{"id":300,"date":"2019-10-01T19:34:00","date_gmt":"2019-10-01T19:34:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/archee.uqam.ca\/?p=300"},"modified":"2022-10-15T19:34:13","modified_gmt":"2022-10-15T19:34:13","slug":"octobre-2019-from-hand-to-screen-the-performance-of-joan-jonas","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archee.uqam.ca\/octobre-2019-from-hand-to-screen-the-performance-of-joan-jonas\/","title":{"rendered":"Octobre 2019 – From Hand to Screen: The Performance of Joan Jonas"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

For more than four decades the visual artist Joan Jonas, representing the U.S. in the 2015 Venice Biennale, has been generating a highly refined vocabulary of forms. In her most recent work,\u00a0Reanimation<\/em>, she brings together multiple technologies of performance: drawing, movement, video, text, sound, photography. All of these elements demonstrate the process of making art the moment it is occurring in the performance event, at the center of which is the embodied artist\u2014drawing the work, making sound and movement, speaking text (passages from the Halld\u00f3r Laxness novel,\u00a0Under the Glacier<\/em>).\u00a0 Her life-long interests are now elaborated in performance time through its relation to cosmic time, the ecological is positioned next to interspecies communication, the ritualistic accompanying the mediated. Whether from the point of view of mediaturgy or posthuman or poetics, in\u00a0Reanimation<\/em>\u00a0Jonas draws her way through space and time, mapping a spiritual journey.<\/p>\n\n\n\n


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New York-based artist Joan Jonas has helped shape the histories of performance and video. She began her artistic work in the 1960s, and is widely admired for her achievements in film, performance, video, sculpture, installation, photography, and drawing. She represented the United States at the Venice Biennale in 2015.\u00a0 There has been a very clear throughline in her body of work, dating back to such early performances as\u00a0Organic Honey\u2019s Visual Telepathy\u00a0<\/em>(1972), Vertical Roll\u00a0<\/em>(1972), Mirror Pieces\u00a0<\/em>(1968-1971),\u00a0Double Lunar Dogs\u00a0<\/em>(1984),\u00a0The Juniper Tree\u00a0<\/em>(1976),<\/em>\u00a0Volcano Saga\u00a0<\/em>(1985),<\/em>\u00a0and up to the last dozen years with\u00a0Lines in the Sand\u00a0<\/em>(2002),\u00a0The Shape, the Scent, the Feel of Things\u00a0<\/em>(2004),\u00a0Reading Dante<\/em>\u00a0(2009) and\u00a0Reanimation\u00a0<\/em>(2012), which will be my focus here. The consistency of her work, at the center of which is her own body, is most apparent in the mirroring and filming of images, in its incorporation of myth, mask, and ritual, in the act of drawing as a performance element, and in her attention to nature and animals. Her worldview moves between the ancient and the contemporary or, to put it another way, between folk culture and avant-garde ideas.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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