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Williams College Museum of Art Presents
Liza
Johnson: if then maybe
September 25, 2004-February 27, 2005
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publicity images now
Williamstown,
MA - Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) presents Liza Johnson: if then
maybe, a multi-channel video installation by filmmaker and Assistant Professor
of Art at Williams College, Liza Johnson. Johnson created this most recent
installation for the museum’s historic rotunda gallery; it features
five separate video loops projected on large, suspended screens and a
series of related photographs in the adjacent Media Field gallery. The
exhibition examines feminine gestures, specifically the gestures of shame,
prevalent in Hollywood cinema. On Thursday, September 30, the
artist will give a lecture at 4:00 p.m. in the WCMA auditorium. A reception
will follow in the galleries. The public is welcome to attend both events.
If then maybe is an intricately arranged cycle of images that
presents a philosophical meditation on cinematic tropes. Johnson restaged
and reshot these typically feminine motions, a downward glance, a turned
head, or a blushing cheek, in a decidedly cinematic style, with lush lighting,
and beautiful sets, yet she removed them from their storylines. The images
feel familiar as instants of silent tension in well-known Hollywood dramas,
but they do not refer to specific recognizable scenes. Each short, perfectly
circular, video loop is characterized by a static camera focused on a
woman caught in an endless moment of speechless vulnerability. With the
loops, Johnson creates an unnerving environment in which the women cannot
escape the frame.
“Liza Johnson’s newest work beautifully and seductively addresses
issues of gender, psychology, and film and art history,” says curator
Lisa Dorin, “The piece makes us look at bad feelings in a constructive
way.” In contrast to earlier accepted feminist imagery, which insisted
upon positive and redeeming depictions of women wielding attributes of
power, Johnson’s women are seemingly at their weakest, under constant
scrutiny by a suggested off-screen presence, as well as by the viewers
themselves. But by excising these moments from their narrative contexts
and isolating them through repetition, the work draws attention to the
gestures, and opens them up to interpretation. The five accompanying photographs,
on view in the adjacent Media Field gallery, give a glimpse of what the
women in the videos might see as they cast their gazes down in shame.
They ask, how does the world look when seen from these particular feminine
postures? What points of view does shame allow?
About
the Artist
Liza Johnson has screened her work in many international film venues,
including the Berlin and Rotterdam film festivals, New York Video Festival,
and a large number of gay and lesbian film festivals. Additionly, Johnson
has shown her work in several museums and galleries, including Artist’s
Space in New York and the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. Some
of her past films and videos include Good Sister/Bad Sister (1996), Fernweh/The
Oppostite of Homesick (2000), and Falling (2003). She was the recipient
of a DAAD Berlin Kunstlerprogram Fellowship and Residency in Film in 1999.
She is currently in post production on her latest film, Desert Hot Springs.
Johnson is also Assistant Professor of Art at Williams College where she
teaches introductory and advanced level classes in video production and
theory. She received her B.A. from Williams College and an M.F.A. from
the University of California, San Diego.
The creation of the video installation has been sponsored by the Williams
College Center for Technology in the Arts and Humanities (CTAH). This
exhibition was organized by Lisa Dorin, Assistant Curator, with the artist.
Publicity
Images Available
Publicity images for Liza Johnson: if then maybe and other current exhibitions
are available. They can be found at ww.wcma.org/press.
The Williams
College Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m., and on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free and the museum
is wheelchair accessible.
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