- Bas Jan Ader
Infobox Person
name = Bas Jan Ader
birth_date =April 19 1942
death_date = Lost at sea, 1975
birth_place =Winschoten ,Netherlands
education = Otis College of Art and Design
occupation = Artist/Photographer/film-maker ("former")Bas Jan Ader (born
April 19 1942 inWinschoten , theNetherlands , lost at sea in 1975 betweenCape Cod, Massachusetts andIreland ) was a Dutchconceptual artist ,performance artist ,photographer andfilmmaker . He lived in Los Angeles for the last 10 years of his life. Ader's work was in many instances presented as photographs and film of his performances. He also made performative installations, including "Please Don't Leave Me" (1969). His work began to experience a surge in popularity in the early 1990s.Education
During adolescence Ader took art classes at the Rietveld Academy in the
Netherlands , and later in theUnited States during astudy abroad program. Ader graduated from theOtis College of Art and Design in 1965 with a BFA, and from theClaremont Graduate School in 1967. After graduating, Ader taught at various institutions, includingMount San Antonio College ,Immaculate Heart College , and theUniversity of California, Irvine .Death
Ader was lost at sea while attempting a single-handed west-east crossing of the
Atlantic in a 13ftpocket cruiser , a modified Guppy 13 named "Ocean Wave". The passage was part of an art performance titled "In Search of the Miraculous". Radio contact broke off three weeks into the voyage, and Ader was presumed lost at sea. The boat was found after 10 months, floating partially submerged 150 miles West-Southwest of the coast of Ireland. His body was never found. The boat, after being recovered by the Spanish fishing vessel that found it, was taken to Coruña. The boat was later stolen. [cite book |url=http://www.artbook.com/9086900119.html |title= Bas Jan Ader: In Search of the Miraculous Discovery File 143/76 |author=Koos Dalstra, Marion van Wijk. |publisher=Veenman Publishers |isbn=9789086900114 |date=03/01/2007 ]Famous works
Ader's most popular work is his 1970 short film piece entitled "I'm too sad to tell you" that consists of the artist crying in front of a camera after a brief title.Fact|date=October 2007 While much has been said about the aesthetic and ironical framework of "I'm too sad to tell you", i.e. the emotive or theatrical content, the slapstick comedy present in much of his work also plays an important role. Within this duality Ader thus creates in much of his work and performance a contrived theatricality that creates comedic space in its meta-awareness. This places not only content and
aesthetics to the fore, but the "idea" of reception as well. The interests and concerns in Ader's oeuvre locate him in similar art historical tropes of conceptual and performance artists of the 1970s, such as Chris Burden and Bruce Nauman. Like many conceptual art works of the 1970s, his works were recorded in descriptive notes and statements destined to have flexible and repeated incarnations, forever unfolding with the perception of history itself.Many myths have spread out about Ader's disappearance at sea, leading to speculations about supposedly lost works resurfacing.
Revival
The work of Bas Jan Ader, while long considered influential in the art community, is now starting to gain an ever-increasing public interest. There have been a number of recent exhibitions of his work, including a European traveling retrospective in 2006-2007 with stops at the Camden Art Center, London, the Boijmans van Beuningen Museum, Rotterdam, and the Kunshalle Basel. A catalogue documenting all of Ader's artworks has been published on the occasion of the retrospective.
The 2006 documentary film "Here is Always Somewhere Else" has further increased Ader's recognition in the contemporary art world. As seen through the eyes of fellow Dutch emigrant filmmaker
Rene Daalder , the film chronicles the life and work of Bas Jan Ader, and becomes a sweeping overview of contemporary art films as well as an epic saga of the transformative powers of the ocean.Additionally, Erika Yeomans' conceptual documentary "In Search of Bas Jan's Miraculous" (1998, 40 mins., mixed media) on the life and art of Bas Jan continues to screen in various festivals and galleries, most recently as part of Dutch Kultprom Russian Tour of Bas Jan's videos. The project was also featured on "
This American Life " in 1996. [ [http://www.thisamericanlife.org/Radio_Episode.aspx?sched=643 "From a Distance"] , "This American Life", December 27, 1996]References
;Specific references
;Other sources
* Jan Verwoert, "Bas Jan Ader: In Search of the Miraculous", London: Afterall Books, 2006. ISBN 1-84638-002-2.External links
* [http://www.basjanader.com Official Bas Jan Ader website]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_M_6cyRvMC8 new Bas Jan Ader footage] onYouTube
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUzBCl6iVoc I'm too sad to tell you] onYouTube
* [http://www.artlies.org/article.php?id=1302&issue=49&s=0 "i shall talk of things which are sometimes accidentally true"] , biographical article at Artl!es
* [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0268/is_7_37/ai_54169956 "Artforum" article]
* [http://www.otis.edu/alumni/da/ader.htm Distinguished Alumni page] from the Otis College of Art and Design
* [http://www.shortypen.com/boats/pocket/guppy/index.htm Guppy 13 Sailboat]
* [http://www.renedaalder.com/docs/24.html "Here is Always Somewhere Else"] at ReneDaalder.com
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