Co-founder and Artistic Director Papo Colo will present a farewell celebration performance as an exit from Exit Art and the entrance to his next full-time project, Tricker Theater.
The hour long performance will be a collage of old works (2010’s Distant Sex) and new works meditating on
time and memory, the political and sexual, the economic and monetary, and current modes of unrest in the spirit of the Occupy movement. The performances will be followed by “Sweeping Memories,” a ritual cleansing of Exit Art's space that acts as a metaphor for Exit Art's closing and
Colo’s retirement as Artistic Director. Performers include Ernesto Nodal, Elinor Thompson, Zoe Metcalfe-Klaw, Jolie Pichardo, among others.
Trickster Theater is a multinational, polyglot theatre company, creating new works for a global audience in New York City. This project, which will serve as Papo Colo’s next artistic feat, explores the process and union of art, music and language in the context of performance. Trickster
productions will be produced out of Colo’s apartment loft on Canal Street, where Exit Art was originally conceived. This breeding ground will allow for intimate performances for select audiences to engage with the actor in startlingly discreet and simple ways.
Link:
http://www.exitart.org/exhibition_programs/current_programs/retrospective.html#events
Address:
Exit Art
475 Tenth Avenue
New York, New York 10018
Mission:
Founded in 1982, Exit Art is an interdisciplinary cultural center that presents innovative exhibitions, films and performances that reflect a commitment to contemporary issues and ideas. We support emerging, under-recognized, mid-career and international artists, emphasizing new and experimental forms of expression. We are interested in art that explores environmental, political and cultural issues as a means of initiating or instigating social change. The diversity of Exit Art’s programs reflect the multiplicity of our audience, which includes artists, activists, scholars, scientists, students, cultural critics, educators, collectors, and the New York community at large.
History:
During our first decade, Exit Art presented artists whose work challenged notions of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and equality. We mounted a series of mid-career retrospectives which helped to bring wider public attention and critical acclaim to artists who are now firmly established, including Jimmie Durham, Willie Birch, Krzysztof Wodiczko, Tehching Hsieh, Martin Wong, Adrian Piper, David Wojnarowicz and David Hammons.
In our second decade, we identified a new generation of young, emerging artists with diverse backgrounds and organized a series of exhibitions, launching the careers of artists such as Shirin Neshat, Fred Tomaselli, Nicole Eisenman, Roxy Paine, Patty Chang, Julie Mehretu, Sue DeBeer, Rirkrit Tiravanija and Chakaia Booker. Fever (1992), the first exhibition in the series, was named one of the ten most important shows of the decade by Peter Plagens in Newsweek.
Now Exit Art is a leading voice in experimental art, producing exhibitions that illuminate the pressing issues of our time while supporting artists whose works reflect the transformations of our culture. By 2012, our 30th year, Exit Art will have organized over 200 exhibitions, events, festivals and programs featuring more than 2,500 artists.
Michael Connor