FAD Magazine

FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

NYC OPENING: Bravin Lee Programs presents Katie Armstrong, Friday March 21st

OPENING RECEPTION: March 21st 6pm-8pm

BRAVIN LEE GALLERY

526 W 26th St #211

New York, NY 10001

unnamed

Dark Spring is an immersive audio-visual installation, the result of Armstrong’s experience shifting between Berlin and New York during the autumn and winter months of 2013. The resulting two animations The resulting two animations – Interlude, made during a three month residency in Germany, and Show me where it hurts, made upon returning back to America – draw heavily from this transitional moment in the artist’s life.

Check the video where Katie spills all of her animating techniques:

In the artists words:

Interlude was created during my time as the artist-in-residence at Axel Springer’s Plug & Play Accelerator in Berlin. Sharing a space with burgeoning tech start-ups, my mind wandered again and again to my own relationship with technology, to the many habits and rituals I have when interacting with my electronic counterparts. I spent rainy autumn nights with the windows open, wrapped in sweaters, musing over the sensation of being alone in a city so different than the one I had traveled from. I relished the calmer pace and the fact that my iPhone no longer received service. At its root, Interlude is a tribute to the space that exists outside of one’s comfort zone; a toast to the wonderful strangeness of solitude in a very ‘connected’ world. Show me where it hurts came to fruition in the months that followed, upon my return to life in New York. It started as a knee-jerk reaction to settling back into American culture. I became quickly aware – and transfixed on – the flurry of media attention surrounding female pop singer, Miley Cyrus. A once well-loved child star, Cyrus has spent the past year aggressively shedding her former Disney persona in exchange for an independent, sexually charged identity. Though I’m no stranger to exploring pop songs in my work, what drew me to Cyrus wasn’t a sentimental attachment to her music – what interested me was the utter scrutiny with which critics and fans alike discussed the young woman’s decision to own and celebrate her sexually mature self, rather than repress it.

Katie Armstrong (b. 1988) lives and works in New York. She received her BFA in Visual and Critical Studies from the School of Visual Arts. This is her second solo show with BravinLee programs

Check out the trailor:

to find out more visit: HERE

or

Visit Katie’s website:  www.katiearmstrong.com

 

Categories

Tags

Related Posts

Trending Articles

Join the FAD newsletter and get the latest news and articles straight to your inbox

* indicates required