Category: News

  • THE 90’s

    THE 90’s

    THE 90s

    THE 90’s

    Presented by Media Burn Archive

    As part of ACRE TV Takeover

    June 22 – 28, 2015

    Twenty-five years ago, something completely different was broadcast on public TV. No, not Monty Python…it was THE 90’s.

    “Easily the most important and innovative news show on the air, a show that does all the things that television was born to do but never does.”—Michael Dare, Billboard, August 25, 1990.

    THE 90’s was independently produced and broadcast on PBS in prime time nationwide, featuring the kind of videos most people didn’t know existed. This was before cell phones, before the Internet, before YouTube, the Daily Show, or “reality tv.”

    The pioneering award-winning weekly series piqued curiosity and challenged ideas about the world. It built an audience of millions on more than 160 public television stations.

    In total, 52 hour-long episodes aired over four years.

    The 25th anniversary of this groundbreaking show will be celebrated with a week-long online streaming marathon on ACRE TV, starting June 22. Viewers will get their only chance to watch, or re-watch, THE 90’sas it was meant to be seen: together, with people all around the world tuning in at the same time. It’s an online TV marathon you don’t want to miss!

    Each episode will play 3-4 times on its designated day. Check out the schedule for each day below:

    June 22: Pilot and Episodes 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106
    June 23: Episodes 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113
    June 24: Episodes 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207
    June 25: Episodes 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215
    June 26: Episodes 216, 217, 218, 219, 301, 302, 303, 304
    June 27: Episodes 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 401, 402
    June 28: Episodes 403, 404, 405, 406, Election Special: The PrimaryElection Special: The ConventionElection Special: It’s Debate-able

    Clintons Super Tuesday

    Photo: The Clintons celebrate their Super Tuesday win at the Palmer House in Chicago, 1992.

    As its title suggests, the series was an ongoing televised mirror of that decade, focused around documentary content but with plenty of music, humor, counterculture, and offbeat politics …low budget, high concept.

    Each episode was built around a general theme like money, taking chances, war, sex, hemp (marijuana), racism, television, everyday global realities, the street, saloons, addictions, food, kids and learning, prisons, and many more.

    “More exciting and genuine than anything on television.—Studs Terkel.

    THE 90’s was created and produced by Tom Weinberg and Joel Cohen, veteran producers of dozens of documentary and television programs. The production was based in Chicago, but videos from hundreds of producers worldwide were selected and shown.

    “What we did was less linear than conventional television, and more associative,” said Producer Joel Cohen. “We try to combine images and impressions to make the whole larger than its parts.”

    Executive Producer Tom Weinberg said, “It’s no accident that there wasn’t an on-camera host. THE 90’s came from an alternative television tradition that’s now more than 40 years old. It wasn’t plastic or homogenized. And we didn’t shy away from political or artistic expression that may have been out of the mainstream.  We had a feisty attitude that came through every week.”

    There were regular appearances by Albert Einstein (animated), Vice President Dan Quayle, historian/author David Halberstam, Lady Aberlin (from Mr. Rogers), and performance artist Todd Alcott, among other notables.

    An ensemble company of 90’s “Camcorder Correspondents” included Joe Angio(Revenge of the Mekons, How to Eat Your Watermelon in White Company (And Enjoy It)), Jay April  (Maui Community TV), Eddie Becker (the Washington Outsider), Skip Blumberg (Videofreex, TVTV), Nancy Cain (CamNet, Videofreex), Patrick Creadon (I.O.U.S.A., Wordplay), Andrew Jones (Thumbs Across America, Panama: Just Cause?), Phil Morton (Yellowstone News), and Jody Procter (T.R. Uthco).

    Works by hundreds of independent videomakers were seen on THE 90’s, many for the first time on TV, including, Wendy Apple, Joe Berlinger, Judith Binder, Fred Bridges, Tony Buba, Shu Lea Cheang, Wendy Clarke, Joe Cummings, Doug Hall, Dee Dee Halleck, Bob Hercules, Scott Jacobs, Tony Judge, Ricki Katz, Chip Lord, Chuck Olin, Jody Procter, Michael Prussian, John Schwartz, Brian Springer, Jeff Spitz, Bill Stamets, Jim Sternfield, Starr Sutherland, and Joe Winston among others.

    All 52 episodes of the show, as well as more than 500 hours of camera original footage created by independent producers, have been preserved and made digitally available by Media Burn Archive, a project of Fund for Innovative TV, independent producer of THE 90’s.

    Funders for the series included the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, PBS Program Fund, Rockefeller Foundation and Instructional Telecommunications Fund (which later morphed into “Free Speech TV” and Voqal TV).

    The final three hours were shown nationally as part of the highly acclaimed PBS prime time national coverage of the 1992 election campaign. It featured previously unprecedented and intimate footage with Bill and Hillary Clinton and their team (including Paul Begala, James Carville, Rahm Emanuel, Dee Dee Myers, George Stephanopoulos, and David Wilhelm) before they were household names.

    Other segments revealed the presidential campaigns of Paul Tsongas, Jerry Brown, Ross Perot, and George H.W. Bush, as well as the historic debates and the Clinton “War Room.” The immense historical significance of this footage was recognized by the “Save America’s Treasures” program of the National Endowment for the Humanities in 2011 with a grant of $79,000.

    Rahmfundraising

    Photo: Rahm Emanuel fundraising for the Clinton campaign in 1992.

    “It’s THE 90’s–something new and important is happening on television. Videotapes produced from ordinary people from around the world, revealing people and ideas you don’t usually see on T.V.”

    Check out some of the press and viewer mail THE 90’s received while the show was on the air.An article about THE 90’s called “Has Tom Weinberg Seen the Future of Television?” was published September 27, 1990 in a Chicago Reader article by Mark Jannot.
  • STROBE Network

    STROBE Network

    strobe-Flyer-web-6-2015

    STROBE Network

    June 12 – 21, 2015

    Flux Factory, Long Island City, NY and streaming online at strobenetwork.tv

    June 15 – 21, 2015

    ACRETV.org is presenting a parallel stream of STROBE Network as a part of ACRE TV Takeover

     

    STROBE Network is a temporary broadcast network that will air via a digital streaming platform, featuring artworks that make use of broadcast as an artistic medium. The content has been programmed through an open call and the Flux Factory community at large, including work from 75+ artists. STROBE Network will create and distribute an alternate reality version of mass culture that is free, conscious, experimental, and uncensored.

    Streaming 24/7 for ten days, STROBE Network will feature video art, performance, animation, talk shows, and music, as well as archival materials from Performa, VML, and E.S.P. TV. STROBE Network will stream from June 12­-21 via strobenetwork.tv. In addition to streaming via our website, we will welcome a studio audience for live tapings on select evenings at our sound stage in the Flux Factory gallery in Long Island City. Off­-site spaces will host viewing parties and Strobe TV Toilet Viewing Stations at TBD locations.

    STROBE Network is part of Flux Factory’s 2015 programing. Flux Factory is a non­-profit art organization that supports and promotes emerging artists through exhibitions, commissions, residencies, and collaborative opportunities. Flux Factory is guided by its passion to nurture the creative process, and knows that this process does not happen in a vacuum but rather through a network of peers and through resource­-sharing. Flux Factory functions as an incubation and laboratory space for the creation of artworks that are in dialogue with the physical, social, and cultural spheres of New York City (though collaborations may start in New York and stretch far beyond).

    PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

    Aas Artgroup, ACRE TV, Robert Ashley, Stephanie Avery, Gili Avissar, Hiram Becker & The Cannery Collective, Tommy Becker, Benna aka Benna Gaean Maris, Billy Robinson and Blue Jazz TV, Aliya Bonar, Joanna Bonder, Julian Bozeman, Emily Bucholz and Lee Tusman, Jeremy Couillard, John Crowe, Daupo, the David Foster Wallace Reading Group (DFWRG), Andrew Demirjian and Dahlia Elsayed, Marie Demple and Becca Kauffman, Michael DiPietro and Lena Hawkins, Justin Donica, Veronica Dougherty, Eric Barry Drasin, Dreamers Welcome, Jason Eppink, ESP TV, The Experimental Half Hour, Eliza Fernand, Caitlin Foley and Misha Rabinovich, Miles Forrester, Daphne Gardner, Douglas Gast, Steven Glavey, Michael Guardiola, Allison Halter, Rui Hu, HUMAN TRASH DUMP, Tatiana Istomina, JANTAR, Zuzanna Juszkiewicz, Millie Kapp, Heather Kapplow, Jason Kashruts, Christine Laquet, Christine Lucy Latimer, Ayden LeRoux, Phuc Lee, Life of a Craphead, Tzu Huan Lin, Christopher Lineberry, Talia Link, Link Link Club, Gabriel Lyons Loeb, Shehrezad Maher, Steve Maher, Wesley Marcarelli, Amelia Marzec, Alexander Mignolo, Heather Murphy, MVY, Alex Nathanson, Joas Nebe, Dustin Luke Nelson and Morricone Youth, Aaron Oldenburg, Will Owen, Duke Papi, Ella Phillips, Meg Powers, Xiaoshi Vivian Vivian Qin, Rob Racine, Mark Regester and nonnon, Steve Roggenbuck, Amanda Ryan, Taylor Sakarett, Mauricio Sanhueza, Julia Santoli, Karl Scholz & plant good seeeds, Alexandra Schwartzberg and Cole Tracy, Ben Seretan, Stephen Sewell, Josephine Skinner, Soda Jerk, Serge Stephan, Kristoff Steinruck, The Sunview Luncheonette, Dan Toth, Troll Food, Jason Tschantre, Roopa Vasudevan, VML, Viva Body Roll, Georgia Wall, Angela Washko, Wetlands, Barry Whittaker, Casey Wooden, Wuz Poppn NY, Ann Liv Young.

    Featuring content from the Performa archives by Ronnie Bass, Omer Fast, Liz Magic Laser, and more!

    PROGRAM SCHEDULE HERE

    ARTIST INFORMATION HERE

  • Chic-A-Go-Go

    Chic-A-Go-Go

    Chic-A-Go-Go1

    Chic-A-Go-Go Marathon

    As part of ACRE TV Takeover

    June 8 – 14, 2015

    Chic-A-Go-Go,  “Chicago’s Dance Show for Kids of All Ages”, is a legendary Chicago institution, an inclusive venue for musicians and dance moves since the first taping in 1996. Created by Jake Austen and Jacqueline Stewart, Chic-A-Go-Go has and continues to invite multi-generational groovers into the worlds of contemporary weirdo music and the unrehearsed freedom of public access television. Shot at CAN TV, Chicago’s public access television studio, a trip to a Chic-A-Go-Go taping might include encounters with world famous talking vermin Ratso and Li’l Ratzo, co-host Miss Mia, and any number of traveling musicians including Lemmy, Bobby Conn, TV on the Radio, Sonic Youth, Patti Smith, Sky Ferreira, Wesley Willis, and GZA.

    Chic-A-Go-Go makes unique twists on television forms inherited from shows like Soul Train, and Chicago’s own Kiddie-a-Go-Go, featuring lip syncing and an “El Train Line” segment to show off individual moves. ACRE TV is proud to host a marathon of selections from the more than 1,000 episodes logged, including some rarely seen, newly digitized, blasts from the past.

    More information about each episode and air dates below:

    June 8:

    Episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 14, 28, 29, 34 & 41

    June 9:

    Episodes 45, 46, 50, 55, 56, 96, 100, 136, 139, 142, 150 & 151

    June 10:

    Episodes 152, 196, 202, 213, 217, 224, 230, 231, 238, 246, 247 & 249

    June 11:

    Episodes 258, 259, 263, 268, 309, 338, 360, 376, 380, 381, 383 & 400

    June 12:

    Episodes 427, 433, 437, 450, 462, 470, 533, 538, 542, 547, 549 & 554

    June 13:

    Episodes 563, 569, 573, 600, 601, 637, 674, 684, 685, 695, 700 & 701

    June 14:

    Episodes 726, 727, 742, 748, 764, 775, 798, 905, 908, 914, 923 & 927

  • Next week on E.S.P. TV

    ESP TV ACRE

    Next week on E.S.P. TV

    As part of ACRE TV Takeover

    June 1 – 7, 2015

    Directed by Scott Kiernan and Victoria Keddie, this expansive project utilizes a mobile television studio to explore the artist dialogue with broadcast transmission, analog and digital media, and televisual liveness. ACRE TV hosts a TV marathon special entitled Next week on E.S.P. TV. With over 50 live taping events and over 75 episodes to date, this televisual series showcases the full spectrum of E.S.P. TV’s 4 years of broadcast.  The episodes will be played back to back from June 1 – 7 2015. Made for television, the E.S.P. TV archive lives on forever in a perpetual “re-run”.

    E.S.P. TV’s live TV studio hybridizes technologies old and new, to realize synthetic environments for performance while exposing their process of production. Each live taping event is the realization of an artists’ collaboration with us.  These events are taped live with a crew of cameramen, sound engineer, and video mixing team in front of an audience. The recorded events air on Manhattan Neighborhood Network public television weekly, as well as online, and have been exhibited internationally.

    E.S.P. TV has worked with various venues including: The Whitney Museum of American Art, New Museum, Museum of Arts and Design, Printed Matter, Millennium Film Workshop, New School, Rawson Projects, Recess (NYC); Interstate Projects, Spectacle Theater, Issue Project Room, Roulette (Brooklyn); Franklin Street Works (Stamford, CT), Liminal Space (Oakland, CA), Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (San Francisco, CA), Human Resources (LA), Ballroom Marfa, Marfa Public Radio, (Marfa, TX), Museum of Human Achievement (Austin, TX), S1(Portland, OR), Nightingale Cinema, Chicago, MOCAD (Detroit MI), General Public (Berlin),  STORE (Dresden), Studio XX (Montreal), Kling and Bang Gallery (Reykjavik) and Pallas Projects (Dublin).

    E.S.P. TV broadcasts every Tuesday night at 10PM on Manhattan Neighborhood Network (MNN). Channel 67 in Manhattan, as well as online at mnn.org.  All episodes are then posted online on their website, ESPTV.com, and Vimeo page, vimeo.com/esptv.  E.S.P. TV now also airs on Wednesdays with Comcast Cable 66/966 or Verizon Fios 29/30 in Philadelphia at 11:30PM.

    More information about each episode and air dates below:

    June 1: Episodes 1 – 10

    June 2: Episodes 11 – 21

    June 3: Episodes 22 – 32

    June 4: Episodes 33 – 43

    June 5: Episodes 44 – 54

    June 6: Episodes 55 – 66

    June 7: Episodes 67 – 74

  • ACRE TV Takeover

    ACRE TV Takeover

    Poster design by Andy Burkholder

    Poster Design: Andy Burkholder

    ACRE TV is pleased to present:

    ACRE TV Takeover

    June 2015

    A month of marathons from E.S.P. TV, Chic-A-Go-Go, STROBE Network, and THE 90’s presented by Media Burn Archive.

    Inspired by one of the most famous Chicago television incidents, ACRE TV‘s stream is being benevolently hijacked by four exciting media organizations for the month of June. These four groups range in project age (from 20+ years to prenatal) as well as geographic center, and have diverse methods and interests to match. Tying these projects together is a spirit of fun and experimentation in broadcast forms, on a human scale.

    PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS

    ESP TV ACRE

    E.S.P. TV: June 1 – 7, 2015

    Directed by Scott Kiernan and Victoria Keddie, this expansive project utilizes a mobile television studio to explore the artist dialogue with broadcast transmission, analog and digital media, and televisual liveness. ACRE TV hosts a TV marathon special entitled Next week on E.S.P. TV. With over 50 live taping events and over 75 episodes to date, this televisual series showcases the full spectrum of E.S.P. TV‘s 4 years of broadcast. The episodes will be played back to back from June 1 – 7, 2015. Made for television, the E.S.P. TV archive lives on forever in a perpetual “re-run”.

    E.S.P. TV’s live TV studio hybridizes technologies old and new, to realize synthetic environments for performance while exposing their process of production. Each live taping event is the realization of an artists’ collaboration with us.  These events are taped live with a crew of cameramen, sound engineer, and video mixing team in front of an audience. The recorded events air on Manhattan Neighborhood Network public television weekly, as well as online, and have been exhibited internationally.

    E.S.P. TV broadcasts every Tuesday night at 10PM on Manhattan Neighborhood Network (MNN) channel 67 in Manhattan, as well as online at mnn.org. All episodes are then posted online on their website, ESPTV.com, and Vimeo page, vimeo.com/esptvE.S.P. TV now also airs on Wednesdays with Comcast Cable 66/966 or Verizon Fios 29/30 in Philadelphia at 11:30PM.


     

    Chic-a-Go-Go

    Chic-A-Go-Go: June 8 – 14, 2015

    Chic-A-Go-Go,  “Chicago’s Dance Show for Kids of All Ages”, is a legendary Chicago institution, an inclusive venue for musicians and dance moves since the first taping in 1996. Created by Jake Austen and Jacqueline Stewart, Chic-A-Go-Go has and continues to invite multi-generational groovers into the worlds of contemporary weirdo music and the unrehearsed freedom of public access television. Shot at CAN TV, Chicago’s public access television studio, a trip to a Chic-A-Go-Go taping might include encounters with world famous talking vermin Ratso and Li’l Ratzo, co-host Miss Mia, and any number of traveling musicians including Lemmy, Bobby Conn, TV on the Radio, Sonic Youth, Patti Smith, Sky Ferreira, Wesley Willis, and GZA.

    Chic-A-Go-Go makes unique twists on television forms inherited from shows like Soul Train, and Chicago’s own Kiddie-a-Go-Go, featuring lip syncing and an “El Train Line” segment to show off individual moves. ACRE TV is proud to host a marathon of selections from the more than 1,000 episodes logged, including some rarely seen, newly digitized, blasts from the past.   


     

    STROBE Network

    STROBE Network: June 15 – 21, 2015

    STROBE Network is a temporary broadcast network that will air via a digital streaming platform, featuring artworks that make use of broadcast as an artistic medium. The content has been programmed through an open call and the Flux Factory community at large, including work from 75+ artists. STROBE Network will create and distribute an alternate reality version of mass culture that is free, conscious, experimental, and uncensored.

    Streaming 24/7 for nine days, STROBE Network will feature video art, performance, animation, talk shows, music, and archival materials. STROBE Network will stream from June 13 – 21 via strobenetwork.tv and as a parallel stream on ACRETV.org from June 15 – 21. In addition to the online streams, they will welcome a studio audience for live tapings on select evenings at their sound stage in the Flux Factory gallery in Long Island City. Off-site stations will host viewing parties and Strobe TV Toilet Viewing Stations at TBD locations.

    STROBE Network is part of Flux Factory‘s 2015 programming. Flux Factory is a non-profit art organization that supports and promotes emerging artists through exhibitions, commissions, residencies, and collaborative opportunities. Flux Factory is guided by its passion to nurture the creative process, and knows that this process does not happen in a vacuum but rather through a network of peers and through resource-sharing. Flux Factory functions as an incubation and laboratory space for the creation of artworks that are in dialogue with the physical, social, and cultural spheres of New York City (though collaborations may start in New York and stretch far beyond).


     

    THE 90s

    THE 90’s: June 22 – 28, 2015

    Twenty-five years ago, something completely different was broadcast on public TV. No, not Monty Python…it was THE 90’s.

    Easily the most important and innovative news show on the air, a show that does all the things that television was born to do but never does.”
                                                                                           — Michael Dare, Billboard, August 25, 1990.

    THE 90’s was independently produced and broadcast on PBS stations in prime time nationwide, featuring the kind of videos most people didn’t know existed. This was before cell phones, before the Internet, before YouTube, the Daily Show, or “reality tv.”

    The pioneering award-winning weekly series piqued curiosity and challenged ideas about the world.  It built an audience of millions on more than 160 public television stations.

    In total, 52 hour-long episodes aired over four years. This week-long streaming marathon coincides with the 25th anniversary of this groundbreaking show. Viewers will get their only chance to watch, or re-watch, THE 90’s as it was meant to be seen: together, with people all around the world tuning in at the same time. THE 90’s has been preserved and made digitally available by Media Burn Archive, a project of Fund for Innovative TV, independent producer of THE 90’s.

    ACRE TV Takeover


     

    ADDITIONAL PROGRAMMING:

    The Green Lantern Press: June 29 – 30, 2015

    Sonia Levy, I Roam.

    Still from Sonia Levy, I Roam.

    Plants, Machines, Animals, and Objects!
    June 29 – 30, 2015

    Airing at 12am3am, 6am, 9am, 12pm, 3pm, 6pm, 9pm CDT

    Everywhere we turn, we find a territory of nonhuman things. It is impossible to escape the trace of others—from material structures (plants, machines, animals and objects) to those all but invisible bodies outside the bounds of human perception (atoms, molecules, pollution, viruses, satellites, planets, etc.). What would an aesthetic look like that included these many other things? Is such an aesthetic possible?

    To further explore a line of research established by its affiliated reading group Following Nonhuman KindsThe Green Lantern Press curated a series of short, related films that first screened at Sector 2337 in Chicago in June 2015, and again on ACRE TV. This series was curated by Giovanni Aloi,Kathleen Kelley, Trevor Perri, and Caroline Picard.

    PROGRAM

    1. Himali Singh Soin (in collaboration with Dario Villanueva), The Particle and the Wave (12:47)
    2. Chloë Brown, Dialogue: Panthera Leo (3:16)
    3. Laura Aish, The Machine (5:14)
    4. Laura Cinti, Nanomagnetic Plants (1:55)
    5. Peter Matthews, The Ocean Moves Through It (5:00)
    6. Matthew C. Wilson, Forecast (2:52)
    7. Quiet ensemble, Orienta (2:45)
    8. Sonia Levy, I Roam (3:16)
    9. Max Stocklosa, More World Material (15:32)
    10. localStyle, Chew (3:33)
    11. Gillian Wylde, A as in Animal (2:46)
    12. NEOZOON, BUCK FEVER (5:54)
    13. NEOZOON, MY BBY 8L3W (3:03)
    14. Linda Tegg, Sheep Actress (2:58)
    15. Filip Kwaitkowski, Tiera (2:47)
    16. Chloë Brown & Ines Lechleitner, The Hum (3:19)
    17. Smriti Mehra, Authanakoota (Banquet) (13:58)

    Rehearsal of a Grand Opera for One Person, Devin King & Caroline Picard

    Performance/Installation still from Devin King & Caroline Picard,

    Rehearsal of a Grand Opera for One Person,
    New Capital, Chicago.

    Rehearsal of a Grand Opera for One Person
    June 29 – 30, 2015

    Airing at 1:30am, 4:30am, 7:30am, 10:30am, 1:30pm, 4:30pm, 7:30pm, 10:30pm CDT

    By Devin King & Caroline Picard

    Pulling from toy theater and the operatic tradition of regietheater, combined with the effect of streaming media in the present day, Caroline Picard and Devin King’s Grand Opera for One Person presents a 48-hour installation, interrupted for 2 hours by improvisatory guitar. The entire 48-hours is conceived as a performance of objects highlighting, in part, the potential for four 3-dimensional paintings to function as micro-stages that illicit a sense of anticipation and promise for aesthetic transformation within the viewer. The 2-hour interruption, or musical interlude, creates an intermission in the tableau, inverting traditional expectations about space and human relation.

    Rehearsal of a Grand Opera for One Person assumes that a space can be active without human presence; a painting has the ability to move and affect, even while it is inanimate. Furthering that point, a birds-eye video loops simultaneously, capturing four acts and a curtain call of assorted objects as they move back, forth and around a black table by a pair of gloved hands. This simple choreography establishes a flux and flow of relations between things performing for a camera.

    The collaboration was inspired by two separate lectures, samples of which are integrated into a looping 20-minute audio track. The first lecture about Graham Harman, Louis Zukofsky, John Cage and the sample-as-object (by King), and the second about Timothy Morton, Giorgio Agamben and The Pancantantra (by Picard) provide an ambient background text about nature and object oriented ontology.

    The Opera is a Total Art Experience. It is massive, expensive, glittering and refined. Its high status and rarified aesthetic is easily inaccessible and exclusive — it is an older tradition, with massive audiences who sit together in vast, ornate rooms. King and Picard are interested in the potential for that form to be appropriated, reduced, tweaked and recontextualized as a one-on-one event, in which humans may or may not be present. This performance was their first rehearsal. This piece was performed on November 19th, 2012 in the basement of New Capital, in Chicago, Illinois.

    Every house has a door, Testimonium, Bourges, France

    Still from video documentation, Every house has a door, Testimonium, Bourges, France.

    Testimonium (quiet form) in Bourges, France
    June 29 – 30, 2015

    Airing at 2am, 5am, 8am, 11am, 2pm, 5pm, 8pm, 11pm CDT

    By Every house has a door

    Video documentation from a performance, 53’15”, La Box ENSA, France, 2014. Performance documentation by Alexia Morinaux.

    Organized in conjunction with the Ghost Nature symposium, Following Nonhuman Kinds.

    During a symposium at La Box, ENSA in Bourges, France, Every house has a door performs a different version of Testimonium — Testimonium (quiet form). Joan of Arc is not present. Instead Stephen Fiehn and Bryan Saner occupy the entire stage with a series of coordinated movements from the original piece. This is a quiet version, a version for a bi-lingual audience, a version focused on the choreography of objects within the original performance.

    Every house has a door was formed in 2008 by Lin Hixson, director, and Matthew Goulish, dramaturge, to convene project-specific teams of specialists, including emerging as well as internationally recognized artists. Drawn to historically or critically neglected subjects, Every house creates performances in which the subject remains largely absented from the finished work. The performances distill and separate presentational elements into distinct modes – recitation, installation, movement, music – to grant each its own space and time, and inviting the viewer to assemble the parts in duration, after the fact of the performance, to rediscover the missing subject. Works include Let us think of these things always. Let us speak of them never. (2009) in response to the work of Yugoslavian filmmaker Dušan Makavejev,Testimonium (2013) a collaboration with the band Joan of Arc in response to Charles Reznikoff’s Testimony poems, and the on-going project 9 Beginnings based on local performance archives.

  • SATELLITES at The Franklin

    EileenRaeWalsh_TheSky

    Still from Eileen Rae Walsh, The Sky, digital video, 0:55.

    With a shared interest in how the cosmos and the scientific fields of physics and cosmology continue to inspire artistic production, Steven L. Bridges and Third Object join forces to create SATELLITES. This one-night event celebrates two recent exhibitions in Chicago dealing with the cultural import of the cosmos: Cosmosis, at the Hyde Park Art Center, and Were the Eye Not Sunlike, at Fernwey Gallery and on ACRE TV. Further extending the reach of these two distinct yet interrelated exhibitions, a program of performances and curated videos will take place throughout the evening, as well as an ACRE TV watching party featuring work from the video stream of Were the Eye Not Sunlike. The evening’s itinerary will be marked by different artistic strategies of exploring how the cosmos acts as a screen onto which the many desires, fears, and wonders of humanity are projected.

    PERFORMANCES
    Erin Washington, A [person] can’t just sit around (2014)
    Rachael Foster, Outposts, Satellites, and Orphan Planets (2012)
    Danny Giles and travis (of the band ONO)

    + Pseudonaut refreshments by Sarah & Joseph Belknap
    + Print works by New Catalogue

    VIDEO
    Blair Bogin, Galileo and Selfies, 02:01
    John Szczepaniak, A Bao A Qu, 04:22
    Pablo Marín, film, 03:24
    Laura Mackin, Dean Sunsets, All of Them (1952-2006), 01:31
    Tommy Becker, Pulling Down the Sky to Give You the Sun, 01:57
    ••• Screening at 6:30 and 8:30pm

    Cassandra C. Jones, Takeoff, 01:11
    Eeva Siivonen, Star, Light, Nothing, 01:42
    Robert Todd, Short, 04:43
    Eden Mitsenmacher, A Poem For You, 01:57
    Eileen Rae Walsh, The Sky, 00:55
    Andrew Rosinski, A Beach, 02:17
    Dana Carter, ZombieBling, 00:26
    ••• Screening at 7:30 and 9:30pm

    + ACRE TV Stream

    SATELLITES
    Saturday, May 23, 2015
    6 – 10 pm
    The Franklin
    3522 W. Franklin Blvd.

  • Art in America: Atlas Chicago Stability and Flux

    img-april-15-cover_151202471584.jpg_x_275x353_c

    Art in America, April 2015 cover.

    In an Art in America article about Chicago’s galleries and alternative spaces Michelle Grabner wrote:

    “Complementing its commercial venues, Chicago has a handful of small, not-for-profit spaces that give mettle to the city’s visual arts scene by providing artists with a platform that is neither DIY nor commercial. The 12-year-old Threewalls is perhaps the best known of these spaces, continuing in the tradition of Chicago’s influential Randolph Street Gallery, which helped shape the scene here in the ’70s and ’80s. Threewalls is widely esteemed for its SOLO exhibition series and for helping to support anothing Chicago-based nonprofit, ACRE (Artists’ Cooperative Residency and Exhibitions), which hosts ACRE TV, a livestreaming network programmed by artists Kera MacKenzie, Jesse Malmed, Andrew Mausert-Mooney, Nick Wylie and others.”

    Read the full review here.

  • WERE THE EYE NOT SUNLIKE PROGRAM SCHEDULE

    WERE THE EYE NOT SUNLIKE PROGRAM SCHEDULE

    ACRETV_poster_031515_highres

    We are pleased to offer a lamp that turns on and off when you clap, when you clap your eyes. A lamp that lets you see in the dark without disturbing the dark. A lamp producing natural light. A lamp that when you clap turns on and on.

    Ben Lerner, Angle of Yaw

     

    Were the Eye Not Sunlike Program

    PROLOGUE, April 1-3, 2015

    1. Penelope Umbrico, Sun Burn (Screensaver), 05:00, looped

    SUNRISE, April 3-19, 2015

    sunrise

    1. Dana Carter, Aurora, 00:34
    2. Patrick Andrew Boivin, Stèphane Charpentier and Alyssa Moxley, Pieces of Time We Taped on the Hills, 08:14
    3. Eric Watts, Sunrise Chart, 00:23
    4. Eric Watts, Yukon Radio, 01:01
    5. Cassandra C. Jones, Takeoff, 00:11
    6. Eileen Rae Walsh,The Sky, 00:55
    7. Stephanie Hough, Instant Calm, 06:08
    8. Christopher Bailey and Charles Woodman, Megurs Ehd Ffleweh Bq Nsolst, 09:36
    9. Laura Bouza, Eight Women, 29:00
    10. Andrew Payne, Light and Shadows 6, 01:00
    11. Andrew Rosinski, Beads II, 07:21
    12. Karen Y. Chan, Myths, 01:00
    13. Eric Watts, Studio Sunset, 30:34
    14. Pablo Marín, Sin título (abril), 03:34
    15. Ben Russell, Greetings to the Ancestors, 28:53
    16. Kate Casanova, Rise and Fall (Beijing), 02:04
    17. Blair Bogin, Galileo and Selfies, 02:01
    18. Chris Rice, So This is What You Do With Your Time Off, 03:07
    19. Silvana D’Mikos, Time Perception, 24:24
    20. Patrick Tarrant, Brokenflo, 10:00
    21. Robert Todd, Within, 05:56
    22. Ilan Gutin, Íslenska, 42:51

    214 min 47 sec (03:38:47), looped

    HIGH NOON, April 19-May 10, 2015

    high noon

    1. Dana Carter, Azimuth, 00:29
    2. Rachael Starbuck, Transfer of Attention (1), 02:03
    3. Ben Russell, Trypps #7 (Badlands), 09:58
    4. Jean-Michel Rolland, Cicadas in the Sun, 06:02
    5. Max Grey, Untitled (white), 02:15
    6. Robert Todd, Short, 04:43
    7. Meredith Lackey, Nature Gaping, 02:49
    8. Rachael Starbuck, Transfer of Attention (2), 02:32
    9. Patrick Tarrant, The Take-Up, 10:54
    10. Pablo Marín, film, 03:24
    11. Fern Silva, Passage Upon the Plume, 06:35
    12. Rachael Starbuck, Transfer of Attention (3), 01:45
    13. Tommy Becker, Pulling Down the Sky to Give You the Sun, 01:57
    14. Rebecca Najdowski, Untitled (Sun), 02:33
    15. Karen Y. Chan, Pilgrimage, 04:30
    16. Karl Lind, A Brief Portrait of the Eternal Recurrence, 00:32
    17. Amy Hicks, Luminiferous Aether, 05:50
    18. Elina Malkin & Jónó Mí Ló, Untitled #11 (excerpt), 04:58
    19. Rachael Starbuck, Transfer of Attention (4), 02:02
    20. Sarah & Joseph Belknap, Joseph Lights Sarah’s Cigarette With the Sun, 00:40
    21. Tony Balko, Emotional Sundiving, 15:26
    22. Thomas Dexter, Optick I: Blinded, 10:57
    23. Eden Mitsenmacher, A Poem For You, 01:57
    24. John Szczepaniak, A Bao A Qu, 04:22
    25. Aaron Oldenburg, The End Sands, 03:28
    26. Jason Judd, Into the Sun, 03:27
    27. Dana Carter, ZombieBling, 00:26

    137 min 52 sec (02:17:52), looped

    SUNSET, May 10-31, 2015 

    acretv sunset

    1. Dana Carter, Arrhythmia, 00:33
    2. Robert Todd, LoveSong, 05:57
    3. Mike Gibisser, Day of Two Noons, 70:01
    4. Laura Bouza, Naomi and Irving, 04:00
    5. Laura Mackin, Dean Sunsets, All of Them (1952-2006), 01:31
    6. Eric Stewart, Wake, 07:51
    7. Sara Condo, Sunset Over the Wonder Valley (For Barbara), 10:50
    8. Takahiro Suzuki, That Which Moves the Sun and Stars, 08:32
    9. Eeva Siivonen, Star, Light, Nothing, 01:42
    10. Andrew Rosinski, A Beach, 02:17
    11. Eileen Rae Walsh, Paradise, 02:01
    12. Sarawut Chutiwongpeti, Untitled (Wishes, Lies and Dreams), 09:48
    13. Jeremiah Jones, Gallows (High Noon), 11:28
    14. Collin Bradford, Accelerating the Sunset (by riding a bicycle away from the sun as fast as I can), 38:13
    15. Eric Watts, 9th Ave Sunset, 06:06
    16. Christine Lucy Latimer, The Pool, 04:13
    17. Max Grey, Untitled (together), 02:54
    18. Sam Hoolihan, Sun Song, 05:01
    19. Fern Silva, Windsor Roll, 03:03
    20. Christine Lucy Latimer, nationtime, 01:40
    21. Alexei Dmitriev, Hermeneutics, 03:15
    22. Penelope Umbrico, Neverending Sunset (Second Life), 12:27
    23. Ying Liu, Ham Over Rice, 03:39
    24. Cassandra C. Jones, Eventide, 05:06
    25. Mathew-Robin Nye and Marc Wieser, In a Flash, 13:24
    26. Jae Pas, Sun of Venice, 04:59
    27. Chris Rice, Tommy Sky, 02:09
    28. Collin Bradford, Eclipsing the Sun, 14:00
    29. Chris Little, Capt. Jack Sparrow and Ernest Miller Hemingway, 01:01
    30. Robert Ladislas Derr, Sun Sunset Set, 20:19

    280 mins  (04:40:06), looped

     

    For more information regarding Were the Eye Not Sunlike‘s gallery component, please visit fernwey.com.

    Were the Eye Not Sunlike is curated by Third Object, a curatorial collective based in Chicago. thirdobject.net

  • Were the Eye Not Sunlike

    bradford EclipsingTheSun

    Collin Bradford, Eclipsing the Sun, 2014. Video stills.

    ACRE TV is pleased to present:

    Were the Eye Not Sunlike

    Curated by Third Object

    ACRE TV
    Online at ACRETV.org
    April 1-May 31, 2015

    Fernwey Gallery
    916 N Damen Ave
    April 3-April 26, 2015

    Opening reception: April 3, 6-9pm, Fernwey Gallery

    Inspired by the long dark winters of Chicago, this exhibition focuses on the Sun at a time when it is missed the most, moments before springtime. As an object that is both illuminating and unseeable, the experience of the Sun is dominated by metaphor and myth. Were the Eye Not Sunlike channels the mythologization of the Sun and our relationship to its immeasurable power.

    Beginning on April 1, a three-part video program will unfold on the artist-made livestreaming platform ACRE TV. The program begins with Sunrise and its thematic associations of stillness, ritual and intimacy. Reflecting the course of the earth-bound day, the following program, High Noon, tracks the warmth and optical energy of a bright, full sky. Sunset, the final chapter, evokes impending darkness, melancholy, loss and reflection.

    Sunrise: April 1 – April 19 | High Noon: April 19 – May 10 | Sunset: May 10 – May 31

    Meanwhile, from April 3 – April 26, Fernwey Gallery presents the physical iteration of Were the Eye Not Sunlike with work in photography, sculpture and installation. Featuring Lauren Edwards, Assaf Evron and Danny Giles, the exhibition proposes its own strain of the solar metaphor, imagining the Sun as an object of theater and a distant dictator in the sky. The exhibition includes a printed publication designed by Mia Nolting with essays by Third Object and Danny Floyd.

    PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

    ACRE TV

    Christopher Bailey & Charles Woodman, Tony Balko, Tommy Becker, Sarah & Joseph Belknap, Blair Bogin, Patrick Andrew Boivin & Stèphane Charpentier & Alyssa Moxley, Laura Bouza, Collin Bradford, Dana Carter, Kate Casanova, Karen Y. Chan, Sarawut Chutiwongpeti, Sara Condo, Silvana D’Mikos, Thomas Dexter, Alexei Dmitriev, Mike Gibisser, Max Grey, Ilan Gutin, Amy Hicks, Sam Hoolihan, Stephanie Hough, Cassandra C. Jones, Jeremiah Jones, Jason Judd, Meredith Lackey, Robert Ladislas Derr, Christine Lucy Latimer, Karl Lind, Chris Little, Ying Liu, Laura Mackin, Elina Malkin & Jónó Mí Ló, Pablo Marín, Eden Mitsenmacher, Rebecca Najdowski, Matthew-Robin Nye & Marc Wieser, Aaron Oldenburg, Jae Pas, Andrew Payne, Chris Rice, Jean-Michel Rolland, Andrew Rosinski, Ben Russell, Eeva Siivonen, Fern Silva, Rachael Starbuck, Eric Stewart, Takahiro Suzuki, John Szczepaniak, Patrick Tarrant, Robert Todd, Penelope Umbrico, Eileen Rae Walsh, Eric Watts, Yehoshua

    FERNWEY GALLERY

    Lauren Edwards, Assaf Evron, Danny Floyd, Danny Giles, Mia Nolting

    Full ACRE TV program information HERE

  • Artforum: Jaime Davidovich

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    Jaime Davidovich, Outreach: The Changing Role of the Art Museum, 1978. Installation view.

    An Artforum review by Jacob Proctor of Threewalls’ show Outreach: Jaime Davidovich 1974-1984, which features Direct Object/Direct Action streaming in the gallery, described ACRE TV’s contribution:

    “Additionally on view were a re-creation of the 1970 tape installation Yellow Wall, a selection of early works on paper and television-related ephemera, and, in a nod to Davidovich’s historical role as a presenter of others’ work alongside his own, a live stream of videos from the Chicago-based artists’ television network ACRE TV.”

    The review goes on to describe a particular episode of The Live! Show, which Jaime Davidovich produced from 1979-84 for Manhattan Cable Television, which we aired as a part of Direct Object/Direct Action and was a touchstone for our show:

    “Broadcasting from the Qube [an early interactive cable-television system] studio in Columbus, Ohio, where the service debuted on December 1, 1877, the host asks viewers to call in and “direct” one of the show’s dual live feeds, instructing the camera operators to tilt, pan, zoom, and adjust focus. Although strikingly primitive by today’s standards and phased out after only a few years, Qube presaged many subsequent developments in the cable industry. Beyond the participatory scenario of this episode of The Live! Show—itself a distant precursor to today’s TV competitions in which viewers are invited to vote—Qube’s programming packages introduced such now-standard features as pay-per-view, on-demand viewing, and specialized channels for music, sports, children’s shows, and so on, making Davidovich’s employ of the then-relatively unknown technology all the more serendipitous, or prophetic.”

    Read the full review here.

    See more of Jaime Davidovich’s work streaming on ACRE TV until March 31!