Friday, December 20, 2013

Tears on A Coffin Documentation video


Tears on a Coffin by Anne Katrine Senstad

A site specific public art installation that took place in Sunnyside, Queens, NY October 2013. Organized by the art foundation No Longer Empty, NY. Curated by Sarah Corona for No Longer Empty.
The project was supported by The Royal Norwegian Consulate General New York, Gallery Nine5, 419 Neon and Sunyside Shines BID.
The installation consisted of Anne Katrine Senstad's Neon sentence, a funeral car, a mariachi band playing funeral songs (not included in the video), a video installation in P.J.Horgan's Irish Pub consisting of scrolling biblical texts, random pub goers, and passerby's. The Neon sentence was later installed in the pub for the remaining weeks of the installation. 
©AKS New York 2013.




Tears on a Coffin – Curatorial text; by Sandra Cerisola
Mexico city
Tears on a Coffin is a site specific performative work that was originally planned to take place in Mexico City. It was however conceived as a traveling piece, adapting to a local environment, in this occasion in NYC.

The main focus of the artwork consists of Anne Katrine Senstad’s white Neon sentence - 'Tears on a Coffin', simulating the artist's handwriting and mounted on the roof of a funeral car, referencing advertisement aesthetic in the public realm. The funeral car would circulate through key areas of Mexico City while being filmed, establishing a dialogue with a national context; political, social-economical and historical.

The routes and performances would reference the national political panorama during the last presidential election in Mexico. The first route was planned to pass symbolic national monuments. The performative character of the piece, would have added an aspect of spatial-temporal precision, reactivating representational sites and buildings of Mexican history. Here, the work suggests the 'death' of political utopias - ranging from colonial to modern - in direct relation to the city as fluctuating and in motion.

The second route was planned in the area of Santa Fe; a relatively new urban area containing headquarters of multinational corporations, a huge exclusive shopping mall, upper social-economical residential areas and a private university, all built on the remains of a large garbage dump where extreme poverty continues to co-exist in radical contrast. For this route a traditional rural orchestra was to play in procession following the funeral car. These bands are used for poor people's funerals in rural Mexico. The songs are simple and rough (usually out of tune).

At this stage Tears on a Coffin, was intended to involve a transgressive act in a sterile environment. Spontaneous reactions of people would have been part of the piece, both as regular passerby’s and as participants in the procession. This performance, was meant to stress the existent contrast between two Mexican post-colonial realities represented in the video by the city garbage dump inhabitants, both old and new, and the band with the the new urban opulent development as background.

The visual hyperbole of the neon on the large black funeral car circulating, is ironically suggestive of the evident phenomena in Mexico in this case, where it has been historically common that people react with a closed eye to the abuse of power.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Aurora 2013 - Light of Convergence - Dallas Morning News

Oslo Screen Festival

www.screenfestival.no

The Coop will premiere at Oslo Screen Festival - March 6th-9th 2014


Video stills, 2013

The Coop is a video piece about the imagined narrative ongoings in a chicken coop. Subjectively examining the nature and territorial behavior of chicken, roosters and hens in a coop, we see through the camera placed at a birds eye view inside the coop the unfolding of feathered characters. The piece is created mostly in slow motion, but with chops in speed and an introduction of an outsider animal towards the end. The well known sound of the rooster has been distorted to the unfamiliar, creating a disturbing effect.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

TEARS ON A COFFIN - Conveying the Invisible


Conveying the Invisible - No Longer Empty
Curated by Sarah Crown

Nov 4-14th 2013 
Sunnyside, Queens, NY

TEARS ON A COFFIN by Anne Katrine Senstad
Neon Sentence, funeral car, Mariachi funeral band
A Performative site specific installation piece












Friday, October 25, 2013

For One Night, a City Lights Up with Art - Hyperallergic Oct 25 2013


STREET

For One Night, a City Lights Up with Art

by Sarah Walko on October 25, 2013

Ingo Maurer's oversize lightbulb "Lucellino" (all photos by the author for Hyperallergic)
Ingo Maurer’s oversize lightbulb “Lucellino” 
(all photos by the author for Hyperallergic unless 
otherwise noted)
DALLAS — Aurora illuminated the Dallas Arts District last Friday, featuring 90 site-specific light and sound installations covering 19 blocks of downtown from 7 pm until midnight. An estimated 30,000 people gathered and wandered through the city, taking in the transformation that molded buildings, illuminated cathedrals, lit hidden spaces, and made concrete, glass, and steel pulse.
Upon entering the city of Dallas two days earlier, one of the first things I had noticed was the intensity of the birdsong. It was louder than the cars passing by as I walked down a four-lane street during sunset, in rush-hour traffic. Later that night, walking back to my hotel after dinner, I looked up to see an incredibly bright, full moon. These moments of magic set the stage for my experience of Aurora.
The block party, live music, food trucks, pop-up bars, lounges, and 1,050 lanterns all opened and lit up at 6 pm, but the real transformation of the city began an hour later. In a very theatrical display, Mayor Mike Rawlings plugged in the chord of an oversize lightbulb with wings, part of sculpture by Ingo Maurer that was placed directly between the Wyly Theatre and the Dallas Opera House. Each artist or team of artists had walkie-talkies and had been poised for the signal, so at that moment, they activated their pieces. Suddenly,  the Dallas Arts District was converted into a brilliantly expansive light and sound exhibition.
Anne Katrine Senstad, "Colour Synesthesia, Variation IV” (click to enlarge)
Anne Katrine Senstad, “Colour Synesthesia, Variation IV” (click to enlarge)










The theme of this year’s Aurora was “Light of Convergence,” which, according to the press release, “illuminates the dichotomy between awareness of the individual and the greater whole.” The theme revolved around ideas of how technology can enable communal consciousness and increase creativity and social awareness, but also have a darker side. I was able to catch up briefly with one of the cofounders, Joshua King (the others are Veletta Forsythe Lill and Shane Pennington). He explained, “It’s about bringing people together under creative circumstances, artists supporting other artists, the contrast of new media and technology-based art within city centers and an immersive experience of ideas.”
The evening showcased contemporary artists from North Texas alongside others from all over the world. One of the featured works was a piece by Max Deancalled “The Robotic Chair,” in which Dean’s generic wooden chair falls apart and then magically reassembles itself, facilitated by a custom-made robot. I was very excited to see the work, but apparently so was a lot of the crowd. I visited the site three times throughout the night, and the lines were so long, I never made it in.
Norwegian artist Anne Katrine Senstad (whom I recently wrote about for Hyperallergic) showed her piece “Colour Synesthesia, Variation IV,” a 60-minute, abstract, color-based loop projected that transformed the altar of the Cathedral Shrine of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Senstad’s work focuses on perception, space, and the sensorial, and her projections bring a new narrative to their locations’ histories, memories, and identities. Senstad told me, “There’s a dialogue that goes beyond words yet is a space of ‘the word,’ bringing light and ambience into a space charged with faith and human belief.”
Aurora cofounder Shane Pennington exhibited a massive LED light installation called “Points of Life,” a specially designed stage curtain created for the Dallas City Performance Hall. Jazz singer Kally Price performed live behind the curtain, along with accordionist Dan Cantrell and bassist Daniel Fabricant. The curtain combined with the tones of the jazz created a shifting feeling, from calm and light to haunting.
3_search, "Blueprints and Perspectives” (courtesy Martin Gabor)
3_search, “Blueprints and Perspectives” 
(courtesy Martin Gabor)
3_Search, a collaboration between curator Leo Kuelbs, artist John Ensor Parker, and animation and mapping collective Glowing Bulbs, brought the exterior of the Wyly Theater alive through a massive projection mapping piece called “Blueprints and Perspectives.”
Having seen similar work of theirs before, I found this piece much more experiential and less narrative. The concept seemed driven by the interior structure of the stage and the mechanics of the theater, as well as the exterior form. “Beginning with an exploration of the physical architecture of the Wyly,” Parker explained, “we then delve into the psychology of the individual and their connectivities through social structures and the fabric of the universe.”
Aurora is a young festival, only its third year. But not many cities in the US are taking on a project of this size for one night only of pure light and sound installations. The temporary nature of the art added a theatrical and magical feeling to the experience. I look forward to seeing how the event will flourish in the next few years.
Aurora 2013 took place on Friday, October 18, from 7 pm to midnight, throughout the Dallas Arts District.