating the vast number of women who work each day in the City, Gilmore’s installation questions notions of work, its limitations, and possibilities, especially as they relate to themes of female identity, physical endurance, and personal expression. Walk the Walk joins a rich tradition of feminist art practices in a decidedly new way.

Best known for her single‐channel videos of private performances, Gilmore’s work often reflects attempts to master arduous physical tasks while wearing stereotypically feminine clothing and shoes. In Standing Here (2010), currently included in the 2010 Whitney Biennial, Gilmore is seen climbing a prefab interior column wearing a polka dot dress and pumps. Similarly, Walk the Walk juxtaposes the display of physical exertion with the trappings of appropriateness and conformity, raising questions about women’s economic and political goals, as well as issues of individuality, class, and social mobility. However, Walk the Walk marks the first time that Gilmore has orchestrated her work for other performers, instead of participating as its main subject.

Walk the Walk is a project of Public Art Fund’s In the Public Realm, a program started in 1995 to identify and champion innovative public art projects by New York‐based emerging artists. Each year, the Public Art Fund makes an open call to artists for In the Public Realm proposals.
Kate Gilmore was selected last year from over 300 applicants. She joins an impressive roster of some 30 artists who have realized commissions in New York City as part of this program.

About the Artist
Born in 1975, in Washington D.C., Kate Gilmore lives and works in New York City. She received her Bachelor of Arts from Bates College, Lewiston, Maine (1997), and her Masters of Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts, New York (2002). Her work has been shown extensively, most recently in the 2010 Whitney Biennial, on view until May 30. She has had solo exhibitions at the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art, San Jose (2009); Franco Soffiantino Arte Contemporanea, Turin (2009); Smith‐Stewart Gallery, New York (2008); and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia (2008). Gilmore was awarded a Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award in 2009.

Kate Gilmore’s Walk the Walk is a part of the Public Art Fund program In the Public Realm, which is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts; New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency; and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

Public Art Fund gratefully acknowledges the cooperation of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg; First Deputy Mayor Patricia E. Harris; Parks and Recreation Commissioner Adrian Benepe; and Cultural Affairs Commissioner Kate D. Levin.

Public Art Fund is a non‐profit art organization supported by generous contributions from individuals, foundations, and corporations, and with funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency; and the National Endowment for the Arts.

This exhibition was made possible with the support of the Bryant Park Corporation.

Image: Walk the Walk (rendering), 2010, courtesy of the artist

Artist's talk:
Kate Gilmore will give a free artist's talk on the Fountain Terrace in Bryant Park on Tuesday, May 11 at 12:30 pm.

Press contact
Kellie Honeycutt for further information at 212-980-4575 or khoneycutt@publicartfund.org

The Press Preview will take place on the Fountain Terrace in Bryant Park on Monday, May 10 at 10:00 am. The artist will be present for comments.

Walk the Walk will be presented Monday, May 10 through Friday, May 14, from 8:30 am- 6:30 pm on the Fountain Terrace in Bryant Park, just inside the west entrance to the Park, on 6th Avenue and 41st Street.
Walk the Walk is free to the public.
Subway: B, D, F, or V train to 42nd Street-Bryant Park; 7 train to 5th Avenue-Bryant Park.

IN ARCHIVIO [1]
Kate Gilmore
dal 9/5/2010 al 13/5/2010

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