Liz Cohen

Last updated
Liz Cohen
Born1973 (age 5051)
Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.
Alma mater School of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Tufts University,
California College of the Arts
Known forperformance art, photography, automotive design, educator
Website https://www.lizcohenstudio.com/

Liz Cohen (born 1973) is an American artist, known as a performance artist, photographer, educator, and automotive designer. She currently teaches at Arizona State University (ASU), and lives in Phoenix, Arizona.

Contents

Early life and education

Cohen was born 1973 in Phoenix, Arizona and was raised there, [1] a first-generation American of a Colombian Jewish family.

Cohen graduated with a dual major in 1996 with a BFA degree in studio art from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and a BA degree in philosophy from Tufts University. [1] [2] [3] At the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Cohen studied with photographer Bill Burke. [4] After graduating in 1996, she travelled to Panama and documented transgender sex workers. She eventually formed relationships with her subjects and started dressing up and performing, blurring the relationship between documentation and performance. [5]

Cohen received an MFA in photography from California College of the Arts (formally known as California College of the Arts and Crafts) in 2000. [1] [2]

Career

In 2002, she was a fellow at Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart, Germany. [6] It was in Germany that she became interested in the Trabant, a common car in East Germany during the Cold War. [6] This interest would go on to inform her work, including the Bodywork project. [6] In 2004, Cohen moved to Phoenix, Arizona to be closer to her mother and to focus her efforts on learning about cars and car culture at Elwood Body Works, studying under mechanic Bill Cherry. [5]

In 2011, Cohen appeared as a guest judge on the Bravo television show 'Work of Art: The Next Great Artist (season 2, episode 7). [7]

Teaching

Between 2008 until 2017, Cohen was the Artist-in-Residence and Head of the Photography Department at Cranbrook Academy of Art. [2] In 2017, she joined Arizona State University (ASU) as an Associate Professor of Photography in the School of Art, within Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts. [2]

Bodywork project

Cohen is most notable for her Bodywork art project and the work Trabantamino (2002–2010) transforming an East German 1987 Trabant automobile into a 1973 Chevrolet El Camino using gears and hydraulics. [8] [9] [10] As part of the project, Cohen transformed her body and hired a personal trainer and dieted [11] so she could appear in a bikini to be the model for the car at lowrider shows and for a series of photographs used to promote and document the project. She had mentioned wanting to feel less like a performer and more like an "insider" of the masculine car subculture, and the female modeling aspect of the car photos were part of her membership. [4]

Photographs from the project have been shown at solo shows at Fargfabriken in Stockholm and Galerie Laurent Godin in Paris [3] as well as numerous publications, including the cover of German culture magazine Sleek (Winter 2006/2007 issue) and the November 2007 issue of The Believer. The car was outfitted with motion sensors, cameras and projectors to create an interactive exhibit. The project and its documentation was financed primarily through a 2005 grant from Creative Capital. [12]

Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jenny Holzer</span> American conceptual artist

Jenny Holzer is an American neo-conceptual artist, based in Hoosick, New York. The main focus of her work is the delivery of words and ideas in public spaces and includes large-scale installations, advertising billboards, projections on buildings and other structures, and illuminated electronic displays.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Graciela Iturbide</span> Mexican photographer (born 1942)

Graciela Iturbide is a Mexican photographer. Her work has been exhibited internationally, and is included in many major museum collections such as the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and The J. Paul Getty Museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pipilotti Rist</span> Swiss contemporary artist

Pipilotti Elisabeth Rist is a Swiss visual artist best known for creating experimental video art and installation art. Her work is often described as surreal, intimate, abstract art, having a preoccupation with the female body. Her artwork is often categorized as feminist art.

Luis Alfonso JiménezJr. was an American sculptor and graphic artist of Mexican descent who identified as a Chicano. He was known for portraying Mexican, Southwestern, Hispanic-American, and general themes in his public commissions, some of which are site specific. The most famous of these is Blue Mustang. Jiménez died in an industrial accident during its construction. It was commissioned by the Denver International Airport and completed after his death.

Mark Klett is an American photographer. His work is included in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rachel Bess</span> American artist

Rachel Bess is an American artist working out of Phoenix, Arizona.

Carrie Mae Weems is an American artist working in text, fabric, audio, digital images and installation video, and is best known for her photography. She achieved prominence through her early 1990s photographic project The Kitchen Table Series. Her photographs, films and videos focus on serious issues facing African Americans today, including racism, sexism, politics and personal identity.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sama Alshaibi</span> Iraqi-born American artist

Sama Raena Alshaibi also known as Sama Alshaibi is a conceptual artist, who deals with spaces of conflict as her primary subject. War, exile, power and the quest for survival are themes seen in her works. She often uses her own body in her artwork as a representation of the country or an issue she is dealing with.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roden Crater</span> Volcanic cone in Arizona, United States

Roden Crater is a cinder cone type of volcanic cone from an extinct volcano, with a remaining interior volcanic crater. It is located approximately 50 miles northeast of the city of Flagstaff in northern Arizona, United States.

Nora Naranjo Morse is a Native American artist and poet. She currently resides in Española, New Mexico just north of Santa Fe and is a member of the Santa Clara Pueblo, part of the Tewa people. Her work can be found in several museum collections including the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona, the Minneapolis Institute of Art in Minnesota, and the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, DC, where her hand-built sculpture piece, Always Becoming, was selected from more than 55 entries submitted by Native artists as the winner of an outdoor sculpture competition held in 2005. In 2014, she was honored with a NACF Artist Fellowship for Visual Arts and was selected to prepare temporal public art for the 5x5 Project by curator Lance Fung.

Betsy Schneider is an American photographer who lives and works in the Boston Area.

Mags Harries and Lajos Héder are artists working collaboratively to create public art across the United States from their studio.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louise Lincoln Kerr</span> American musician (1892–1977)

Louise Lincoln Kerr was an American musician, composer, and philanthropist from Cleveland, Ohio. She wrote over 100 music compositions including fifteen symphonic tone poems, twenty works for chamber or string orchestra, a violin concerto, five ballets and incidental music, numerous piano pieces, and about forty pieces of chamber music. She was known as "The Grand Lady of Music" for her patronage of the arts. Louise Kerr helped to co-found and developed The Phoenix Symphony (1947), The Phoenix Chamber Music Society (1960), The Scottsdale Center for the Arts, The National Society of Arts and Letters (1944), Monday Morning Musicals, The Bach and Madrigal Society (1958), Young Audiences, The Musicians Club, and the Phoenix Cello Society. Kerr was also a benefactor to the Herberger School of Music at Arizona State University. She was inducted into the Arizona Women's Hall of Fame on October 21, 2004 and was nominated by conductor and musicologist Carolyn Waters Broe.

Queen Melé Le'iato Tuiasosopo Muhammad Ali is an American filmmaker, composer, social activist and visual anthropologist. Queen and her husband Hakeem Khaaliq founded Nation19, a magazine and film production company, and she is the director of the Manuia Samoa, a social wellness hub in American Samoa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steffani Jemison</span> American artist

Steffani Jemison is an American artist, writer, and educator. Her videos and multimedia projects explore the relationship between Black embodiment, sound cultures, and vernacular practices to modernism and conceptual art. Her work has been shown at the Museum of Modern Art, Brooklyn Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Whitney Museum, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, and other U.S. and international venues. She is based in Brooklyn, New York and is represented by Greene Naftali, New York and Annet Gelink, Amsterdam.

Cara Romero is an American photographer known for her digital photography that examines Indigenous life through a contemporary lens. She lives in both Santa Fe, New Mexico and the Mojave Desert. She is an enrolled citizen of the Chemehuevi Indian Tribe.

Tania Candiani is a Mexican artist known for her interdisciplinary, large-scale, multimedia installations. In 2011, she was named a Guggenheim Fellow.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gregory Sale</span> American artist

Gregory Sale is a socially engaged, multidisciplinary artist, educator, and advocate. Collaborating with individuals and communities on aesthetic responses to social challenges, Sale creates and coordinates large-scale and often long-term public projects that are organized around collective experiences. Participants become creative co-producers focused on collective artistic experiences that identify, address, and transform lives. With the commitment of a wide range of constituencies and institutions, his creative practice includes projects with primary partners in activist circles, social service agencies, non-profit organizations, and government. His most prominent and continuing projects focus on issues of mass incarceration, illuminating the complexities of justice, democracy, and how we practice care as a society.

M. Jenea Sanchez is a Mexican-American artist, photographer, and educator. She co-founded the nonprofit arts organization Border Arts Corridor.

Courtney M. Leonard is a multimedia artist, filmmaker, and activist from the Shinnecock Nation in Long Island, New York. Her work revolves around issues of ecology and Native identity, specifically their intersection with water, which is essential to the Shinnecock. Leonard primarily uses clay and her ceramic artwork has been inspired by the whaling coastal culture of the Shinnecock Nation. She has contributed to the Offshore Art Movement and now focuses on her work, BREACH, which is centered on environmental sustainability.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Liz Cohen Biography". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Trimble, Lynn (2017-05-09). "Liz Cohen to Join ASU School of Art Faculty This Fall". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  3. 1 2 Megan Irwin, "Hard Body: Liz Cohen's infiltrating the lowrider world — and calling it art", Phoenix New Times, October 5, 2006
  4. 1 2 Margolis-Pineo, Sarah (2011-11-03). "Yes, That is a Car Seat in my Low Rider: An Interview with Liz Cohen". Bad at Sports. Retrieved 2020-01-31. My motivation was more about how to become a part of a certain subculture...For the next piece, I wanted to take something where I could go from being on the outside-really being an outsider, to really being an insider, even if I was a freak insider. Different ways to become a part of that car culture are to build cars, to own cars, or to model for cars. So my motivation for doing the modeling was more to become a member-I never did it to make fun of that aspect of car culture. I wasn't judging it, I was using it.
  5. 1 2 "An Interview with Liz Cohen". Believer Magazine. 2007-11-01. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  6. 1 2 3 Walsh, Brienne (2010-11-04). "Liz Cohens Car Culture". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  7. "Work Of Art: The Next Great Artist: "La Dolce Arte"". TV Club. December 2011. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  8. Berk, Brett (14 May 2012). "Photos: cArt: BMW Makes Weird Noises at the Frieze Art Fair (& Bonus Car-Art Slide Show!)". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2020-01-31. Liz Cohen, Trabantamino, 2002–10: This hydraulically powered, extendible, low-rider version of the universally derided Eastern European Trabant was a real show-stopper.
  9. Rosenberg, Karen (2010-10-29). "Liz Cohen: 'Trabantimino'". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  10. Heyman, Marshall (2014-07-07). "Liz Cohen's 'Trabantimino' Comes to Bridgehampton". Wall Street Journal. ISSN   0099-9660 . Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  11. Keats, Jonathon (July 2003). "High-Performance Artist". Wired . Retrieved 2007-09-04.
  12. "BODYWORK". Creative Capital. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  13. Trimble, Lynn (13 April 2020). "A Phoenix Artist Has Been Named a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved 2020-04-27.
  14. "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation" . Retrieved 2020-04-27.