Dance Theatre Journal - Trashy students get their grubby mits all over it


Cover: Penny Arcade, Photo by Christa Holka
                               

Trashing
 Dance Theatre Journal

We are thrilled to announce the forthcoming issue of Trashing Dance Theatre Journal co-edited by João Florêncio and Owen Parry.

This special issue of Dance Theatre Journal is a dedicated and rigorous exploration of Trash in art, performance, work, and club culture. It features interviews with performance star and living-legend Penny Arcade, club performer Mouse, sex worker and activist Thierry Schaffauser, plus articles exploring the work of John Sex, Danish collective dunst, Club Wotever and the 'lowest form of performance' - living street sculptures, wasted works, and contaminated performances. Forms of trashy articulation including soap box articles, TV Chat Shows and Tabloid Newspapers interrupt and compliment more formal essays and interviews in this special issue!

Contributors include:

Augusto Corrieri
Bryony Kimmings
Eirini Kartsaki
Johanna Linsley
Lisa Wesley
Lorena Rivero de Beer
Marcia Farquhar
Marianne Mulvey
Mathias Danbolt
Oriana Fox
R. Justin Hunt
Rachel Lois Clapham
Season Butler
Tero Nahua
The Famous Lauren Barri Holstein
Vikki Chalklin

Trashing
Dance Theatre Journal will be available to purchase through the Unbound stall at the Trashing Performance Public Programme.

See www.thisisperformancematters.co.uk for details

Just Say 'No'

Excerpt from Charles Atlas' video Rainer Variations (2002)

Since 2009 I've been thinking about Yvonne Rainer's 'No Manifesto' and how I could re-perform one of her choreographic pieces in a way that makes sense of my love of both the avant-garde and the burlesque. Charles Atlas has beat me to it. 

The Authentic Self - Part 2


The Authentic Self - Part 2
 
Pheonix Square, Leicester

Film Screening and Q&A I 6th October 6.30pm
The Cube Gallery I 6th-29th October
FREE EVENT
Following the success of The Authentic Self film screening in November 2010 The Cutting Room are re-screening the showreel to further get to grips with the ideas surrounding an Authentic Self at Pheonix Square Leicester.
With a few tweaks on the line up the showreel presents a few new additions which will be followed by a panel discussion. Featuring Child of the Atom by David Blandy and Dance Like My Dad by Hetain Patel
 
 

The Cube Gallery
Along side the film screening The Cutting Room present David Blandy and Hetain Patel in exciting mix of reality and fantasy in The Cube Gallery. Both artists looking at their cultural identities in a search for authencity.
 

Film Screening and Q&A
 
'The Cutting Room' present a series of short films exploring questions about our own personal and collective identities. Is it possible to be truly authentic? Does an authentic self exist?
Including an exclusive screening of David Blandy's new film "Child of the Atom" along side Hetain Patel's 'Dance Like Your Dad' and accompanying films from David Shrigley, Oriana Fox, Clare Harris, Jennifer Ross, Chambers Judd, Jon Burgerman and Multitouch Barcelona.
Following the screening will be a Q&A with Artist David Blandy and Hetain Patel

 
 
The Cutting Room is a curatorial organisation initiated by Nottingham based filmmakers Clare Harris and Jennifer Ross, producing events to engage new audiences and to inspire them with the intention of exploring social realities and communication through digital new media, film and performance.

How to find Pheonix Square: http://phoenix.org.uk/index.php?cms_id=212

Role Model of The Week: John Kilduff (a.k.a. Mr Let's Paint) OR 'Infomercials on Acid'

I finally started the daunting task of writing a draft of my first chapter for my PhD and ended up writing quite a bit about John Kilduff’s Let’s Paint TV which will no doubt be scrapped eventually. Embrace failare buddy! 

The initial inspiration for The O Show was John Kilduff's Let's Paint TV which ran from 2002 to 2008 as a public access show in Los Angeles and ended up as a daily spot on stickam.com, a website that enables interactive broadcasting via webcam and chat rooms. Kilduff’s show entails him running on a treadmill, blending mixed drinks, painting canvases and answering calls from random members of the public; all performed in front of a blue screen which shows alternative angles, such as close-ups of what he’s painting or cooking, adding another level of visual chaos. It looks sort of like something you would expect to find on US daytime television – a combination of Bob Ross and exercise infomercial, but on acid. 
 

 The early episodes were very much about testing John’s multitasking abilities or lack thereof, seeing how many activities he could do (or not) simultaneously, adding things like interviewing special guests and playing chess on top of his usual mix of activities. Each episode played with form and content; for example, one episode shows John playing table tennis with the invisible man (a man draped in fabric so that blue screen special effects could wipe away all but his sun-glasses and ping pong paddle). Kilduff’s experimentation with materials/technology and his gift for delivering an amusing, at times absurd, at times profound, oratory play-by-play fuelled the series and earned him a place in both LA counter-culture and UCLA’s highly competitive Masters in Fine Art programme. With the advent of the internet, his videos went viral and gained an international audience; some of his youtube clips have had more than a million views. The more recent stickam episodes which are filmed at his home in The Valley, have a much more DIY aesthetic and are geared towards interacting with his dispersed but committed, web-based community of fans who chat in the stickam chat room.

Day after day, episode after episode, Kilduff espouses the benefits of creativity, perseverance and “embracing failare” [sic], but Let’s Paint TV viewers are divided about whether or not his preaching is ironic or heartfelt. I would argue that it’s the mixture of both that allows their identification and keeps them coming back for more. Critic Doug Harvey describes it aptly: “[b]oisterous, irreverent and surreal, Let’s Paint TV is nevertheless utterly sincere in its espousal of painting as a path of creative liberation’, although I might substitute the word ‘painting’ for ‘multitasking’ or maybe even ‘play’.

Let's Paint TV can be analysed as an example of post-modern parody, especially the cable-access episodes; using absurdity and irony, Kilduff critiques the values of perfectionism and consumerism espoused within US daytime TV programming. On one level, Let’s Paint TV repeats the conventions of the infomercial with the critical difference being that the balding, out-of-breath Kilduff replaces the coherent, attractive and aspirational figure of the salesperson. John is the ultimate ‘everyman’, someone who viewers identify with perhaps more readily and intimately than they would the sun-tanned, muscle-toned body trying to sell them the latest exercise gadget. On another level, the show places itself at the end of a lineage of hobbyist, how-to painting shows, with the critical difference between John Kilduff and Bob Ross being that Ross demonstrates a certain level of skill that can be copied, a fact made all the more poignant because the main message of Let’s Paint TV is to be yourself.[1] 

 



[1] Doug Harvey elluciates this history in his LA Weekly article on Kilduff “The Joy of Painting Saddam” from 2 September 2004, available online: http://www.laweekly.com/content/printVersion/38879

The O Show - PR blurb

In-Progress description of The O Show for marketing purposes:

Do you want to find out about the lives of artists? Do you need to know how they balance the challenges of making art, paying the bills and finding love? The O Show was made for you! Out with the Oprah, in with the new! Professional artist and self-taught therapist Oriana Fox hosts the kind of chat show you’ve always wanted to see. The O Show provides fresh inspiration and straight talk from the mouths of artists and performers. Oriana, her guests and staff psychologists (Oriana’s Mom and Dad) provide the tools you need to make a change – if not in the world – then at least in your little corner of it. It’s a show that will raise your energy, lower your blood pressure and occasionally make you laugh—in short, a whole 45 minutes to an hour of pure possibility.

Artists have a lot to deal with – whether it’s their larger-than-life passion, psychological neuroses or the challenges inherent in the bohemian lifestyle – many of them find creativity to be the only respite. If Oriana’s guests can find complacency, or at least enjoy themselves in the process of striving towards it, so can you!

Creative practitioners will share their work, their life stories and their respective coping mechanisms for dealing with life’s obstacles. As life coach Barbara DeAngelis once said: “We teach what we need to learn.” For those viewers whose cup of joy runneth over, many of the techniques illuminated by these professionals can be employed towards achieving ever increasing happiness, self-actualisation and creative productivity. At the very least, The O Show provides an opportunity to debate whether or not happiness should be anyone’s ultimate goal. Whatever Oriana’s findings turn out to be, you can be a part of it! Join The O Show community and make a commitment to personal and political transformation!

More recommended reading

Our Bodies, Ourselves (2003), video still

Catherine Grant's essay "Fans of Feminism: Re-writing Histories of Second-wave Feminism in Contemporary Art" is now in print in the Oxford Art Journal vol.34 no.2. Here's what she has to say about my video Our Bodies, Ourselves (2003): 
 
"The humorous clash of historical moments and presentations of empowered sisterhood perfectly illustrated my own feelings of disjuncture between the powerful potential of activist feminism and the reworking of 'empowerment' through the acquisition of shoes and boyfriends as shown on Sex and The City. As Carrie Bradshaw might say 'Which got me thinking. . . . What does it mean to be a feminist in the twenty-first century?'"

Provocation Interview

Earlier this year I gave a talk at Sheffield Hallam University as part of their Transmission series on provocation. After the lecture I was interviewed by Keith Barley. You can read my interview and the others from the series here.