Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Interview // QAF artist Coral Short

When I first met inter­na­tional Queer per­for­mance artist Coral Short at the Queer Arts Fes­ti­val’s open­ing art party, she was wear­ing box­ing shorts and a deter­mined expres­sion. Don­ning her gloves, she walked onto stage and began to per­form her open­ing piece, Stop Beat­ing Your­self Up, a lit­eral box­ing match fought entirely–and mercilessly–against her­self. When I met Short a few days later for our inter­view, she was a rad­i­cally dif­fer­ent per­son. Relaxed, smil­ing, and as I dis­cov­ered later, a lit­tle con­cussed, Short was noth­ing like the fierce fighter I remem­bered from a few nights ago.
As we talked per­for­mance, med­i­ta­tion, and travel over after­noon cof­fee, I real­ized that Short is actu­ally both of these peo­ple: open and friendly, but also strong and, hon­estly, intim­i­dat­ing. Despite her gen­tle nature, Short clearly has no prob­lem being ruth­less when it comes to what really mat­ters: cre­at­ing pow­er­ful, boundary-pushing art.
Coral Short performs Stop Beating Yourself Up, photos by Katie Stewart
Coral Short per­forms Stop Beat­ing Your­self Up, photo by Katie Stew­art
SAD Mag: You first per­formed Stop Beat­ing Your­self Up in 2013 at Edgy Women in Mon­treal. In a recent inter­view with Daily Xtra, you said that you chose to add some mod­i­fi­ca­tions to the piece for this year’s per­for­mance: decreas­ing the length from the orig­i­nal three hours to one and keep­ing a para­medic on hand. Why did you choose to per­form the piece again, if it was so dam­ag­ing the first time?
Coral Short: I actu­ally never wanted to do this piece again, but Artis­tic Direc­tor SD Hol­man, through the Gen­eral Man­ager, Elliott Hearte, really wanted me to do the piece and offered to fly me out here. And my lit­tle sis­ter Amber just had a baby–the first baby in the Short fam­ily, so I said, “Okay, I’m going to do this for this nephew.”
SM: You mean, beat your­self up for her child?
CS: Basi­cally! After [the per­for­mance] I sent my sis­ter a text that said, “This will make a good story one day, but my head really hurts.”
SM: Did you get any­thing new out of repeat­ing your per­for­mance? Has your orig­i­nal inten­tion or rela­tion­ship to the piece changed since 2013? 
CS: I think it did. The first time I did it, I didn’t do it with full body aware­ness. Since that time I’ve been to three vipassanas–ten day silent retreats–and I have a daily med­i­ta­tion prac­tice. Being more inside my body than I used to, [the per­for­mance] was more impactual on the cel­lu­lar struc­ture than it did orig­i­nally. Each time has been a rit­ual, but I think this [time] was more like a clo­sure: “I will stop doing this now–stop doing this very lit­eral performance–stop beat­ing myself up.” We all need to move for­ward from this inter­nal strug­gle, myself included!
It’s also really, really hard on the audi­ence. This per­for­mance, peo­ple are more with me than any other per­for­mance I’ve ever done. They’re hor­ri­fied, but they’re with me. There’s blood spurt­ing out of me, but peo­ple try to stay the course with me. Psy­cho­log­i­cally, it’s really hard on peo­ple. I can’t make eye con­tact with them, so I have to look at the wall or the cam­eras or the floor. I’m a chan­nel for the audience–a vis­ceral sym­bol for the strug­gle inside themselves.
They want to pro­tect me–they want to stop me. But no one does. When I first did the piece in 2013, I was asked by my cura­tor, “What if some­one stops you?” And I said, “It will just become part of the piece.” But no one stopped me then, and no one stopped me now. I think the audi­ence becomes trans­fixed with a hyp­notic mor­bid fascination.
DSC_1449
Photo by Katie Stew­art
SM: Do you think that’s because it’s art, or do you think that’s just human nature?
CS: I think there’s a “This is art” thing going on. But, I think if some­one would have tried to stop me, I would have stopped. I think all it would take is just one person.
I think peo­ple almost want to see it play out. If you look back across human­ity, or to Game of Thrones, there’s always been a love of fight­ing and blood. The fight­ing pits, the colos­seum, the behead­ings –I think there’s an ele­ment of human­ity that wants to see that. Blood is powerful.
SM: In addi­tion to per­form­ing at the festival’s open­ing party, you also curated a film night this year called TRIGGERWARNING. How did you find the “fear­less Queer video art” for that event? 
CS: I travel a lot. I have about ten home bases. I move with a lot of ease in the world due to the priv­i­lege of being a triple pass­port holder. I have all these dif­fer­ent com­mu­ni­ties that I have lived and worked in, so I meet so many more cre­ators than the aver­age per­son. While I’m mov­ing, I talk to other cura­tors, inter­act with other fes­ti­vals, other artists, every­where I go. I come across incred­i­ble film­mak­ers some of whom I have been work­ing with for almost a decade.  I’m part of a huge Queer net­work of cul­tural pro­duc­ers in Asia, North Amer­ica and Europe who I can reach out to at any time on the inter­net. We are all there for each other.
Photo by Katie Stewart
Photo by Katie Stew­art
SM: And how did you choose which ones to include? What qual­i­fied the videos as too triggering–or not trig­ger­ing enough–for the event?
CS: It’s actu­ally really hard to find trig­ger­ing work. I cut out pieces that I found prob­lem­atic in terms of race and trans issues. I didn’t want any­one to feel unwel­come in the space. In the end, I cre­ated a bill that I felt com­fort­able with and I felt other peo­ple would be com­fort­able with, but there were def­i­nitely pieces that push the limit in terms of sexuality.
SM: Were there a lot of strong reactions?
CS: Well, actu­ally it’s funny, I feel like my bill was not trig­ger­ing enough. Per­haps I have to try harder! There was blood and piss and some­one kiss­ing their par­ents and per­for­mance art on the verge of self harm. But it was a fine line, because I didn’t want to make any­one feel so uncom­fort­able that they would walk off in a bad state alone into the world.
SM: What’s been your expe­ri­ence as some­one who works both with film and per­for­mance? Do you think peo­ple react very dif­fer­ently to the two art forms?
CS: I think peo­ple are wary of per­for­mance art, because they feel that it’s an unpre­dictable medium–which it is — that is the joy of it!  A lot of my video cura­tions make per­for­mance art more palat­able in a way. And video makes it pos­si­ble to get all these artists with dynamic per­son­al­i­ties from dif­fer­ent loca­tions on one bill. That’s why I love video: all that tal­ent within three min­utes. It’s amaz­ing. For exam­ple: Mor­gan M PageEduardo Resrepo, and local artist Jade Yumang.
Photo by Katie Stewart
Photo by Katie Stew­art
SM: In that same Daily Xtra inter­view, you refer to Van­cou­ver cul­ture as “very PC com­pared to the east coast,” and in another inter­view with Edgy Women, you describe Mon­treal as “one of the few remain­ing metrop­o­lises that is afford­able to live cheaply and cre­ate art.” Van­cou­ver cul­ture receives a lot of this sort of criticism–among the well known, of course, is the Econ­o­mist’srecent inclu­sion of Van­cou­ver in the list of “mind-numbingly bor­ing” cities. Do you think our atti­tude will ever change, or are we for­ever doomed to be small-minded, unaf­ford­able and ulti­mately, boring?
CS: I feel like the Van­cou­ver art com­mu­nity is thriv­ing these days! There’s been a much needed show of city sup­port: a bunch of money given to VIVO and the art orga­ni­za­tions in that area. There seems to be some new stuff hap­pen­ing; there’s always some great work. I always like to find out what’s hap­pen­ing here–who the new upcom­ing artists are, like Emilio Rojas, Helen Reed and Han­nah Jickling.
Photo by Katie Stewart
Photo by Katie Stew­art
SM: Obvi­ously you’re famil­iar with the theme of this year’s fes­ti­val: draw­ing the line. As a per­former and artist, you’ve crossed many lines: from hole-puppet protests to phys­i­cal self-abuse, you don’t seem afraid to “go too far” when it comes to your craft. This might be cliche, but where (if ever) do you draw the line? And why?
CS: When I was a young artist, I used to repeat some kind of mantra that went some­thing like this:  to keep push­ing through my lim­its to go to the other side. I really wanted that to be my work: to not be afraid of any­thing. Push it as far as you can go and then push it far­ther.  That’s where it begins and where my prac­tice has grown — when I take risks and walk my own path.
But my artis­tic prac­tice has changed since I did vipas­sana. I’ve started to make places for peo­ple to sit down, because peo­ple want to relax; it’s a really fast-paced life. So I made a giant, portable nest. I give peo­ple rides with these brown, vel­vet cush­ions while they hold this egg, and they become very bird­like. Peo­ple love to sit in it. I’ve also started mak­ing this incred­i­ble earth fur­ni­ture that is opu­lently grow­ing with plants on rad­i­cal faerie sanc­tu­ary land in Ver­mont and at IDA. I’m build­ing places for peo­ple to repose, relax and be comfortable.
SM: Is this expe­ri­ence of com­fort some­thing you’re try­ing to com­mu­ni­cate in your art? Is that your intention?
CS: I think it just kind of hap­pened. I have almost 15 years of sobri­ety, and each year I grow into my body and cel­lu­lar struc­ture a lit­tle more. That’s com­ing through in my work. It’s all tied into med­i­ta­tion and slow­ing down. The Queer scene is soaked in sub­stances and lack of self-awareness, so liv­ing inside our bod­ies as queers is rev­o­lu­tion­ary. Self-love is radical.

The Van­cou­ver Queer Arts Fes­ti­val runs from July 23 — August 7. Event list­ings are avail­able on the fes­ti­val web­siteFor more infor­ma­tion about Coral Short, fol­low her on Twit­ter and Face­book, or visit her web­site.

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Meet Rae Langes who is "...seeking other queer creatures with whom to play and conspire."

I met Rae while at the Rapid Pulse Performance Festival in Chicago.
Rae is a PhD Candidate in Performance Studies at Northwestern University

Check out Rae work and research here:  https://sites.google.com/site/ralanges/

Statemen from Rae:

"I am a Chicago-based artist who engages issues of gender, sexuality, and race through various texts and embodied (inter)actions to raise questions around the socio-cultural contingencies of being human. If one is positioned as sub/human according to one's skin color and/or genitalia, how does that affect one's quality of life or belonging in a particular community or culture? Is "humanity" a term we should continue to revise and fight for? My approach to performance is hydra-headed and often includes telling stories while traipsing through surreal environments patchworked from digital media, found objects, and clownish contraptions. 

Over the past fifteen years I have performed in art galleries, museums, nightclubs, universities, backyards, cafes, the streets, and the sticks. In addition to my solo work I have participated in performance and visual art communities such as The End of the World Cirkus, Thought Crime Collective, Theater in My Basement, The Shipyard, the Guerrilla Studio at SIGGRAPH, Draka Arts Foundation, and Cirkus Plexus. While working towards my BA in Interdisciplinary Arts and Performance at Arizona State University from 2006-2009, I participated in performance workshops facilitated by La Pocha Nostra and The Rachel Rosenthal Co. In 2011, I received an MFA in Studio Arts of Performance from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Currently, I am a PhD candidate in the Performance Studies Department at Northwestern University seeking other queer creatures with whom to play and conspire."


~Rae Langes, 2015

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Baltimore Artivists

ATTENTION ALL ARTIST, ACTIVIST, TRUTH SEEKERS, INJUSTICE SUFFERERS AND SUPPORTERS ! WE ARE INVITING YOU TO GATHER FOR A DAY OF ARTISTIC EXPRESSION AND DEMONSTRATION SUNDAY MARCH 3RD. 

STARTING @ JUBILEE ARTS( 1947 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE) 
AND ENDING @ SPIN CYCLE LAUNDROMAT (2020 MARYLAND AVE) 

WE WILL MARCH IN SOLIDARITY WITH ALL THOSE EXPERIENCING INJUSTICE, AND EXPRESS IT BY ANY MEDIUM NECESSARY.

JOIN UP FOR CREATION, LIVE PERFORMANCES, AND UNIFYING ACTIONS ALL IN THE NAME OF ARTIVISM. 

UNTIL THEN,
LOVE, TRUTH AND ART.
_______________________________________________
SCHEDULE

1PM:MEET AT JUBILEE ARTS AND ENGAGE IN COMMUNITY CREATION

2PM-BEGIN PROCESSION
3:45 -END PROCESSION
4PM- LOVE ON THE LINE@ SPIN CYCLE LAUNDROMAT ( 2020 Maryland Ave)
https://www.facebook.com/events/374653809409879/
4:30PM - OPEN SHARE EXPERIENCE @ YNOT LOT
( 4 W NORTH AVE.)
5:30 - ALL AGE DANCE PARTY W/DJ K-META @ The Windup Space (12 West North Avenue)