Tony Oursler

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Tony Oursler
File:27438374 - 29 02 2012 - TONY OUSLER - HùYBYE LIV.jpg
Portrait of Tony Oursler
Born 1957 (1957)
New York City
Nationality American
Education 1979 California Institute of the Arts, B.F.A
Known for Video art, performance art, installation art
Spouse(s) Jacqueline Humphries

Tony Oursler (born 1957) is an American multimedia and installation artist. He completed a BA in fine arts at the California Institute for the Arts, Valencia, California in 1979. His art covers a range of mediums working with video, sculpture, installation, performance and painting. The artist currently lives and works in New York City. He is married to painter Jacqueline Humphries.[1]

Early life and education

Born in Manhattan in 1957, Oursler was brought up in Nyack, New York.[2] At CalArts, his fellow students included Mike Kelley, Sue Williams, Stephen Prina and Jim Shaw. John Baldessari — with whom he did an independent study[3] — and Laurie Anderson were teachers.[4] Oursler moved back to New York in 1981[5] and was picked up by Electronic Arts Intermix.[6]

In 1999, Oursler moved to a studio near New York City Hall.[7]

Work

Tapes, Installations: 1977-1989

Tony Oursler is known for his fractured-narrative handmade video tapes including The Loner (1980) and EVOL (1984). These works involve elaborate sound tracks, painted sets, stop-action animation and optical special effects created by the artist. The early videotapes have been exhibited extensively in alternative spaces and museums, they are distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix.[8] His early installation works are immersive dark-room environments with video, sound, and language mixed with colorful constructed sculptural elements. In these projects, Oursler experimented with methods of removing the moving image from the video monitor using reflections in water, mirrors, glass and other devices. For example, L-7, L-5, exhibited at The Kitchen in 1983, used the translucent quality of video reflected on broken glass.

Projection: 1991

Oursler began working with small LCD video projectors in 1991 in his installation The Watching presented at documenta 9, featuring his first video doll and dummy. This work utilizes handmade soft cloth figures combined with expressive faces animated by video projection. Oursler then produced a series of installations that combined found objects and video projections. Judy (1993) explored the relationship between multiple personality disorder and mass media. Get Away II features a passive/aggressive projected figure wedged under a mattress that confronts the viewer with blunt direct address. These installations led to great popular and critical acclaim.[citation needed]

Signature works have been his talking lights, such as Streetlight (1997), his series of video sculptures of eyes with television screens reflected in the pupils, and ominous talking heads such as Composite Still Life (1999). An installation called Optics (1999) examines the polarity between dark and light in the history of the camera obscura. In his text "Time Stream", Oursler proposed that architecture and moving image installation have been forever linked by the camera obscura noting that cave dwellers observed the world as projections via peep holes. Oursler's interest in the ephemeral history of the virtual image lead to large scale public projects and permanent installations by 2000.[9]

Public Projects: 2000-2009

The Public Art Fund and Artangel commissioned the Influence Machine in 2000.[10] This installation marks the artist's first major outdoor project and thematically traced the development of successive communication devices from the telegraph to the personal computer as a means of speaking with the dead. Oursler used smoke, trees and buildings as projection screens in Madison Square Park NYC and Soho Square London. He then completed a number of permanent public projects in Barcelona, New Zealand, Arizona including "Braincast" at the Seattle Public Library. In 2009 he created a series of commissioned video installations at the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts in Astoria, New York.[11]

2010 exhibitions

From October–December 2010, the Lehmann Maupin Gallery hosted Oursler's exhibition entitled Peak.[12] The exhibition was timed with Oursler's Valley, the inaugural exhibition of the Adobe Museum of Digital Media.

Collaborations

Oursler was part of the musical and performance group, "Poetics", with fellow California Institute of the Arts students Mike Kelley and John Miller.[13] "Mike played the drums and I sang and we both played organ — we both bonded on that probably because of our Catholic upbringing. Though to say 'played' is an exaggeration; we made noises," Oursler said in a 2012 interview on the occasion of Kelley's death.[14]

Oursler created the background videos that played at David Bowie's 50th birthday party concert[15] in 1997, as well as the video to accompany Bowie's single "Where Are We Now?", released in January 2013.[16]

Film and video

See videos Electronic Arts Intermix [17]

  • “Tony Oursler Video Projections” by Tony Oursler, Inner-Tube Videos. 2002, 27 minutes, Color. NY: Inner-Tube Videos.

Exhibitions

Oursler's work has been exhibited in public institutions including the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; documenta VIII, IX, Kassel; Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the D.O.P. Foundation, Caracas; the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Skulptur Projekte Münster; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; the Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC; the Tate, Liverpool. "Introjection”, the artist’s mid-career survey, was on view from 1999 to 2001 at the Williams College Museum of Art in Massachusetts, the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and the Des Moines Art Center, Iowa. In 2000, Ourlser’s installation The Darkest Color Infinitely Amplified was presented at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Tate Modern.[18] Oursler’s work was included in Glasstress at the 54th Venice Biennale (2011).[19]

Collections

The Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh), Fondation Cartier pour l'Art Contemporain (Paris), the Hammer Museum (Los Angeles), the Honolulu Museum of Art,[20] the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, the Museum of Modern Art (New York City), the Tate Modern, and the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York City) are among the public collections holding work by Oursler.[21]

Art market

Oursler is represented by:

See also

References

  1. "Jacqueline Humphries revealed".
  2. Michael Kimmelman (April 27, 2001), In the Studio With Tony Oursler; A Sculptor Of the Air With Video New York Times.
  3. Jori Finkel (June 20, 2010), John Baldessari's former students share memories Los Angeles Times.
  4. Michael Kimmelman (April 27, 2001), In the Studio With Tony Oursler; A Sculptor Of the Air With Video New York Times.
  5. Suzanne Muchnic (April 2, 2000), A Projection of the Imagination Los Angeles Times.
  6. Michael Kimmelman (April 27, 2001), In the Studio With Tony Oursler; A Sculptor Of the Air With Video New York Times.
  7. Michael Kimmelman (April 27, 2001), In the Studio With Tony Oursler; A Sculptor Of the Air With Video New York Times.
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  9. Fineartkmv.com[dead link]
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  13. LehmannMaupin.com[dead link]
  14. Jori Finkel (February 2, 2012), Mike Kelley dies at 57; L.A. contemporary artist Los Angeles Times.
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  18. Tony Oursler, 17 September – 1 November 2003 Lisson Gallery, London.
  19. Tony Oursler Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York.
  20. Honolulu Museum of Art, wall label, 'Roman à Clef' by Tony Oursler, 2002, accession 2013-03-01
  21. Tony Oursler Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York.
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External links