New Museum Opens Wynne Greenwood's KELLY Exhibit Today
By: BWW News Desk Sep. 16, 2015
New York, NY...Working across video and performance, Wynne Greenwood explores constructions of the self, tracing how subjectivities are formed in public and private spaces and always in relation to others-be they imagined or real-life personae. Greenwood is widely known for her work as Tracy + the Plastics, in which she plays all three members of an all-girl band. As Tracy + the Plastics, Greenwood performed live as lead singer Tracy, accompanied by videos of herself portraying keyboardist Nikki and drummer Cola, and toured across the country from 1999 until the project's end in 2006.
Naming a new, yet-to-be-imagined character orbiting beyond the Plastics' cosmology, "Kelly" is an exhibition in the Fifth Floor gallery and a six-month residency at the New Museum in which Greenwood premieres the now complete, re-performed, and mastered archive of Tracy + the Plastics' performances. Over the last two years, Greenwood has worked to produce videos of the band's historical, but, until now, largely undocumented, performances. Her approach generates an unusual archival object-original footage of Nikki and Cola accompanied by newly taped performances, made a decade or more later, of the "live" vocalist, Tracy. Bringing this archive into dialogue with more recent work exploring the artist's interest in what she calls "culture healing," this exhibition presents new work from Greenwood's ongoing More Heads series-a body of sculptures and videos that represents characters in symbolic and deconstructed forms. Together, these works consider the poetics of the pause while mining electric gaps of meaning in conversation and offering possibilities for feminist, queer, and experimental models of collaboration and dialogue.MUSIC SERIES: TEMPORARY ARRANGEMENTS
"Temporary Arrangements" is a unique concert series that invites artists to form one-night-only bands and stage their premiere-and, by definition, also final-performances at the New Museum. Curated by Wynne Greenwood, the program emerges out of the DIY ethos of Greenwood's legendary feminist band, Tracy + the Plastics. "Temporary Arrangements" proposes a collaborative model that is makeshift and provisional from the outset, asking what can happen when a group is formed without future expectations in mind.September 18, 7 PM: Temporary Arrangement by Anna OxygenNovember 13, 7 PM: Temporary Arrangement by Sacha Yanow
December 11, 7 PM: Temporary Arrangement by Wynne Greenwood PUBLIC PROGRAMSSeptember 19, 3 PM: "Let's piece our knowing together"
A conversation on queer archives with Lisa Darms, Reina Gossett, Wynne Greenwood, and Sasha Wortzel, moderated by exhibition curators Johanna Burton and Stephanie SnyderNovember 14, 3 PM: "Hall Pass"
A conversation on legacies of feminist video production with Cecilia Dougherty, Cheryl Dunye, and Tara MateikDecember 12, 3 PM: "Can you take it from 'Hey, Tracy...'"
A conversation on language, scripts, and performance with Gregg Bordowitz, Erin Markey, and Elisabeth SubrinDecember 13, 3 PM: Release Party: Wynne Greenwood and Friends
Book launch with performances by Morgan Bassichis, Joe DeNardo, K8 Hardy, Sara Jaffe, Fawn Krieger, and Emily RoysdonSUPPORT Major support for the project is generously provided by The New Foundation, Seattle. Artist commissions at the New Museum are generously supported by the Neeson / Edlis Artist Commissions Fund. Artist residencies are made possible, in part, by Laurie Wolfert. Additional support is provided by the Toby Devan Lewis Emerging Artists Exhibitions Fund. Additional support for Seasons is provided by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, and from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Endowment support is provided by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Skadden, Arps Education Programs Fund, and the William Randolph Hearst Endowed Fund for Education Programs at the New Museum. The artist would like to acknowledge Henry Art Gallery, the City of Seattle Artist Project, and Tom White and the Estate of Leslie Scalapino.
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