fbpx
Wikipedia

Valie Export

Valie Export (often stylized as 'VALIE EXPORT'; born 17 May 1940)[1][2] is an avant-garde Austrian artist.[3] She is best known for provocative public performances and expanded cinema work.[4] Her artistic work also includes video installations, computer animations, photography, sculpture and publications covering contemporary art.[5]

Valie Export
Valie Export in 2013
Born
Waltraud Lehner

(1940-05-17) 17 May 1940 (age 83)
NationalityAustrian
Known forArtist
Notable workCinema Work, Photography, Sculpture, Computer Animations
MovementAvant-Garde, Performance art, Contemporary art
AwardsGrand Gold Decoration for Services to the Republic of Austria
Website[1]

Early life edit

 
Sculpture Landschaftsmesser by Valie Export in Allentsteig, Austria.

Valie Export was born Waltraud Lehner in Linz, Austria and was raised in Linz by a single mother of three.[6][7][8] Export studied painting, drawing, and design at the National School for Textile Industry in Vienna.[9]

Career edit

1960s and 1970s edit

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Austrian feminism was forced to address the fact that by the 1970s there was still a generation of Austrians whose attitudes towards women were based on Nazi ideology.[10] They also had to confront the guilt of their parents’ (mothers’) complacency within the Nazi regime. In 1967, she changed her name from Waltraud Hollinger to VALIE EXPORT. In conversation with Gary Indiana for BOMB magazine, Export described her name-change:

"I did not want to have the name of my father [Lehner] any longer, nor that of my former husband Hollinger. My idea was to export from my 'outside' (heraus) and also export, from that port. The cigarette package was from a design and style that I could use, but it was not the inspiration."[11]

With this gesture of self-determination, Export emphatically asserted her identity within the Viennese art scene, which was then dominated by the taboo-breaking performance art of the Vienna Actionists such as Hermann Nitsch, Günter Brus, Otto Mühl, and Rudolf Schwarzkogler. Of the Actionist movement, Export has said, “I was very influenced, not so much by Actionism itself, but by the whole movement in the city. It was a really great movement. We had big scandals, sometimes against the politique; it helped me to bring out my ideas.”[11] Like her male contemporaries, she subjected her body to pain and danger in actions designed to confront the growing complacency and conformism of postwar Austrian culture. But her examination of the ways in which the power relations inherent in media representations inscribe women's bodies and consciousness distinguishes Export's project as unequivocally feminist. “In these performances and in my photo work of the 60s and 70s,” Export said in a 1995 interview with Scott MacDonald, “I used a female body, generally my own, as a bearer of signs and symbols - individual, sexual, cultural - that could function within an artistic environment.”[12]

Export's early guerrilla performances have attained an iconic status in feminist art history. In her 1968 performance Aktionshose:Genitalpanik (Action Pants: Genital Panic), Export entered an art cinema in Munich, wearing crotchless pants, and walked around the audience with her exposed genitalia at face level. The associated photographs were taken in 1969 in Vienna, by photographer Peter Hassmann. The performance at the art cinema and the photographs in 1969 were both aimed toward provoking thought about the passive role of women in cinema and confrontation of the private nature of sexuality with the public venues of her performances.[13] Apocryphal stories state that the Aktionshose:Genitalpanik performance occurred in a porn theater and included Export brandishing a machine gun and shooting at the audience, as depicted in the 1969 posters,[14] however she claims this never occurred.[15] In an interview in Ocula Magazine, the artist stated that: 'The fear of the vulva is present in mythology, where it is depicted devouring man. I don't know if this fear has changed.'[16]

Export's well-known performance piece Tapp-und-Tast-Kino (Tap and Touch Cinema) was performed in ten European cities, including Vienna and Munich, from 1968 to 1971.[17][18][19] For this bodily public performance, Export wandered the streets of cities with a "small mock-up of a [movie] theater," first made of Styrofoam and remade later in aluminum, strapped to her bare chest.[18] Peter Weibel, her collaborator, invited passersby to "'visit the cinema' for five minutes" by reaching into the "theater" and feeling her bare breasts.[18]

In Tap and Touch Cinema, Export inverts the sight-dependent functions of film and substitutes the "pleasure" of vision for physical touch.[18] Instead of presenting a sexualized female body to be viewed, Export solicits physical contact.[18] The "audience," actively participating in the performance, has direct, face-to-face contact with Export's body in the public sphere.[18] The media responded to Export's provocative work with panic and fear, one newspaper aligning her to a witch. Export recalls, "There was a great campaign against me in Austria."[20]

Some of her other works including Invisible Adversaries, "Syntagma," and "Korpersplitter," show the artist's body in connection to historical buildings not only physically, but also symbolically. The body’s attachment to the historical progression of gendered spaces and stereotyped roles represent Export's feminist and political approach to art.[21]

In her 1970 photograph, “Body Sign Action,” Export portrays a politically charged agenda through her performance artwork. The piece features a tattoo of a garter belt on Export's naked upper leg. The garter is not attached at the top and only attached to a sliver of a stocking at the bottom- therefore suspended on the leg. Instead of the garter objectifying the body, the body objectifies the garter, flipping constructed societal roles in relation to the female body.[22]

Export's groundbreaking video piece, Facing a Family (1971) was one of the first instances of television intervention and broadcasting video art. The video, originally broadcast on the Austrian television program Kontakte on 2 February 1971,[23] shows a bourgeois Austrian family watching TV while eating dinner. When other middle-class families watched this program on TV, the television would be holding a mirror up to their experience and complicating the relationship between subject, spectator, and television.

Export published “Women’s Art: A Manifesto” in 1972. In it, she advocated for women to “speak so that they can find themselves, this is what I ask for in order to achieve a self-defined image of ourselves and thus a different view of the social function of women.”[24] Here Export points out the unjust way that women had been living their lives within the boundaries created by men. In this same manifesto, Export also wrote “the arts can be understood as a medium of our self-definition adding new values to the arts. these values, transmitted via the cultural sign-process, will alter reality towards an accommodation of female needs”.[25] This statement directly related her own work to the progress of empowering women.

Export's 1973 short film, "Remote, Remote," exemplifies the painful ramifications of the female body conforming to societal standards. In this piece she digs at her cuticles with a knife for twelve minutes, representing the damage societal beauty standards inflict on the female body.[26]

Based on the precepts laid out in her 1972 manifesto, Export curated an exhibition of feminist art at the Galerie nachst St. Stepan in Vienna in 1975. Titled MAGNA. Feminism: Art and Creativity, this exhibition “introduced the feminist artist as curator and as contemporary art historian.”[27]

1977 saw the release of her first feature film, Unsichtbare Gegner. For this film's script, she collaborated with her former partner, Peter Weibel.[28] The film follows Anna, a young woman photographer, as she becomes increasingly convinced that the people around her are being taken over by the Hyksos, a hostile alien force. Her delusion, the film reveals, is caused by internalized behavioral expectations for herself as a woman that run counter to her true desires.[29] However, Invisible Adversaries brought a lot of criticism towards her. In an interview she explains that some people actually thought she was cutting up a bird and a mouse where in reality she was not. She further explains that a man called Schtabel who writes on a column on a magazine released false information about her piece, even though she contacted him on various occasions. She then explains that after bringing a lawsuit against him he was forced to release the letters that were sent to him by Valie Export.[30]

1980s to present edit

In her 1983 experimental film, Syntagma, Export attempted to reframe the female body by using a multitude of "...different cinematic montage techniques—doubling the body through overlays, for example".[31] The film follows Export's belief that the female body has, throughout history, been manipulated by men through the means of art and literature.[31] In an interview with "Interview Magazine", Export discusses her movie, Syntagma, and says, "The female body has always been a construction".[31]

Her 1985 film The Practice of Love was entered into the 35th Berlin International Film Festival.[32]

Since 1995/1996 Export has held a professorship for multimedia performance at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne.

In 2016, the city of Linz acquired her archive and opened a research center devoted to her work.[33]

Bard College hosted an exhibition centered around Export’s 1977 film Unsichtbare Gegner in 2016. The show featured work by Export as well as artists for whom Export’s art “blew open doors: Lorna Simpson, K8 Hardy, Hito Steyerl, Trisha Donnelly and Emily Jacir, among others.”[34]

In 2019, Export won the Roswitha Haftmann Prize of £120,000, which is “Europe’s largest single-award art prize.”[35]

Russia's war against Ukraine edit

In February 2023, Valie Export was one of the initial signers of a widely publicized petition calling for an end of military support to Ukraine in the wake of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Works edit

Selected filmography
  • Splitscreen - Solipsismus (1968)
  • INTERRUPTED LINE (1971)
  • ...Remote…Remote... (1973)
  • Mann & Frau & Animal (1973)
  • Adjungierte Dislokationen (1973)
  • Invisible Adversaries (Unsichtbare Gegner, 1976)
  • Menschenfrauen (1977)
  • Syntagma (1983)
  • The Practice of Love (Die Praxis der Liebe, 1984)
  • I turn over the pictures of my voice in my head (2008)

Awards edit

In popular culture edit

Her name appears in the lyrics of the Le Tigre song "Hot Topic."[40]

References edit

  1. ^ Bock, Hans-Michael (2009). The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-57181-655-9.
  2. ^ Blazwick, Iwona (2004). Faces in the crowd: picturing modern life from Manet to today. Skira. p. 349. ISBN 88-7624-069-1.
  3. ^ Angkjær Jørgensen, Ulla (2012). "Bodies and real-time interfaces: in video performance and interactive digital 3D installation art by VALIE EXPORT and Jette Gejl Kristensen". Journal of Aesthetics & Culture. 4 (1): 18149. doi:10.3402/jac.v4i0.18149. ISSN 2000-4214.
  4. ^ Fullerton, Elizabeth (2020-02-01). "Valie Export". Art in America. 108: 94–95.
  5. ^ Warren, Lynne (2006). Encyclopedia of 20th century photography. CRC Press. pp. 468–470. ISBN 978-0-415-97665-7.
  6. ^ Bock, Hans-Michael (2009). The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-57181-655-9.
  7. ^ Blazwick, Iwona (2004). Faces in the crowd: picturing modern life from Manet to today. Skira. p. 349. ISBN 88-7624-069-1.
  8. ^ Kennedy, Randy (2016-06-29). "Who Is Valie Export? Just Look, and Please Touch". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-01-31.
  9. ^ ”Biography.” VALIE EXPORT Center. https://www.roswithahaftmann-stiftung.com/en/prizewinners/2019_biography_ve.htm.
  10. ^ Margarete Lamb-Faffelberger. Out From The Shadows. (Riverside: Ariadne Press, 1997): 229.]
  11. ^ a b Indiana, Gary. "Valie Export", ‘’BOMB Magazine’’ Spring, 1982. Retrieved on August 15, 2011
  12. ^ MacDonald, Scott (1998). A Critical Cinema 3. University of California Press. p. 255. ISBN 9780585339924.
  13. ^ Tate.org
  14. ^
  15. ^ Mueller, Roswitha (1994). Valie Export/Fragments of the Imagination. Indiana University Press. p. 32. ISBN 0-253-33906-5.
  16. ^ Moldan, Tessa (6 December 2019). "Valie Export: 'The voice belongs to me'". Ocula Magazine.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-03-16. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Molesworth, Helen (2003). Work Ethic. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 177. ISBN 0-271-02334-1. OCLC 1158437662.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-06-13. Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  20. ^ Indiana, Gary. "Valie Export", ‘’BOMB Magazine’’ Spring, 1982. Retrieved on August 15, 2011
  21. ^ O'Reilly, Sally. "Valie Export." Art Monthly 280 (2004): 31-32. Art & Architecture Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2016.
  22. ^ Harris, Jane. "Valie Export: Frau Export." Artext 70 (2000): 72-75. Art & Architecture Complete.Web. 12 Dec. 2016.
  23. ^ "Facing a Family". Electronic Arts Intermix.
  24. ^ Stiles, Kristine, and Peter Howard Selz. "Performance Art." Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art. 2nd ed. Berkeley, CA: U of California, 2012. 869. Print.
  25. ^ Stiles, Kristine, and Peter Howard Selz. "Performance Art." Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art. 2nd ed. Berkeley, CA: U of California, 2012. 870. Print.
  26. ^ Eifler, Margret. "Valie Export's Iconography: Visual Quest For Subject Discourse." Modern Austrian Literature 29.1 (1996): 108-130. Academic Search Alumni Edition. Web. 12 Dec. 2016.
  27. ^ Krasny, Elke. “Curatorial Materialism. A Feminist Perspective on Independent and Co-Dependent Curating.” Notes on Curating 29 (May 2016): 99. https://www.on-curating.org/issue-29-reader/curatorial-materialism-a-feminist-perspective-on-independent-and-co-dependent-curating.html#.X95bsMA8IlR.
  28. ^ Mueller, Roswitha (1994). Valie Export/Fragments of the Imagination. Indiana University Press. p. 126. ISBN 0-253-33906-5.
  29. ^ Delpeux, Sophie and C. Penwarden, trans. “VALIE EXPORT: De-Defining Women,” Art Press 293 (Spring 2003): 41.
  30. ^ "Valie Export by Gary Indiana - BOMB Magazine". April 1982.
  31. ^ a b c Fore, Devin (24 August 2012). "Valie Export". Interview Magazine. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  32. ^ "Berlinale: 1985 Programme". berlinale.de. Retrieved 2011-01-12.
  33. ^ “History.” VALIE EXPORT Center Linz. https://www.valieexportcenter.at/en/center/history.
  34. ^ Kennedy, Randy (2016-06-29). "Who Is Valie Export? Just Look, and Please Touch". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-01-31.
  35. ^ “Prizes.” Art Monthly July/August 2019: 428.
  36. ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (PDF) (in German). p. 1668. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
  37. ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (PDF) (in German). p. 1932. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
  38. ^ "Roswitha Haftmann Stiftung".
  39. ^ "Visionary Pioneer of Feminist Media Art".
  40. ^ Oler, Tammy (October 31, 2019). "57 Champions of Queer Feminism, All Name-Dropped in One Impossibly Catchy Song". Slate Magazine.

External links edit

  • "Finger Envy: A Glimpse into the Short Films of VALIE EXPORT." Article in Brights Lights Film Journal.
  • Media Art Net contains a description of Facing a Family as well as a video clip from the piece.
  • Valie Export at IMDb
  • in the Video Data Bank
  • Valie Export Archived 2014-02-03 at archive.today in the Imai – inter media art institute
  • Thomas Dreher on VALIE EXPORT and Peter Weibel: Multimedia feminist art. In: Artefactum Nr.46/December 1992-February 1993, p. 17-20
  • Thomas Dreher: VALIE EXPORT - Bild im Bild (PDF, ca. 13,8 MB). In: Kunst + Unterricht, Issue 106/October 1986, p. 56ff. Interpretation of an untitled photographic work (1981). In German.
  • and list of video works by VALIE EXPORT at Electronic Arts Intermix
  • Valie Export: Innovator at Museum of Modern Art

valie, export, often, stylized, valie, export, born, 1940, avant, garde, austrian, artist, best, known, provocative, public, performances, expanded, cinema, work, artistic, work, also, includes, video, installations, computer, animations, photography, sculptur. Valie Export often stylized as VALIE EXPORT born 17 May 1940 1 2 is an avant garde Austrian artist 3 She is best known for provocative public performances and expanded cinema work 4 Her artistic work also includes video installations computer animations photography sculpture and publications covering contemporary art 5 Valie ExportValie Export in 2013BornWaltraud Lehner 1940 05 17 17 May 1940 age 83 Linz AustriaNationalityAustrianKnown forArtistNotable workCinema Work Photography Sculpture Computer AnimationsMovementAvant Garde Performance art Contemporary artAwardsGrand Gold Decoration for Services to the Republic of AustriaWebsite 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1960s and 1970s 2 2 1980s to present 3 Russia s war against Ukraine 4 Works 5 Awards 6 In popular culture 7 References 8 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Sculpture Landschaftsmesser by Valie Export in Allentsteig Austria Valie Export was born Waltraud Lehner in Linz Austria and was raised in Linz by a single mother of three 6 7 8 Export studied painting drawing and design at the National School for Textile Industry in Vienna 9 Career edit1960s and 1970s edit In the late 1960s and early 1970s Austrian feminism was forced to address the fact that by the 1970s there was still a generation of Austrians whose attitudes towards women were based on Nazi ideology 10 They also had to confront the guilt of their parents mothers complacency within the Nazi regime In 1967 she changed her name from Waltraud Hollinger to VALIE EXPORT In conversation with Gary Indiana for BOMB magazine Export described her name change I did not want to have the name of my father Lehner any longer nor that of my former husband Hollinger My idea was to export from my outside heraus and also export from that port The cigarette package was from a design and style that I could use but it was not the inspiration 11 With this gesture of self determination Export emphatically asserted her identity within the Viennese art scene which was then dominated by the taboo breaking performance art of the Vienna Actionists such as Hermann Nitsch Gunter Brus Otto Muhl and Rudolf Schwarzkogler Of the Actionist movement Export has said I was very influenced not so much by Actionism itself but by the whole movement in the city It was a really great movement We had big scandals sometimes against the politique it helped me to bring out my ideas 11 Like her male contemporaries she subjected her body to pain and danger in actions designed to confront the growing complacency and conformism of postwar Austrian culture But her examination of the ways in which the power relations inherent in media representations inscribe women s bodies and consciousness distinguishes Export s project as unequivocally feminist In these performances and in my photo work of the 60s and 70s Export said in a 1995 interview with Scott MacDonald I used a female body generally my own as a bearer of signs and symbols individual sexual cultural that could function within an artistic environment 12 Export s early guerrilla performances have attained an iconic status in feminist art history In her 1968 performance Aktionshose Genitalpanik Action Pants Genital Panic Export entered an art cinema in Munich wearing crotchless pants and walked around the audience with her exposed genitalia at face level The associated photographs were taken in 1969 in Vienna by photographer Peter Hassmann The performance at the art cinema and the photographs in 1969 were both aimed toward provoking thought about the passive role of women in cinema and confrontation of the private nature of sexuality with the public venues of her performances 13 Apocryphal stories state that the Aktionshose Genitalpanik performance occurred in a porn theater and included Export brandishing a machine gun and shooting at the audience as depicted in the 1969 posters 14 however she claims this never occurred 15 In an interview in Ocula Magazine the artist stated that The fear of the vulva is present in mythology where it is depicted devouring man I don t know if this fear has changed 16 Export s well known performance piece Tapp und Tast Kino Tap and Touch Cinema was performed in ten European cities including Vienna and Munich from 1968 to 1971 17 18 19 For this bodily public performance Export wandered the streets of cities with a small mock up of a movie theater first made of Styrofoam and remade later in aluminum strapped to her bare chest 18 Peter Weibel her collaborator invited passersby to visit the cinema for five minutes by reaching into the theater and feeling her bare breasts 18 In Tap and Touch Cinema Export inverts the sight dependent functions of film and substitutes the pleasure of vision for physical touch 18 Instead of presenting a sexualized female body to be viewed Export solicits physical contact 18 The audience actively participating in the performance has direct face to face contact with Export s body in the public sphere 18 The media responded to Export s provocative work with panic and fear one newspaper aligning her to a witch Export recalls There was a great campaign against me in Austria 20 Some of her other works including Invisible Adversaries Syntagma and Korpersplitter show the artist s body in connection to historical buildings not only physically but also symbolically The body s attachment to the historical progression of gendered spaces and stereotyped roles represent Export s feminist and political approach to art 21 In her 1970 photograph Body Sign Action Export portrays a politically charged agenda through her performance artwork The piece features a tattoo of a garter belt on Export s naked upper leg The garter is not attached at the top and only attached to a sliver of a stocking at the bottom therefore suspended on the leg Instead of the garter objectifying the body the body objectifies the garter flipping constructed societal roles in relation to the female body 22 Export s groundbreaking video piece Facing a Family 1971 was one of the first instances of television intervention and broadcasting video art The video originally broadcast on the Austrian television program Kontakte on 2 February 1971 23 shows a bourgeois Austrian family watching TV while eating dinner When other middle class families watched this program on TV the television would be holding a mirror up to their experience and complicating the relationship between subject spectator and television Export published Women s Art A Manifesto in 1972 In it she advocated for women to speak so that they can find themselves this is what I ask for in order to achieve a self defined image of ourselves and thus a different view of the social function of women 24 Here Export points out the unjust way that women had been living their lives within the boundaries created by men In this same manifesto Export also wrote the arts can be understood as a medium of our self definition adding new values to the arts these values transmitted via the cultural sign process will alter reality towards an accommodation of female needs 25 This statement directly related her own work to the progress of empowering women Export s 1973 short film Remote Remote exemplifies the painful ramifications of the female body conforming to societal standards In this piece she digs at her cuticles with a knife for twelve minutes representing the damage societal beauty standards inflict on the female body 26 Based on the precepts laid out in her 1972 manifesto Export curated an exhibition of feminist art at the Galerie nachst St Stepan in Vienna in 1975 Titled MAGNA Feminism Art and Creativity this exhibition introduced the feminist artist as curator and as contemporary art historian 27 1977 saw the release of her first feature film Unsichtbare Gegner For this film s script she collaborated with her former partner Peter Weibel 28 The film follows Anna a young woman photographer as she becomes increasingly convinced that the people around her are being taken over by the Hyksos a hostile alien force Her delusion the film reveals is caused by internalized behavioral expectations for herself as a woman that run counter to her true desires 29 However Invisible Adversaries brought a lot of criticism towards her In an interview she explains that some people actually thought she was cutting up a bird and a mouse where in reality she was not She further explains that a man called Schtabel who writes on a column on a magazine released false information about her piece even though she contacted him on various occasions She then explains that after bringing a lawsuit against him he was forced to release the letters that were sent to him by Valie Export 30 1980s to present edit In her 1983 experimental film Syntagma Export attempted to reframe the female body by using a multitude of different cinematic montage techniques doubling the body through overlays for example 31 The film follows Export s belief that the female body has throughout history been manipulated by men through the means of art and literature 31 In an interview with Interview Magazine Export discusses her movie Syntagma and says The female body has always been a construction 31 Her 1985 film The Practice of Love was entered into the 35th Berlin International Film Festival 32 Since 1995 1996 Export has held a professorship for multimedia performance at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne In 2016 the city of Linz acquired her archive and opened a research center devoted to her work 33 Bard College hosted an exhibition centered around Export s 1977 film Unsichtbare Gegner in 2016 The show featured work by Export as well as artists for whom Export s art blew open doors Lorna Simpson K8 Hardy Hito Steyerl Trisha Donnelly and Emily Jacir among others 34 In 2019 Export won the Roswitha Haftmann Prize of 120 000 which is Europe s largest single award art prize 35 Russia s war against Ukraine editIn February 2023 Valie Export was one of the initial signers of a widely publicized petition calling for an end of military support to Ukraine in the wake of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Works editSelected filmography Splitscreen Solipsismus 1968 INTERRUPTED LINE 1971 Remote Remote 1973 Mann amp Frau amp Animal 1973 Adjungierte Dislokationen 1973 Invisible Adversaries Unsichtbare Gegner 1976 Menschenfrauen 1977 Syntagma 1983 The Practice of Love Die Praxis der Liebe 1984 I turn over the pictures of my voice in my head 2008 Awards edit1990 City of Vienna Prize for Visual Arts 1992 Austrian Prize for video and media art 1995 Sculpture Award at the Generali Foundation 1997 Gabriele Munter Prize 2000 Oskar Kokoschka Prize 2000 Alfred Kubin Prize Big Price culture of Upper Austria 2003 Gold Medal for services to the City of Vienna 2005 Austrian Decoration for Science and Art 36 2009 Honorary Doctorate of the University of Arts and Industrial Design Linz 2010 Grand Gold Decoration for Services to the Republic of Austria 37 2019 19th Roswitha Haftmann Prize 38 2020 Golden Nica Visionary Pioneer of Feminist Media Art Prix Ars Electronica 39 2021 Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic SocietyIn popular culture editHer name appears in the lyrics of the Le Tigre song Hot Topic 40 References edit Bock Hans Michael 2009 The Concise Cinegraph Encyclopedia of German Cinema Berghahn Books p 114 ISBN 978 1 57181 655 9 Blazwick Iwona 2004 Faces in the crowd picturing modern life from Manet to today Skira p 349 ISBN 88 7624 069 1 Angkjaer Jorgensen Ulla 2012 Bodies and real time interfaces in video performance and interactive digital 3D installation art by VALIE EXPORT and Jette Gejl Kristensen Journal of Aesthetics amp Culture 4 1 18149 doi 10 3402 jac v4i0 18149 ISSN 2000 4214 Fullerton Elizabeth 2020 02 01 Valie Export Art in America 108 94 95 Warren Lynne 2006 Encyclopedia of 20th century photography CRC Press pp 468 470 ISBN 978 0 415 97665 7 Bock Hans Michael 2009 The Concise Cinegraph Encyclopedia of German Cinema Berghahn Books p 114 ISBN 978 1 57181 655 9 Blazwick Iwona 2004 Faces in the crowd picturing modern life from Manet to today Skira p 349 ISBN 88 7624 069 1 Kennedy Randy 2016 06 29 Who Is Valie Export Just Look and Please Touch The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 01 31 Biography VALIE EXPORT Center https www roswithahaftmann stiftung com en prizewinners 2019 biography ve htm Margarete Lamb Faffelberger Out From The Shadows Riverside Ariadne Press 1997 229 a b Indiana Gary Valie Export BOMB Magazine Spring 1982 Retrieved on August 15 2011 MacDonald Scott 1998 A Critical Cinema 3 University of California Press p 255 ISBN 9780585339924 Tate org Bodytracks org archived 2013 02 12 Mueller Roswitha 1994 Valie Export Fragments of the Imagination Indiana University Press p 32 ISBN 0 253 33906 5 Moldan Tessa 6 December 2019 Valie Export The voice belongs to me Ocula Magazine VALIE EXPORT Tapp und Tastkino Touch Cinema Archived from the original on 2013 03 16 Retrieved 2013 04 09 a b c d e f Molesworth Helen 2003 Work Ethic Pennsylvania State University Press p 177 ISBN 0 271 02334 1 OCLC 1158437662 Valie Export Pomeranz Collection Archived from the original on 2019 06 13 Retrieved 2021 05 10 Indiana Gary Valie Export BOMB Magazine Spring 1982 Retrieved on August 15 2011 O Reilly Sally Valie Export Art Monthly 280 2004 31 32 Art amp Architecture Complete Web 12 Dec 2016 Harris Jane Valie Export Frau Export Artext 70 2000 72 75 Art amp Architecture Complete Web 12 Dec 2016 Facing a Family Electronic Arts Intermix Stiles Kristine and Peter Howard Selz Performance Art Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art 2nd ed Berkeley CA U of California 2012 869 Print Stiles Kristine and Peter Howard Selz Performance Art Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art 2nd ed Berkeley CA U of California 2012 870 Print Eifler Margret Valie Export s Iconography Visual Quest For Subject Discourse Modern Austrian Literature 29 1 1996 108 130 Academic Search Alumni Edition Web 12 Dec 2016 Krasny Elke Curatorial Materialism A Feminist Perspective on Independent and Co Dependent Curating Notes on Curating 29 May 2016 99 https www on curating org issue 29 reader curatorial materialism a feminist perspective on independent and co dependent curating html X95bsMA8IlR Mueller Roswitha 1994 Valie Export Fragments of the Imagination Indiana University Press p 126 ISBN 0 253 33906 5 Delpeux Sophie and C Penwarden trans VALIE EXPORT De Defining Women Art Press 293 Spring 2003 41 Valie Export by Gary Indiana BOMB Magazine April 1982 a b c Fore Devin 24 August 2012 Valie Export Interview Magazine Retrieved 12 December 2016 Berlinale 1985 Programme berlinale de Retrieved 2011 01 12 History VALIE EXPORT Center Linz https www valieexportcenter at en center history Kennedy Randy 2016 06 29 Who Is Valie Export Just Look and Please Touch The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 01 31 Prizes Art Monthly July August 2019 428 Reply to a parliamentary question PDF in German p 1668 Retrieved 3 January 2013 Reply to a parliamentary question PDF in German p 1932 Retrieved 3 January 2013 Roswitha Haftmann Stiftung Visionary Pioneer of Feminist Media Art Oler Tammy October 31 2019 57 Champions of Queer Feminism All Name Dropped in One Impossibly Catchy Song Slate Magazine External links edit Finger Envy A Glimpse into the Short Films of VALIE EXPORT Article in Brights Lights Film Journal Media Art Net contains a description of Facing a Family as well as a video clip from the piece Valie Export at IMDb Valie Export in the Video Data Bank Valie Export Archived 2014 02 03 at archive today in the Imai inter media art institute Thomas Dreher on VALIE EXPORT and Peter Weibel Multimedia feminist art In Artefactum Nr 46 December 1992 February 1993 p 17 20 Thomas Dreher VALIE EXPORT Bild im Bild PDF ca 13 8 MB In Kunst Unterricht Issue 106 October 1986 p 56ff Interpretation of an untitled photographic work 1981 In German Valie Export in the Mediateca Media Art Space Artist Biography and list of video works by VALIE EXPORT at Electronic Arts Intermix Valie Export Innovator at Museum of Modern Art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Valie Export amp oldid 1212755234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.