24, 25 & 26 March, 2011Thursday & Friday at 7:00 p.m.Saturday at 6:00 p.m. with performance at 7:30 p.m.
King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center at NYU
Organized by Laura Turégano and Eva Mendoza Chandas
Curated by Eva Mendoza Chandas
With the support of the Consulate General of Spain in New York
[email protected]
www.regionzero.net
In some cases this vision translates into works like Deriva sobre la Práctica Artística (2008) by Estíbaliz Sábada, where the artist utilizes the art world to highlight repetitive social patterns within a profesional field that is supposed to be transgressive. Verónica Ruth Frías and Cyro García work through this same idea in Tonto el Que lo Lea (2010), a work inspired by the interaction between gallerists, artists, critics and audience. Will it Blend? (2010) by Raúl Gómez Valverde relates viral marketing strategies to philosophy and critical theory so as to interrogate all these creative processes.
In the same way, Diana Larrea in her video performance Geofagia o la Dieta del Artista (2008) uses art antecedents to make reference to the professional situation of artists. This concern is addresed in a very different fashion in Transacción (2008) by Patricio Ponce and in If I Come Back to This Life I Want to Be an American Dentist (2011) de Manuel Molina Martagón.
In other cases, like This Leak (2011) by Félix Fernández and Juanma Carrillo, marketing strategies are embedded in the work itself, which becomes a hybrid mix of music video and art piece. Transforming (2009) by Carolina Conejero uses this same idea in its most experimental mode.
Works like Facebook (2010) by Andi Rivas, Crash! by Suso33, TypeSeries by Lucas Borras, Next by Brais García, and Compresión a Trescientas Cincuenta y un Veces El Tiempo de los Cien Mejores Videoclips Según MTV (2010) by Marcos Calvari incorporate languages related to the mass media and cultural phenomena, giving them a subversive twist.
The concepts of landscape and cityscape are explored via travel in the works by Yaco Neches and Iván Cortázar, and in relation to temporal perception by Lois Patiño and Gianfranco Foschino, while Albert Merino, José Vicente Navarro López, Alex Reynolds and Mar Caldas relate them to visual perception, and Gwenn Joyaux, Marco Casado, Mario Sarramián and Antonio Savinelli use them as a starting point for arriving at a position closer to the imaginary.
In Contrato Para Paisaje nº2 (2010) Vicente Blanco addresses the landscape in territorial terms, focusing on its evolution. Other artists who establish a historical dialogue are Txuspo Poyo, who in Delay Glass (2007) restores virtually Marcel Duchamp’s unfinished work The Great Glass, and Verónica Ruth Frías who in Give Me Your Blood, Thanks (2010) reproduces an exchange of knowledge with the mythical Mexican artist Frida Kahlo.
Also present is the concept of the boundary between two universes, moving from the sober, raw street reality shown by Nicky Enright to the abstractions of Lucía Warck-Meister, passing along the way through a number of individual positionings in works like Medialengua (2010) by Carlos Aguasaco, Porotito Granado (2010) by Jorge Catoni, Mohai (2010) by Momu No Es, L.A.K. Love by Sergio Roger, Identity by Mireia Feliu Fabra, Afirmaciones para atraer el amor by Esther Achaerandio, The Book of the Fragile World (2007) by Laura F. Gibellini, and El Camino Más Largo (2011) by Alejandro Ramírez Ariza. All of these works show personal conflicts or marginal characters who oscillate between opposing poles, in some cases producing a humorous, absurd parody.
After the screenings, the festival will close on Saturday 26 with Shifting Gaze, a site-specific video-art-music installation by Laia Cabrera, Erica Glyn and Isabelle Duverger. www.regionzero.net/p/festival-program.html
King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center at NYU53 Washington Square SouthNew York, NY 10012www.nyu.edu/kjcT (212) 998-3650