AA Bronson
Andrew Zealley
Scott Treleaven
Michael Dudeck
Christophe Chemin
Scott Hug
Sands Murray-Wassink
Naufus Figueroa
Item Idem
J.X. Williams
Bruce LaBruce
School for Young Shamans. The artist's new exhibition returns to his collaborative roots. The installation includes performance, video, sculpture, sound, photography and drawing.
AA Bronson's new exhibition returns to his collaborative roots.
Two collaborations, both with Terence Koh, consist of a double toilet
cubicle joined by a glory hole: one is a miniature, a
three-dimensional model; the other is an architectural installation
that invites the performative.
The installation "AA Bronson's School for Young Shamans" is also
performative in nature. Incorporating works by nine younger artists
and a musical score by composer Andrew Zealley, the installation
includes performance, video, sculpture, sound, photography and
drawing. The central object in the installation, a soothsayer's tent
made in collaboration with Scott Treleaven (Paris), will act as the
site for a performance by "Performance Artist/Witch Doctor" Michael
Dudeck (Winnipeg) during the opening event. Other artists in the
installation include Christophe Chemin (Berlin), Scott Hug (New
York), Sands Murray-Wassink (Amsterdam), Naufus Figueroa (Guatemala),
Item Idem (Tokyo), and J.X. Williams (East L.A.). A portrait of
Christophe Chemin by Bruce LaBruce (Toronto) completes the
installation. The installation is intentionally cross-generational
and spans 40 years of artists.
AA's earliest works, photographic self-portraits from 1969, are also
tucked into the show, together with recent self-portraits. A
photographic self-portrait commissioned by the Royal Museum of
Mariemont in Brussels is a still life, within which the artist can be
found. And a new edition of convex mirrors, studded with crystals,
mimic a 16th century Tibetan mirror, the divination mirror of the
State Oracle of Tibet.
For the last fifteen years, AA Bronson's work has addressed themes of
trauma and mourning, sex and death, spirit and transformation. "Anna
and Mark, February 3, 2001" is a bill-board-sized photographic
portrait of the artists' spouse, Mark Jan Krayenhoff van de Leur,
with his daughter Anna, taken 10 days after her premature birth. Like
the "School for Young Shamans" it points the way to renewal and new
life in the face of loss.
AA Bronson worked and lived as one of the three artists of General
Idea from 1969 through 1994. Since then, he has worked under his own
name, with exhibitions at the Vienna Secession (2000), the Chicago
Museum of Contemporary Art (2001), the MIT List Visual Arts Center
(2002), and the Power Plant, Toronto (2003). He was included in the
Montreal Biennial (2000), and the Whitney Biennial (2002), as well as
the Venice Biennale (1980), the Sydney Biennale (1983), the Sao Paulo
Biennale (1998), and Documenta (1982). He has received many awards,
most recently the Skowhegan Medal in Media Arts (2006). He was
appointed a Senior Critic at the Yale School of Art in 2006, and has
been the Director of Printed Matter, Inc. since 2004.
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