This biographical article is written like a résumé. (November 2021) |
Laura Parnes is contemporary American artist[1] who creates non-linear narratives that engage strategies of film and video art and blur the lines between storytelling conventions and experimentation. Her work is often episodic, references pop culture, female stereotypes, history and the anxiety of influence.[2] She was the co-director of Momenta Art with Eric Heist and helped relaunch the not-for-profit exhibition space in New York City; at first as a nomadic space and then as a permanent space in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. She continued to her involvement as a Board Chair until 2011.[3] Parnes received her BFA from the Tyler School of Art, Temple University, and lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She currently teaches in MFA departments at MICA, Parsons, and SVA.[4]
Laura Parnes | |
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Born | Buffalo, NY |
Education | BFA, Tyler School of Art, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA |
Awards | Solomon Guggenheim Memorial Fellow, 2013 |
Works and critical reception
editLaura Parnes' latest work, County Down, is an episodic, digital film investigating a pandemic of psychosis in a gated community that coincides with an adolescent girl's creation of a designer drug. Performers include Chloe Bass, Becca Blackwell, Ellen Cantor, Patty Chang, Nicole Eisenman, Jim Fletcher, Kate Valk, Stephanie Vella and Sacha Yanow. The soundtrack and musical arrangements are by Johanna Fateman.[5]
Blood and Guts in High School, a 50-minute Parnes video which Chris Kraus called an “extrapolationist reduction” of Kathy Acker’s famous 1978 novel of the same name,[6] builds snippets of the book's original dialogue and text into scripts for theatrical vignettes.[7] Holland Cotter stated “the video is a model of how to bring off an ambitions project with scant resources, and also of how to respect source material while transforming it. Ms. Parnes’s video floats like a shark, forever hovering, but always watching and moving.”[8]
Often her work is formally staged and uses dialogue sampled from cultural dogma.[9] Her work Hollywood Inferno is a two-channel installation that refers to our cultural obsession with adolescents. The main protagonist, Sandy, is a candy store clerk who attaches herself to a script writer named Virgil, who promises career contacts and gives her a picaresque tour through cultural hell.[10]
She collaborated with Sue de Beer on Heidi 2, an unauthorized sequel to Mike Kelley and Paul McCarthy’s Heidi. In this feminist,[11] multi-media installation the artists used pop cultural tropes without apology expressing the most primal events through the idiom of sitcoms, video games and splatter films.[12]
Exhibitions
editLaura Parnes' works have been exhibited widely in the United States and worldwide, including: Deste Foundation for Contemporary Art, Athens, Greece., LOOP Festival, Barcelona, Spain; Light Industry, Brooklyn, NY; Kusthalle Winterhur, Switzerland; Overgaden- Institute for Contemporary Art, Copenhagen, Denmark; iMOCA, Indianapolis, IN; Cinematexas, Austin, TX; Contemporary Art Center, Vilnius, Lithuania; Museo Nacional Centro De Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid; Whitney Museum of American Art (1997 Whitney Biennial), NY; Dunedin Public Art Gallery, New Zealand; PSI Contemporary Art Center MoMA, NY; Miami Museum of Contemporary Art, FL; and Brooklyn Museum, NY.[1]
Her solo exhibitions include: LA><Art, LA, CA; Alma Enterprises, London; Locust Projects, Miami; Upstream Gallery, Amsterdam; Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, LA; Participant Inc, NY and Deitch Projects, NY. She has had solo screenings at MoMA, NY; CATE 10-year Anniversary, presented by the School of Art Institute of Chicago and Video Data Bank, Gene Siskel Film Center, Chicago IL; Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley Art Museum, CA; Vtape, Toronto and in a two-person screening at MoMA, NY. She was presented by Participant Inc. in a two-person exhibition at No Soul for Sale at X Initiative, NYC, NY.[1]
She participated in the 1997 Whitney Biennial and is a 2013 Solomon R. Guggenheim Memorial Fellow and Creative Capital Awardee.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Laura Parnes Video Data Bank". www.vdb.org. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ "Sardonic Tales: an Interview With Video Artist Laura Parnes". The Huffington Post. 27 January 2014. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ Ann Fensterstock, “Art on the Block”, PALGRAVE MACMILLAN, 2013, NYC, NY p 146/147
- ^ "Laura Parnes". www.lauraparnes.com. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ Wagley, Catherine (30 April 2012). "Are You High on Quix? In Laura Parnes' Fake Gated Community, This Drug Is All the Rage". L.A. Weekly. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ "Blood and Guts in Hollywood: Four Works by Laura Parnes | Video Data Bank". www.vdb.org. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ Velasco, David. "David Velasco on Laura Parnes". artforum.com. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ The New York Times (2009-03-26). "Aipad Photography Show New York, Thomas Hirschhorn, Dan Graham, Cary Leibowitz, Laura Parnes, Laurie Anderson, Michael Rakowitz". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ Parnes, Laura; Art Institute of Chicago; Video Data Bank (2014-01-01), Blood and guts in Hollywood: four works by Laura Parnes, OCLC 882109383
- ^ Cotter, Holland (2003-01-31). "ART IN REVIEW; Laura Parnes". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ^ Cohen, Michael. "the Love Mechanics", Flash Art, Vol. XXXIII, Summer, 2000, pp. 90-93, Rome, ITALY
- ^ Moody, Tom. "Double Your Transgression, Double Your Fun, Heidi 2", VERY, Fall, 1999, pp. 16-17, New York, NY