Chelsea on the Rocks
Chelsea on the Rocks celebrates the personalities and artistic voices that have emerged from New York’s legenda...
Directing
Vito Acconci (January 24, 1940 – April 27, 2017) was an American performance, video and installation artist, whose diverse practice eventually included sculpture, architectural design, and landscape design. His performance and video art was characterized by "existential unease," exhibitionism, discomfort, transgression and provocation, as well as wit and audacity, and often involved crossing boundaries such as public–private, consensual–nonconsensual, and real world–art world. His work is considered to have influenced artists including Laurie Anderson, Karen Finley, Bruce Nauman, and Tracey Emin, among others. Acconci was initially interested in radical poetry, creating 0 to 9 Magazine, but by the late 1960s he began creating Situationist-influenced performances in the street or for small audiences that explored the body and public space. Two of his most famous pieces were Following Piece (1969), in which he selected random passersby on New York City streets and followed them for as long as he was able, and Seedbed (1972), in which he claimed that he masturbated while under a temporary floor at the Sonnabend Gallery, as visitors walked above and heard him speaking.
In the late-1970s, he turned to sculpture, architecture and design, greatly increasing the scale of his work, if not his art world profile. Over the next two decades he developed public artworks and parks, airport rest areas, artificial islands and other architectural projects that frequently embraced participation, change and playfulness. Notable works of this period include: Personal Island, designed for Zwolle, the Netherlands (1994); Walkways Through the Wall at the Wisconsin Center, in Milwaukee, WI (1998); and Murinsel, for Graz, Austria (2003). Retrospectives of Acconci's work have been organized by the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam (1978) and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (1980), and his work is in numerous public collections, including those of the Museum of Modern Art and Whitney Museum of American Art. He has been recognized with fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts (1976, 1980, 1983, 1993), John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (1979), and American Academy in Rome (1986).[6] In addition to his art and design work, Acconci taught at many higher learning institutions. Acconci died on April 27, 2017, in Manhattan at age 77.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Vito Acconci
Chelsea on the Rocks celebrates the personalities and artistic voices that have emerged from New York’s legenda...
A probing portrait of Chris Burden, an artist who took creative expression to the limits and risked his life in...
Explores some of the most innovative attempts by contemporary artists, filmmakers, architects etc to explore mu...
An epic meditation on psychoanalysis, the Baader-Meinhof, feminism, and pre-revolutionary Russia.
Poet and artist Vito Acconci points his finger towards the camera and his own reflection in an offscreen video...
With HOW TO FLY, Bowes abandoned plot entirely, finding other forms of structure. He wanted to show that storie...
Inspired in form by American police TV shows and soap operas, The Golden Boat is a madcap, surreal dash through...
A documentation of one of Acconci's most notorious performances, Claim Excerpts is a highly confrontational wor...
Documentary about the Mekons.
Three-part short film. In 'Blindfold Catching', a blindfolded Acconci reacts, flinching and lunging, as rubber...
A three-part video epic in which avant-garde artist Vito Acconci explores the relationship between the self and...
The two-channel piece Remote Control is an exercise in manipulation and control between artist and subject, mal...
In this feature-length silent film, Acconci uses hand-written title cards to present an "interior monologue" ab...
“In this legendary sculpture/performance Acconci lay beneath a ramp built in the Sonnabend Gallery. Over the co...
"In this now infamous tape, exemplary of his early transgressive performance style, Acconci sits and relates a...
The multiple means of making art after the end of illusionism led these artists to create performances, sculptu...
A comprehensive documentation of new art movements from 1945 to the present day. Beginning with the "Internatio...
A documentation of a live performance at New York University, Pryings is a graphic exploration of the physical...
Compilation film consisting of material from various artists who are involved in body art
This early document is a videotaped interview ("videoview") of Vito Acconci by Willoughby Sharp during which th...
"Steven Holl: The Body in Space" explores the career of the innovative, highly renowned American architect. In...
"You’re Going to Die!" is a children’s story exploring one simple idea ad nauseum bonum. This video treatment b...
The back of Acconci's head is seen in tight close-up. He hums to himself, first lyrically, then aggressively, v...
The artist, sitting naked, takes water from a pot into his mouth and gargles; he spits it out onto his stomach...
The artist, covered in flour, tries to blow the flour off his skin.
In these three exercises, Acconci plays with trans-gender illusions, manipulating and altering his own body par...
The tradition of modernism and neo-avant-garde are faced in the project, in which Radziszewski is confronting b...
Standing alone among beach dunes, Acconci begins to kick at the sand below him. Over the course of the film's t...
This early performance tape is an example of what Acconci has termed his "quasi-ESP exercises," in which he exp...
Acconci oftens performs controlled actions as if he had entered into a contractual agreement to test his physic...