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LigoranoReese

LigoranoReese is the collaborative name of Nora Ligorano and Marshall Reese, artists who've worked together since the mid-eighties. Their artwork falls within the fields of new technology, ice sculpture, installation art, video art, artists books and limited edition multiples.

LigoranoReese
Born1956, Ligorano; 1955, Reese
Gettysburg, PA, Ligorano; Washington, D.C., Reese
NationalityAmerican
EducationMaryland Institute College of Art, Ligorano; Pomona College, Reese
Known forConceptual Art, Ice Sculpture, Installation art, New media art

Background edit

Nora Ligorano met Marshall Reese in 1977 while studying painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore. Reese moved to Baltimore in 1977 after a year abroad as a student at Pomona College. From 1978 to 1980, he co-published with Kirby Malone the small press magazine Epod[1] that featured early language poetry and performance scores and began experimenting with visual and sound poetry as a member of CoAccident a collective of poets and musicians. Ligorano and Reese began working collaboratively in that context.[2] In 1982 Ligorano was awarded a Fulbright scholarship in design arts in Spain. Reese moved with Ligorano to Barcelona, where they made their first video art piece, relocating to Madrid the following year. In 1984, Reese moved to New York City to pursue interests in video art. Ligorano joined him one year later in Williamsburg Brooklyn. In New York, both of them continued working in performance art and video expanding into other media including installations, artists books and limited edition multiples.[2]

Works edit

New Technology edit

In 2001, The Kitchen and MIT MediaLab commissioned LigoranoReese to make an interactive installation for the exhibition ID/entity.[3] The artists’ Van Eyck's Mirror is an installation based on the Arnolfini Portrait using video, sensors and computer controls. This was among LigoranoReese's first artworks that incorporated interactive technology.

In 2003 they made In Memory of Truth an installation using a microprojection system designed by the artists and the optical engineer Tony Cappo. The centerpiece of the installation is a magnifying glass on a pedestal with a primary lens that miniaturizes Hollywood war films to fit on the head of a pin. Holland Cotter described the piece “a tour-de-force.”[4] History's Garden 2006 was the next installation using a similar microprojection system. Mounting a prism and lens on a mechanical arm, they replaced the moving counterweight of a metronome with a small projection screen on which images of refugees from Central Europe and the Middle East are projected.[5]

With funding from NYSCA and the Jerome Foundation in 2003 they started research and development on illuminating woven fiber optic thread. From 2003 – 2007 they worked with Eric Singer on developing the hardware. In 2009 while residents at Eyebeam,[6] LigoranoReese met Luke Loeffler and devised programming with him for the fabric to respond to live information from the internet. Calling this body of work “fiber optic data tapestries” the artists completed 50 Different Minds[7] in 2010, which uses Twitter feeds and air flight data to make patterns and colors on its surface.

In 2013 they debuted a new tapestry called I•AM•I at Miami Art Project with Catharine Clark Gallery. I•AM•I is a woven personal data portrait using Fitbit activity and responses to a self-reporting emotional survey to create an abstract portrait of the artists’ subjects. Two of these pieces are in the collections of the University of Wyoming and 21C Museum in Louisville.

Megan Prelinger in her book Inside the Machine: Art and Invention in the Electronic Age[8] notes:

... these characteristics allowed microcircuits to retain a legacy association with textile crafts, an association that has been encouraged in the intervening decades by the networked nature of the electronic systems that now structure everyday life. The twenty-first century textile artists LigoranoReese writing about their electronic tapestries woven of fiber-optic thread, explain their approach to integrating electronics with weaving: 'Weaving is a social activity. It is about threading narratives and mythology, even language and accounting, with (the) quipu. Weaving is a shared tradition common to cultures throughout the world in the same way that computers and networks have flattened the world, making communication and exchange more common.'

Temporary Monuments - Ice Sculptures edit

In 2006, on the third anniversary of the Iraq War, the artists installed the word Democracy sculpted from 2000 pounds of ice in the garden of Jim Kempner Fine Art in New York City. They called it The State of Things and photographed and filmed it while it disappeared. This project began a series of public art events LigoranoReese call “temporary monuments.”

In 2008, Provisions Library invited the artists to participate in BrushFire, public art interventions by a number of artists during the campaign season in the Midwest.[9] The artists reprised The State of Things at the conventions in Denver and St. Paul, installing ice sculptures of Democracy in front of the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver on the first day of the Democratic Convention and on the state capital grounds in St. Paul on the first day of the Republican Convention.[10]

In October that same year, the artists installed an ice sculpture of the word Economy on the 79th Anniversary of the Great Depression in front of the New York State Supreme Court Building at Foley Square.[11] In 2010 LigoranoReese made an ice sculpture of the words Middle Class and filmed it disappearing in Kempner's garden called Morning In America. Senator Bernie Sanders featured the time lapse video on his U.S. Senate webpage.[12] In 2012 at the conventions in Tampa and Charlotte, the artists remade the installation in public parks there.[13] The artists installed the ice sculpture Dawn of the Anthropocene in New York City in front of the Flatiron Building as part of the People's Climate March on September 21, 2014. It was a 21-foot long sculpture of the words "The Future"[14] disappeared in 13 hours.

The poet/writer Charles Bernstein writes, “The fundamental feature of LigoranoReese's ice sculptures is that they start out as massive objects, weighing two tons, but by the end of the day they are no more than memories. The sculptures are constantly metamorphosing, changing shape at every moment. In this sense, these works are more lifelike than other kinds of public art, imitating the way life is a constant series of changes.”[15]

Installation Art edit

LigoranoReese began making video installations in 1992 often as sculptural objects that incorporate video monitors placed inside other media: newspapers, books[16] and clocks. These sculptures concerned how electronic networks were changing physical media and transforming the act of reading and sharing information.

Johanna Drucker commented on their installation The Corona Palimpsest:[17]

The current tension of the book reflects the present tense of electronic media continuing to come into being. This is not a contrast between the space of the real and the space of the virtual, but between two modes of imaginative life of thought, language, and the eye, each competing to determine the relations of history, language and idea. As the page was once written so the monitor redraws itself.[18]

In 1994 they installed their first public art installation in the windows of the Donnell Library Center. Acid Migration of Culture was a 48 ft x 8 ft photo mural of an open dictionary of cultural terms. Four video monitors displayed statements by artists, politicians and civic leaders on the role of arts in society.[16][19] Free Speech Zone (2004) at the Brooklyn Public Library Grand Army Plaza Main Branch featured backlit duratrans photos of blind-folded library users and electronic zipper signs of titles and phrases of banned and challenged books. In 2005, they reinstalled it in the windows of the Donnell Library Center.[20]

Video Art edit

Single channel video art and videos as elements of sculptures, installations and websites is an ongoing activity of their collaboration. They exhibit these in galleries and festivals.

Limited Edition Multiples edit

LigoranoReese began making artists books and limited edition multiples in 1992 with the Bible Belt as an element of a room-size installation with the same name. The edition consisted of a New Testament Bible mounted on a 33-inch belt with a gold-plated Jesus belt buckle.[21] The Bible Belt became the first edition piece of the series the Pure Products of America.[22] In 2001 the edition series became the website pureproductsusa.[23] The Bible Belt was followed with Contract with America underwear in 1995, an edition of cotton underwear briefs with the name of the Republican congressional campaign silkscreened on the waistband, an image of the House Speaker Newt Gingrich on the crotch and the platform of the Contract on the seat. After the artists mailed pairs of the underwear to political leaders in Washington as gifts, they were sued by the Republican National Committee to cease and desist citing trademark infringement.[24] In 2001 LigoranoReese published the W Collection on the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision halting the counting of ballots in Florida. The Collection consisted of a Bush vs Gore dish towel, Money/Honey, and the John Ashcroft snow globe.[25] In 2004 the artists published the postcard book Line Up and sold it in Union Square during the Republican convention in NYC. Line Up depicted the Bush administration cabinet in the form of mug shots. Madness of Art editions published a limited edition set of digital prints acquired by the New York Public Library.[26] LigoranoReese's limited edition art includes mirrors, lenticulars and snow globes.[27]

Representation edit

LigoranoReese is represented by Catharine Clark Gallery in San Francisco.

References edit

  1. ^ "Epod magazine #3" (PDF). Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  2. ^ a b "M/E/A/N/I/N/G Online#2". Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  3. ^ Iverson, Hana (Spring 2002). "Mirror Mirror". Afterimage. 29 (5): 3. doi:10.1525/aft.2002.29.5.3. S2CID 251854861.
  4. ^ Cotter, Holland (September 22, 2008). "With Politics in the Air, a Freedom Free-for-All Comes to Town". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  5. ^ "New Media When, Neuberger Museum, SUNY Purchase". neuberger.org/. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  6. ^ "Ligorano/Reese | eyebeam.org". eyebeam.org. Retrieved 2016-01-28.
  7. ^ Avila, Susan Taber (Spring 2011). "Textile Tweets". Fiber Arts.
  8. ^ Prelinger, Megan (2015). Inside the Machine: Art and Invention in the Electronic Age (First ed.). New York, N.Y.: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-393-08359-0.
  9. ^ "The UnConvention". Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  10. ^ Bloom, Julie (August 15, 2008). "Your (Nonpartisan) Message Here". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  11. ^ Chung, Jen (October 29, 2008). . Gothamist. Archived from the original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  12. ^ Sanders, Bernie. "The Melting Middle Class". Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  13. ^ Kazakina, Katya (August 29, 2012). "Vanishing 'Middle Class' Ice Sculpture Hits Conventions". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on August 31, 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  14. ^ Revkin, Andrew (September 22, 2014). "Humanity's Long Climate and Energy March". New York Times. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  15. ^ Bernstein, Charles (July 19, 2016). "The American Dream Project". Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  16. ^ a b Weiss, Jason. "The Book Talks Back: the video books of Ligorano/Reese". Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  17. ^ Cotter, Holland (October 16, 1998). "When Words' Meaning Is Their Look". New York Times. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  18. ^ Drucker, Johanna (1998). Figuring the Word (PDF). Granary Books. p. 170. ISBN 1-887123-23-7. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  19. ^ "Acid Migration of Culture". Leonardo On-Line. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  20. ^ Strausbaugh, John (September 26, 2005). "Artistic Commentary at the Library on the Zeal to Ban Books". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  21. ^ "The Allan Chasanoff Book Art Collection, Yale University Art Gallery". Archived from the original on 2 September 2014. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  22. ^ Valdez, Sarah (April 2007). "Pure Satire" (PDF). Art on Paper. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  23. ^ "pureproductsusa". Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  24. ^ Morrison, Jim (June 11, 1995). "Researching Legal Briefs (the Silk-Screened Kind)". New York Times.
  25. ^ Tapper, Jake (October 28, 2002). "Snow Blind". The New Yorker. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  26. ^ Johnson, Ken (December 3, 2007). "Politically Charged Prints Cause Talking in the Library". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  27. ^ Murphy, Kate (December 12, 2012). "The World Through a Flurry of Snow". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2014.

External links edit

  • LigoranoReese Website
  • Melted Away Ice Sculpture Website
  • PureProductsUSA Website

ligoranoreese, collaborative, name, nora, ligorano, marshall, reese, artists, worked, together, since, eighties, their, artwork, falls, within, fields, technology, sculpture, installation, video, artists, books, limited, edition, multiples, born1956, ligorano,. LigoranoReese is the collaborative name of Nora Ligorano and Marshall Reese artists who ve worked together since the mid eighties Their artwork falls within the fields of new technology ice sculpture installation art video art artists books and limited edition multiples LigoranoReeseBorn1956 Ligorano 1955 ReeseGettysburg PA Ligorano Washington D C ReeseNationalityAmericanEducationMaryland Institute College of Art Ligorano Pomona College ReeseKnown forConceptual Art Ice Sculpture Installation art New media art Contents 1 Background 2 Works 2 1 New Technology 2 2 Temporary Monuments Ice Sculptures 2 3 Installation Art 2 4 Video Art 2 5 Limited Edition Multiples 3 Representation 4 References 5 External linksBackground editNora Ligorano met Marshall Reese in 1977 while studying painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore Reese moved to Baltimore in 1977 after a year abroad as a student at Pomona College From 1978 to 1980 he co published with Kirby Malone the small press magazine Epod 1 that featured early language poetry and performance scores and began experimenting with visual and sound poetry as a member of CoAccident a collective of poets and musicians Ligorano and Reese began working collaboratively in that context 2 In 1982 Ligorano was awarded a Fulbright scholarship in design arts in Spain Reese moved with Ligorano to Barcelona where they made their first video art piece relocating to Madrid the following year In 1984 Reese moved to New York City to pursue interests in video art Ligorano joined him one year later in Williamsburg Brooklyn In New York both of them continued working in performance art and video expanding into other media including installations artists books and limited edition multiples 2 Works editNew Technology edit In 2001 The Kitchen and MIT MediaLab commissioned LigoranoReese to make an interactive installation for the exhibition ID entity 3 The artists Van Eyck s Mirror is an installation based on the Arnolfini Portrait using video sensors and computer controls This was among LigoranoReese s first artworks that incorporated interactive technology In 2003 they made In Memory of Truth an installation using a microprojection system designed by the artists and the optical engineer Tony Cappo The centerpiece of the installation is a magnifying glass on a pedestal with a primary lens that miniaturizes Hollywood war films to fit on the head of a pin Holland Cotter described the piece a tour de force 4 History s Garden 2006 was the next installation using a similar microprojection system Mounting a prism and lens on a mechanical arm they replaced the moving counterweight of a metronome with a small projection screen on which images of refugees from Central Europe and the Middle East are projected 5 With funding from NYSCA and the Jerome Foundation in 2003 they started research and development on illuminating woven fiber optic thread From 2003 2007 they worked with Eric Singer on developing the hardware In 2009 while residents at Eyebeam 6 LigoranoReese met Luke Loeffler and devised programming with him for the fabric to respond to live information from the internet Calling this body of work fiber optic data tapestries the artists completed 50 Different Minds 7 in 2010 which uses Twitter feeds and air flight data to make patterns and colors on its surface In 2013 they debuted a new tapestry called I AM I at Miami Art Project with Catharine Clark Gallery I AM I is a woven personal data portrait using Fitbit activity and responses to a self reporting emotional survey to create an abstract portrait of the artists subjects Two of these pieces are in the collections of the University of Wyoming and 21C Museum in Louisville Megan Prelinger in her book Inside the Machine Art and Invention in the Electronic Age 8 notes these characteristics allowed microcircuits to retain a legacy association with textile crafts an association that has been encouraged in the intervening decades by the networked nature of the electronic systems that now structure everyday life The twenty first century textile artists LigoranoReese writing about their electronic tapestries woven of fiber optic thread explain their approach to integrating electronics with weaving Weaving is a social activity It is about threading narratives and mythology even language and accounting with the quipu Weaving is a shared tradition common to cultures throughout the world in the same way that computers and networks have flattened the world making communication and exchange more common Temporary Monuments Ice Sculptures edit In 2006 on the third anniversary of the Iraq War the artists installed the word Democracy sculpted from 2000 pounds of ice in the garden of Jim Kempner Fine Art in New York City They called it The State of Things and photographed and filmed it while it disappeared This project began a series of public art events LigoranoReese call temporary monuments In 2008 Provisions Library invited the artists to participate in BrushFire public art interventions by a number of artists during the campaign season in the Midwest 9 The artists reprised The State of Things at the conventions in Denver and St Paul installing ice sculptures of Democracy in front of the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver on the first day of the Democratic Convention and on the state capital grounds in St Paul on the first day of the Republican Convention 10 In October that same year the artists installed an ice sculpture of the word Economy on the 79th Anniversary of the Great Depression in front of the New York State Supreme Court Building at Foley Square 11 In 2010 LigoranoReese made an ice sculpture of the words Middle Class and filmed it disappearing in Kempner s garden called Morning In America Senator Bernie Sanders featured the time lapse video on his U S Senate webpage 12 In 2012 at the conventions in Tampa and Charlotte the artists remade the installation in public parks there 13 The artists installed the ice sculpture Dawn of the Anthropocene in New York City in front of the Flatiron Building as part of the People s Climate March on September 21 2014 It was a 21 foot long sculpture of the words The Future 14 disappeared in 13 hours The poet writer Charles Bernstein writes The fundamental feature of LigoranoReese s ice sculptures is that they start out as massive objects weighing two tons but by the end of the day they are no more than memories The sculptures are constantly metamorphosing changing shape at every moment In this sense these works are more lifelike than other kinds of public art imitating the way life is a constant series of changes 15 Installation Art edit LigoranoReese began making video installations in 1992 often as sculptural objects that incorporate video monitors placed inside other media newspapers books 16 and clocks These sculptures concerned how electronic networks were changing physical media and transforming the act of reading and sharing information Johanna Drucker commented on their installation The Corona Palimpsest 17 The current tension of the book reflects the present tense of electronic media continuing to come into being This is not a contrast between the space of the real and the space of the virtual but between two modes of imaginative life of thought language and the eye each competing to determine the relations of history language and idea As the page was once written so the monitor redraws itself 18 In 1994 they installed their first public art installation in the windows of the Donnell Library Center Acid Migration of Culture was a 48 ft x 8 ft photo mural of an open dictionary of cultural terms Four video monitors displayed statements by artists politicians and civic leaders on the role of arts in society 16 19 Free Speech Zone 2004 at the Brooklyn Public Library Grand Army Plaza Main Branch featured backlit duratrans photos of blind folded library users and electronic zipper signs of titles and phrases of banned and challenged books In 2005 they reinstalled it in the windows of the Donnell Library Center 20 Video Art edit Single channel video art and videos as elements of sculptures installations and websites is an ongoing activity of their collaboration They exhibit these in galleries and festivals Limited Edition Multiples edit LigoranoReese began making artists books and limited edition multiples in 1992 with the Bible Belt as an element of a room size installation with the same name The edition consisted of a New Testament Bible mounted on a 33 inch belt with a gold plated Jesus belt buckle 21 The Bible Belt became the first edition piece of the series the Pure Products of America 22 In 2001 the edition series became the website pureproductsusa 23 The Bible Belt was followed with Contract with America underwear in 1995 an edition of cotton underwear briefs with the name of the Republican congressional campaign silkscreened on the waistband an image of the House Speaker Newt Gingrich on the crotch and the platform of the Contract on the seat After the artists mailed pairs of the underwear to political leaders in Washington as gifts they were sued by the Republican National Committee to cease and desist citing trademark infringement 24 In 2001 LigoranoReese published the W Collection on the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision halting the counting of ballots in Florida The Collection consisted of a Bush vs Gore dish towel Money Honey and the John Ashcroft snow globe 25 In 2004 the artists published the postcard book Line Up and sold it in Union Square during the Republican convention in NYC Line Up depicted the Bush administration cabinet in the form of mug shots Madness of Art editions published a limited edition set of digital prints acquired by the New York Public Library 26 LigoranoReese s limited edition art includes mirrors lenticulars and snow globes 27 Representation editLigoranoReese is represented by Catharine Clark Gallery in San Francisco References edit Epod magazine 3 PDF Retrieved 31 August 2014 a b M E A N I N G Online 2 Retrieved 1 September 2014 Iverson Hana Spring 2002 Mirror Mirror Afterimage 29 5 3 doi 10 1525 aft 2002 29 5 3 S2CID 251854861 Cotter Holland September 22 2008 With Politics in the Air a Freedom Free for All Comes to Town New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2014 New Media When Neuberger Museum SUNY Purchase neuberger org Retrieved 1 September 2014 Ligorano Reese eyebeam org eyebeam org Retrieved 2016 01 28 Avila Susan Taber Spring 2011 Textile Tweets Fiber Arts Prelinger Megan 2015 Inside the Machine Art and Invention in the Electronic Age First ed New York N Y W W Norton amp Company Inc p 121 ISBN 978 0 393 08359 0 The UnConvention Retrieved 31 August 2014 Bloom Julie August 15 2008 Your Nonpartisan Message Here New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2014 Chung Jen October 29 2008 A Literal Economic Meltdown Gothamist Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Sanders Bernie The Melting Middle Class Retrieved 31 August 2014 Kazakina Katya August 29 2012 Vanishing Middle Class Ice Sculpture Hits Conventions Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on August 31 2014 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Revkin Andrew September 22 2014 Humanity s Long Climate and Energy March New York Times Retrieved 9 October 2014 Bernstein Charles July 19 2016 The American Dream Project Retrieved 18 April 2022 a b Weiss Jason The Book Talks Back the video books of Ligorano Reese Retrieved 31 August 2014 Cotter Holland October 16 1998 When Words Meaning Is Their Look New York Times Retrieved 2 September 2014 Drucker Johanna 1998 Figuring the Word PDF Granary Books p 170 ISBN 1 887123 23 7 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Acid Migration of Culture Leonardo On Line Retrieved 31 August 2014 Strausbaugh John September 26 2005 Artistic Commentary at the Library on the Zeal to Ban Books New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2014 The Allan Chasanoff Book Art Collection Yale University Art Gallery Archived from the original on 2 September 2014 Retrieved 2 September 2014 Valdez Sarah April 2007 Pure Satire PDF Art on Paper Retrieved 31 August 2014 pureproductsusa Retrieved 1 September 2014 Morrison Jim June 11 1995 Researching Legal Briefs the Silk Screened Kind New York Times Tapper Jake October 28 2002 Snow Blind The New Yorker Retrieved 31 August 2014 Johnson Ken December 3 2007 Politically Charged Prints Cause Talking in the Library New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2014 Murphy Kate December 12 2012 The World Through a Flurry of Snow New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2014 External links editLigoranoReese Website Melted Away Ice Sculpture Website PureProductsUSA Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LigoranoReese amp oldid 1150965532, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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