Julia Meltzer

Last updated

Julia Meltzer (born 1968) is an American video artist and director.

Contents

Early life and education

Meltzer was born in Hollywood, California, in 1968. [1] She received her BA from Brown University and she received her MFA from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. [2]

Career

Julia Meltzer is the founder and director of a non-profit arts organization called Clockshop located in Los Angeles that focuses on creating projects and organizations for the public. [3] Meltzer and her usual collaborator, David Thorne, a video artist, produce media-intensive projects such as videos, photographs, and installations. Their works from 1993-2003 have been focused on history, secrecy, and memory. After 2003, Julia Meltzer and David Thorne have focused on the ways people envision the future and how it is claimed, realized, or even relinquished. Predominantly, their works focus on the relation to faith and global politics. [4] Julia Meltzer and David Thorne's collaborated works have been featured in the 2008 Whitney Biennial. [1] Among their most visible projects is The Speculative Archive , [5] a collection of recorded videos that are focused on the metamorphosis of cultural practices as displayed in documents, objects, and memories for Public Record, an online archive that works as a channel for organizations and the public. [6]

Meltzer has received grants from Art Matters, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship Fund, and the John Simon Memorial Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. She was a Fulbright fellow in Damascus, Syria in 2005–06 and a Guggenheim fellow in 2009-10. Meltzer has received a Fulbright fellowship to work in the West Bank in 2014. [7] Meltzer has taught at the University of California, Irvine and Hampshire College. [8]

The Light in Her Eyes is a documentary that follows the life of a woman named Houda al-Habash, exploring the stereotypes surrounding Muslims and offering a perspective on Syria's Arab Spring protests. [9]

Featured in the 2008 Whitney Biennial, Epic, a 7-minute film, is focused on a Syrian performer named Rami Farah. Farah delivers five speeches on a variety of topics, speaking in Arabic with English subtitles. His speeches blend topics such as war and political oppression with allegory and poetry. [10]

We Don't Like it as it is But We Don't Know What We Want it to Be is a video set in Syria about the views of people who oppose the U.S. foreign policies in Syria and neighboring regions. The ending of the video shows Meltzer and Thorne looking for a structure that represents the political condition of Syria. They found it in the Marquez Basel al-Asad, a combination of a hotel and a mosque, with many conflicting stories about its history. [11]

Personal life

Meltzer resides in Los Angeles, California [1] and is married to David Thorne. [12]

Major works

In collaboration with David Thorne [13]

Solo projects

Related Research Articles

Catherine Opie American fine-art photographer (born 1961)

Catherine Sue Opie is an American fine-art photographer and educator. She lives and works in West Adams, Los Angeles, as a professor of photography at University of California at Los Angeles.

Martha Rosler is an American artist. She is a conceptual artist who works in photography and photo text, video, installation, sculpture, and performance, as well as writing about art and culture. Rosler's work is centered on everyday life and the public sphere, often with an eye to women's experience. Recurrent concerns are the media and war, as well as architecture and the built environment, from housing and homelessness to places of passage and systems of transport.

Ken Feingold

Kenneth Feingold is a contemporary American artist based in New York City. He has been exhibiting his work in video, drawing, film, sculpture, photography, and installations since 1974. He has received a Guggenheim Fellowship (2004) and a Rockefeller Foundation Media Arts Fellowship (2003) and has taught at Princeton University and Cooper Union for the Advancement of Art and Science, among others. His works have been shown at the Museum of Modern Art, NY; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Tate Liverpool, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among others.

Alison Saar is a Los Angeles, California based sculptor, mixed-media, and installation artist. Her artwork focuses on the African diaspora and black female identity and is influenced by African, Caribbean, and Latin American folk art and spirituality. Saar is well known for "transforming found objects to reflect themes of cultural and social identity, history, and religion."

Zoe Strauss

Zoe Strauss is an American photographer and a nominee member of Magnum Photos. She uses Philadelphia as a primary setting and subject for her work. Curator Peter Barberie identifies her as a street photographer, like Walker Evans or Robert Frank, and has said "the woman and man on the street, yearning to be heard, are the basis of her art."

Rea Tajiri is a Japanese American video artist, filmmaker and screenwriter, known for her personal essay film History and Memory: For Akiko and Takashige (1991).

Paul Druecke is an American artist who works at the intersections of poetry, sculpture, video, and photography. His work was included in the 2014 Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art and anthologized in Wiley Blackwell’s Companion to Public Art. His project, A Social Event Archive foreshadowed the role of social media in blurring boundaries between personal and public. The Archive was the focus of a solo exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Museum (2017) on the 20th anniversary of its inception.

The Vera List Center for Art and Politics is a nonprofit research organization and public forum for art, culture, and politics.

Zoe Leonard American artist (born 1961)

Zoe Leonard is an American artist who works primarily with photography and sculpture. She has exhibited widely since the late 1980s and her work has been included in a number of seminal exhibitions including Documenta IX and Documenta XII, and the 1993, 1997 and 2014 Whitney biennials. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2020.

Sharon Hayes is an American multimedia artist. She came to prominence as an artist and an activist during the East Village scene in the early '90s. She primarily works with video, installation, and performance as her medium. Using multimedia, she "appropriates, rearranges, and remixes in order to revitalize spirits of dissent". Hayes's work addresses themes such as romantic love, activism, queer theory, and politics. She incorporates texts from found speeches, recordings, songs, letters, and her own writing into her practice that she describes as “a series of performatives rather than performance.”

Yale Union

Yale Union is a non-profit contemporary art center in southeast Portland, Oregon, United States. It is located in the Yale Union Laundry Building built in 1908. The center was founded in 2008. In 2020, the organization announced it would transfer the rights of its building to the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation. It intends to dissolve the non-profit after wrapping up its program in 2021.

Nicole Eisenman American artist

Nicole Eisenman is French-born American artist known for her oil paintings and sculptures. She has been awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship (1996), the Carnegie Prize (2013), and has thrice been included in the Whitney Biennial. On September 29, 2015, she won a MacArthur Fellowship award for "restoring the representation of the human form a cultural significance that had waned during the ascendancy of abstraction in the 20th century."

An-My Lê is a Vietnamese American photographer, and professor at Bard College.

Barbara Kasten

Barbara Kasten is an American artist from Chicago Illinois. Her work involves the use of abstract video and photograph projections.

Anicka Yi is a conceptual artist whose work lies at the intersection of fragrance, cuisine, and science. She is known for installations that engage the senses, especially the sense of smell, and for her collaborations with biologists and chemists. Yi lives and works in New York City.

Judith Barry is an American artist, writer, and educator best known for her installation and performance art and critical essays, but also known for her works in drawing and photography. She is a professor and the director of the MIT Program in Art, Culture and Technology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA. She has exhibited internationally and received a number of awards.

Terry Berkowitz creates installations, videos, photography, audio and objects dealing with social and political critique, social consciousness and the human condition. Beginning in the early seventies, she has shown in museums, biennials and other institutions internationally including PS1, the Whitney Museum of American Art (NY), First International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Cartagena de Indias (Colombia) The Alternative Museum (NY), Boca Raton Museum of Art, Contemporary Arts Museum (Houston) and Metrònom (Barcelona), Museo do Pobo Galego

Sue Williams is an American artist born in 1954. She came to prominence in the early 1980s, with works that echoed and argued with the dominant postmodern feminist aesthetic of the time. In the years since, her focus has never waned yet her aesthetic interests have moved toward abstraction along with her subject matter and memories. She lives and works in New York.

Ellie Ga is an American artist, writer and performer. Ga produces narratives in the form of video installations, performances and artist’s books. She received an MFA from the Hunter College in New York, NY and a BA from Marymount Manhattan College, NY. Ga is represented by Bureau, New York. She lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden.

Shalom Gorewitz is an American visual artist. Gorewitz was among the first generation of artists who used early video technology as an expressive medium. Since the late 1960s, he has created videos that "transform recorded reality through an expressionistic manipulation of images and sound". His artworks often "confront the political conflicts, personal losses, and spiritual rituals of contemporary life". Gorewitz has also made documentary videos.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Whitney Biennial 2008 website, "Julia Meltzer and David Thorne"
  2. Julia Meltzer and David Thorne website, "CV"
  3. Clockshop website, "People"
  4. Julia Meltzer and David Thorne website, "About"
  5. Public Record website, "About"
  6. Public Record website, "Introduction"
  7. UCSC Film Digital Media website, "FDM/Porter Visiting Artist: Julia Meltzer"
  8. Transmediale website, "Julia Meltzer"
  9. PBS website, "Film Description"
  10. Myers, Holly. "Review: Julia Meltzer and David Thorne at Steve Turner Contemporary" LA Times, January 29, 2009.
  11. New York Foundation for the Arts website, "The Speculative Archive" Archived 2013-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  12. McGarry, Kevin. "Out There | Elysian" New York Times, February 16, 2012.
  13. Julia Meltzer and David Thorne website, "Projects"
  14. Internet Movie Database website, "Julia Meltzer"