"I've always been interested in challenging authority." | Artist Amie Siegel | Louisiana Channel

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  • čas přidán 24. 08. 2024
  • “The importance of realizing that one’s life could be different.”
    Meet artist Amie Siegel who variously works with film, video, photography, sculpture, painting and installation.
    “I am extremely invested in the existential quest of figuring things out”, says Siegel, who is known for her layered, meticulously constructed works that trace and perform the undercurrents of systems of value, cultural ownership and image-making.
    “The world presents itself to us very partially and almost in a psychotic way at times.”
    “The revealing of what is actually going on; the things that we do not see; the unspoken things or the hidden things; the behind-the-scenes circulation of things that create the structures that determine our environment are extremely interesting to me.”
    The interview, which took place in Siegel’s studio in Brooklyn, New York, presents several of her video works - especially the multi-channel video installation Asterisms (2021) as one example of Siegel’s sophisticated approach. Siegel also tells how looking at art throughout her life has “changed me and my perspective”.
    “I think, like many artists, I have always been interested in challenging authority. Whether it is this sort of hegemonic practices that continue in our culture, unquestioned, though they seem absurd on many levels or just manipulative. Like the algorithms of the internet driving behavior for profit gain. People participate in unquestioning ways; it’s incredible.”
    Amie Siegel was born in Chicago, Illinois, in 1974. Recent solo exhibitions include Bloodlines, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh (2022); The Silence, ArkDes/The Swedish Centre for Architecture & Design, Stockholm (2022); Medium Cool, Blaffer Art Museum, Houston (2019); In Focus: Amie Siegel - Provenance, Tate St. Ives (2018); Winter, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (2017); Strata, South London Gallery (2017); Interiors, Frye Art Museum, Seattle (2017), Double Negative, Museum Villa Stuck, Munich (2016); Ricochet, Kunstmuseum Stuttgart (2016). She has participated in the 34th São Paulo Bienal; 12th Gwangju Biennial; Glasgow International, 5th Auckland Triennial; and the 2008 Whitney Biennial, as well as numerous other group exhibitions. Her films have screened at the Cannes, Berlin, Toronto, Rotterdam and New York film festivals. Her work is in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate, London; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; The Art Institute of Chicago; Kunstmuseum Stuttgart; Auckland Art Gallery; The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Whitney Museum and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. Siegel has been a fellow of the DAAD Berliner-Künstlerprogramm and the Guggenheim Foundation, a Fulton Fellow at The Film Study Center at Harvard University, a Smithsonian Artist Fellow and a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award recipient.
    Amie Siegel was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner in her studio in Brooklyn, New York. The interview was recorded in September 2022.
    Camera: Sean Hanley
    Edited by: Signe Boe Pedersen
    Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
    Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023
    Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet, C.L. Davids Fond og Samling and Fritz Hansen.
    #AmieSiegel #Artist #contemporaryart
    Works featured in the video:
    Asterisms, 2021
    4K multi-channel video installation, colour/sound
    Video documentation: LUMA Arles, Victor & Simon
    Photo: 34th Bienal de São Paulo, Everton Ballardin
    Quarry, 2015
    HD video, colour/sound
    Photos: South London Gallery, Andy Stagg; Haus der Kulturen der Welt; Temple Bar Gallery & Studios
    Black Moon, 2010
    S-16mm film to HD, colour/sound; 2-channel video installation from 16mm
    film, colour/sound, 15 C-Prints
    Photos: Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, Frank Kleinbach
    Black Moon Hole Punch #5, #6, 2010
    Cibachrome prints
    34.3 x 61 cm / 13 1/2 x 24 1/8 in.
    Photos: Todd-White Art Photography
    Fetish, 2016
    HD video, colour/sound
    Photo: Simon Preston Gallery, New York
    The Silence, 2022
    4K two-channel video installation, colour/sound
    Photos: ArkDes Stockholm, readsreadsinfo
    Berlin Remake, 2005
    2-channel video installation, colour/sound
    Photos: Villa Stück Munich; Kunst-Werke Berlin; Hayward Gallery London
    Winter, 2013
    S-16mm film to HD, colour/sound, performance, objects, scores
    Photos: Guggenheim Bilbao
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Komentáře • 10

  • @MjolnirMarks
    @MjolnirMarks Před rokem +4

    The island appearing as it is disappearing is a powerful piece of footage. I suffer from existential episodes throughout the day, so the theory behind your artwork, and the artwork itself, is very cathartic.

  • @fabianthaesler1317
    @fabianthaesler1317 Před rokem +4

    Wonderful episode with a very well reflected artist, who brings things in a very interesting way together that are (only seemingly!) invisible connected. There are a lot of similarities to my work as a screenwriter. Thanks for sharing! :-)

  • @TD-qi2rw
    @TD-qi2rw Před rokem +3

    I love this body of work !!!!! Thank you !!

  • @brokenrulerlabs
    @brokenrulerlabs Před rokem

    When I first came across this installment of your contemporary art series with artist Amie Siegel, I almost passed on it. I did not think I would get much from it. I was surprised. Her thinking is interesting and opened up her practice to me. She is the work of art in how her life experiences have translated to what she executes so well. As she would say, I kept wondering what her upbringing had been, found myself wondering about her friends, travels, schooling, influences and all the other things that come together to put her at ease with translating her “tell me more” rhythm. Thanks, I learned something…

  • @Deepbeatu2
    @Deepbeatu2 Před rokem

    how do I know which part of the video correspond to the video listed in the video description? thanks :)

  • @dfalls9321
    @dfalls9321 Před rokem

    What’s the song playing during Berlin remake @ 17:38?

  • @johnslade5072
    @johnslade5072 Před rokem

    There is no difference between Art and design, unless you want to be super literal, which is difficult in an openly subject field. the 'maker' limits themselves by denying the activity of design in the work. Form outlives function, but every artist implements 'design' in their work, it's wholly unavoidable, particularly in this case of media based compositions.

  • @mnldgbD
    @mnldgbD Před rokem +2

    "Design Fantasizes itself as art"?? Really??

  • @John-rb3yv
    @John-rb3yv Před rokem

    what crappy “music” on that island!