Tue, Jan 28, 2025

11 AM – 12:15 PM PST (GMT-8)

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The undergraduate and graduate Fine Art departments will host Animal Charm (Richard Bott and Jim Fetterly) for a special artist lecture and Q&A on Tuesday, Jan 28, 11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m. in the Forum.

Animal Charm, a collaboration between Richard Bott (b.1972 Louisville, Kentucky) and Jim Fetterley (b. 1971 Rockford, Illinois) - began using found VHS tapes to make video collages in 1995. With the advent of YouTube a decade away, the artists culled bins of dead and devalued media, including industrial and promotional videos, bargain vinyl LPs, and consumer-grade electronics. They then combined disparate footage, using early nonlinear video-editing software, to create unsettling and humorous works. The duo composes unexpected juxtapositions to subvert the original intentions of the found videos and expose their absurdity while eliciting new meanings from the detritus of vulture.

Image courtesy of PBS: https://www.pbssocal.org/shows/artbound/animal-charms-underground-film-and-sculpture

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Tue, Feb 04, 2025
11:00 AM – 12:15 PM
Private Location (sign in to display)
Johanna Hedva - Fine Arts Visiting Artist Lecture Series (VALS)

The undergraduate and graduate Fine Art departments will host Johanna Hedva for a special artist lecture and Q&A on Tuesday, Feb 4, 11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m., in the Forum.

Johanna Hedva is a Korean American writer, artist, and musician, who was raised in Los Angeles by a family of witches. Hedva’s practice cooks magic, necromancy, and divination together with mystical states of fury and ecstasy, and political states of solidarity and disintegration. They are devoted to deviant forms of knowledge and to doom as a liberatory condition. There is always the body — its radical permeability, dependency, and consociation — but the task is how to eclipse it, how to nebulize it, and how to cope when this inevitably fails. Whether the form is novels, essays, theory, poetry, music, performance, AI, videogames, installation, sculpture, drawings, or trickery, ultimately Hedva’s work is different kinds of writing because it is different kinds of language embodied: it is words on a page, screaming in a room, dragging a hand through water.

Their work has been shown in Berlin at Gropius Bau, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Klosterruine, and Institute of Cultural Inquiry; in Los Angeles at JOAN, HRLA, in the Getty’s Pacific Standard Time, and the LA Architecture and Design Museum; in London at TINA, Camden Arts Centre, The Roberts Institute of Arts, and The Institute of Contemporary Arts; in New York City at Amant Foundation and Performance Space New York; in South Korea at Seoul Museum of Art and Gyeongnam Art Museum; the 14th Shanghai Biennial; Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst in Zürich; Modern Art Oxford; Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art of Bolzano; the Museum of Contemporary Art on the Moon; and in the Transmediale, Unsound, Rewire, and Creepy Teepee Festivals. Hedva has written about the political and mystical capacities of Nine Inch Nails, Sunn O))), and Lightning Bolt; the legacy of Susan Sontag; how everything is erotic therefore exhausting; and the revolutionary potential of illness. Their writing has appeared in Triple Canopy, frieze, The White Review, Topical Cream, Spike, Die Zeit, and is anthologized in Whitechapel: Documents of Contemporary Art. Their essay “Sick Woman Theory,” published in 2016, has been translated into 11 languages.

Image courtesy of: https://www.artmattersfoundation.org/grantees/johanna-hedva

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