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[idm] Video Barbecue at the Bass Museum of Art - Miami Beach

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2001-05-18 18:16sony mao [idm] Video Barbecue at the Bass Museum of Art - Miami Beach
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2001-05-18 18:16sony maoSubject: Video Barbecue at the Bass FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 9, 2001 Video Barbecue at t
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Fri, 18 May 2001 14:16:23 -0400
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[idm] Video Barbecue at the Bass Museum of Art - Miami Beach
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Subject: Video Barbecue at the Bass FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 9, 2001 Video Barbecue at the Bass Featuring Biting Style and Spitting Image, a program of contemporary video art Saturday, May 19, 2001, 6:00-10:00 PM Bass Museum of Art, 2121 Park Avenue, Miami Beach In the Bass Museum Sculpture Park Free admission for program, $5 for barbecue Contact Denise Delgado at 305.673.7530, ext 1003 A few days after its preinaugural opening night, the Bass Museum of Art will present the Video Barbecue: an outdoor event featuring video art projected on a large screen in the sculpture park, a DJ spinning electronic music in the courtyard, and an abundant outdoor barbecue. Biting Style and Spitting Image, a 60-minute program of video art, is a compilation of recent works that reference, appropriate and parody television as an influence, adversary, and unavoidable media presence. The program, curated by Denise Delgado, includes work by Miami artists Gavin Perry, Beatriz Monteavaro, William Cordova, Katy Robinson, and Edward Bobb; as well as New York-based artists Matthew Keegan, Susan Black, Kate Howard, Michelle Hines, Adriana Arenas Ilian, Guy Richards Smit, Eli Sudbrach, and Anissa Mack. The fast-paced collection of short pieces appropriates freely from music video aesthetics: Susan Black's serenely distorted landscape shots accompanied by original music, Matthew Keegan's unabashedly sincere cheerleader paean to his grandmother, and Beatriz Monteavaro's site-specific allusion to a Frankie Goes to Hollywood video. Other pieces reference one of our most beloved TV genres: reality-based programs, banal and seductive at the same time. Michelle Hines' America This is You features what appears to be rather disturbing footage of a middle-American family shooting the perfect video to submit to Amerca's Funniest Home Videos. In First Person, Third Party, Anissa Mack's series of interviewees speaking directly into the camera may remind you of The Real World or Big Brother, but the speakers are more likely to talk about connections between people than squabbling roommates. A common theme also involves artists playing dress-up with screen-friendly pop culture personas. I Can Turn Off My Love Light in a Thousand Different Ways features Guy Richards Smit's crooning alter ego as schmaltzy pop star Maxi Geil. William Cordova escapes into the horizon disguised as the legendary masked hero, Zorro. And in Just Like a Movie Star, Eli Sudbrach lip-synchs as a glittery surfer character at the center of a constellation of pop culture ephemera called Astro. The program will be looped for continuous viewing throughout the night. Visitors can eat ($5 to partake in the barbecue), drink, and get down to music by DJ NEEDLE (Beta Bodega) in the nearby Bass Museum courtyard. For more information, contact: Denise Delgado Bass Museum of Art 2121 Park Avenue Miami Beach, FL 33139 Tel 305 673 7530, ext 1003 Fax 305 673 7062 ddelgado@bassmuseum.org _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org