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Archive des Ephemeren (#zotero2-2317722.5EFGCMGA)

Martha Wilson and Franklin Furnace Archive
(01.11.2018)

https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11806/qr/ade_Wilson
Wilson, Martha (Presenter)

Martha Wilson is an American feminist artist and gallery director who began her career in the early 1970s in Halifax while studying English Literature at Dalhousie University and teaching English at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design.  Working in a male-dominated conceptualist milieu at that time, Martha Wilson generated pioneering photographic and video work that explored her female subjectivity through role-playing, costume transformations and invasions of male and other female personas.  She further developed her performative practice after moving to New York City in 1974 where she also founded and continues to direct Franklin Furnace Archive, Inc., a downtown artist-run center dedicated to the exploration and promotion of innovative installation, performance and time-based art practices.

This lecture chronicles the interwoven stages of Martha Wilson’s creative contributions within the context of early feminist and socially engaged studio practice as well as her dissemination of the work of like-minded individuals through the auspices of Franklin Furnace. Central to the discussion is Martha Wilson’s presence as an agent of transformative change, initially in her artwork and then her facilitation of cultural change through her leadership of Franklin Furnace. Martha Wilson’s selection of 40 projects from 40 years of programming at the archive also becomes a self-portrait of sorts as she highlights works that are historically significant for pushing boundaries within exhibition and display culture as well as society at large.

place: Kunstmuseum Bern



Extra
DateAdded:  2019-04-14T10:28:01Z
ShortTitle:  Martha Wilson und das Franklin Furnace Archive
Rights:  https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Language:  Englisch
DateModified:  2021-10-13T10:39:48Z
Key:  5EFGCMGA