- Dara Birnbaum
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Dara Birnbaum Born 1946
New York, USANationality American Field installation artist, video artist Dara Birnbaum, born in 1946 in New York ,USA, where she continues to live and work, uses video to reconstruct television imagery using as material such archetypal formats as quizzes, soap operas, and sports programmes. Her techniques involve the repetition of images and interruption of flow with text and music. She is also well known for forming part of the feminist art movement.
Work
Her most prominent piece of video art is the 1978 - 1979 video art piece Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman. In this work she uses appropriated images of Wonder Woman to subvert the ideology and meaning embedded in the television series.[1] "Opening with a prolonged salvo of fiery explosions accompanied by the warning cry of a siren, Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman is supercharged, action-packed, and visually riveting... throughout its nearly six minutes we see several scenes featuring the main character Diana Prince... in which she transforms into the famed superero." [2]
In 1979 she started to make fast-edited video collages from footage appropriated while working for a TV post-production unit.[3] She participated in the 1985 Whitney Biennial.[4]
Her 1994 six channel video installation Hostage has as its subject the kidnapping of Hanns-Martin Schleyer in 1977.[5]
Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman is held in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art.[6] She also has works in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada.[7]
In 2010 she won a United States Artists Fellow award. [8]
External links
- Artist's official website
- Artcyclopedia entry
- Popcorn and Politics - Activists of Art entry
- Video Databank entry
- Dara Birnbaum - student documentary
- Dara Birnbaum in the Mediateca Media Art Space
References
- ^ Margot Lovejoy, Digital Currents: Art in the Electronic Age, Routledge, 2004, p108. ISBN 0415307805
- ^ T.J. Demos, Dara Birnbaum, Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman, MIT/Afterall Books, 2010, p1. ISBN-10: 1-846380-66-9
- ^ Catherine Elwes, Video Art: A Guided Tour, I.B.Tauris, 2005, p108. ISBN 1850435464
- ^ Margot Lovejoy, Digital Currents: Art in the Electronic Age, Routledge, 2004, p129. ISBN 0415307805
- ^ Dot Tuer, Mining the Media Archive: Essays on Art, Technology and Cultural Resistance, YYZ Books, 2006, p45. ISBN 0920397352
- ^ moma.org.uk
- ^ National Gallery of Canada's Cybermuse website
- ^ United States Artists Official Website [1]
Categories: Feminist artists | Installation artists | Video artists | Contemporary artists | Living people | 1946 births | Postmodern artists | American women artists
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