Lynn Hershman Leeson

Lynn Hershman Leeson (b. in 1941 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an award-winning American artist and filmmaker. She was Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Davis, and an A.D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University. She is Chair of the Film Department at the San Francisco Art Institute, and has received wide recognition for a body of work combining art with social commentary, particularly regarding the relationship between humans and technology.

Contents

Work

Leeson's work has as its themes: identity in a time of consumerism, privacy in an era of surveillance, interfacing of humans and machines, and the relationship between real and virtual worlds. Her work grew out of an installation art and performance tradition. She explored interactivity with her video work.[1]

LORNA was an early project of Leeson. The first interactive laser artdisk, LORNA tells the story of an Agoraphobic woman. Viewers have the option of directing her life into several possible plots and endings.[2] LORNA never left her one room apartment. According to Leeson, the objects in her room were very much like those in The Dante Hotel. Except that there was a television set. As LORNA watched the news and ads, she became fearful, afraid to leave her tiny room. Viewers were invited to liberate LORNA from her web of fears by accessing buttons on their remote control unit that corresponded to numbers placed on the items in her room. Instead of being passive, the action was literally in their own hands. Every object in LORNA'S room contains a number and becomes a chapter in her life that opens into branching sequences.

The viewer/participant accesses information about LORNA'S past, future and personal conflicts via these objects. Many images on the screen are of the remote control device LORNA uses to change television channels. Because viewer/participants also use a nearly identical unit to direct the disc action, a metaphoric link or point of identification is established and surrogate decisions are made for LORNA. The telephone was LORNA'S link to the outside world. imageViewer/participants chose to voyeuristically overhear conversations of different contexts as they trespassed the cyberspace of her hard pressed life. There were three endings: Lorna shoots her television set, commits suicide, or moves to Los Angeles.

The plot has multiple variations that can be seen backwards, forwards, at increased or decreased speeds, and from several points of view. There is no hierarchy in the ordering of decisions. And the icons were made often of cut off and dislocated body parts such as a mouth, or an eye...[3]

In 2007 a retrospective at the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester, Autonomous Agents, featured a comprehensive range of the artist's work - from the Roberta Breitmore series (1974–78) to videos from the 1980s and interactive installations that use the Internet and artificial intelligence software. Her influential early ventures into performance and photography are also featured in the current touring exhibition WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution, organized by the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. The Art and Films of Lynn Hershman Leeson: Secret Agents, Private I, was published by The University of California Press in 2005 on the occasion of another retrospective at the Henry Gallery in Seattle.

Work by Lynn Hershman Leeson is featured in the public collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the William Lehmbruck Museum, the ZKM (Zentrum fur Kunst und Medientechnologie), the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Canada, the Walker Art Center and the University Art Museum, Berkeley, in addition to the private collections of Donald Hess and Arturo Schwarz, among many others. Commissions include projects for the Tate Modern, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, de Young Museum, Daniel Langlois and Stanford University, and Charles Schwab.

Her three feature films - Strange Culture, Teknolust, Conceiving Ada - have been part of the Sundance Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival and The Berlin International Film Festival, among others, and have won numerous awards. She is presently in the editing phase of a feature-length documentary entitled !Women Art Revolution! A (Formerly) Secret History, which is anticipated for release in 2011.

Awards and honors

Recently honored with grants from Creative Capital and the National Endowment for the Arts, she is also the recipient of a Siemens International Media Arts Award, the Flintridge Foundation Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Visual Arts, Prix Ars Electronica, the Alfred P Sloan Foundation Feature Film Prize, and the Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement in Digital Art from the Association for Computer Graphic's Special Interest Group on Graphics and Interactive Techniques (ACM SIGGRAPH). In 2004, Stanford University Libraries acquired Hershman Leeson's working archive.

Lynn Hershman Leeson was the recipient of a 2009 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship.

In 2010 Hershman Leeson received the [ddaa] d.velop digital art award.

Hershman Leeson is Chair of the Film Department at the San Francisco Art Institute, Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Davis and an A D White Professor at Large at Cornell University.[4] [5]

Selected filmography

Other works

Early works

Performances/Installations

Photography

Video

Net Works

Awards

Lifetime Achievement Award, Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Graphics and Interactive Techniques (ACM SIGGRAPH), New Orleans, LA

Guggenheim Fellow, US & Canada Competition. Creative Arts, Film, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, New York, NY

Individual Artist Commissions Award, San Francisco Arts Commission, San Francisco, CA

Film/Video Grantee, for !Women Art Revolution! A (Formerly) Secret History, Creative Capital, New York, NY

Marlon Riggs Award, for courage and innovation in cinema, The San Francisco Film Critics Circle, San Francisco, CA

Innovation that Matters Award, ISEA/ZeroOne, San Jose, CA

Funding, for the production of Life to the Second Power: Animating the Archive, The Daniel Langlois Foundation, Montreal, Canada[7]

National Endowment for the Arts Grant in Media Arts

Positive Innovations Award, International Digital Media and Arts Association, Muncie, IN

Acquisition of Lynn Hershman Leeson archives 1966-2002 by Stanford University Libraries

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Feature Film Prize in Science and Technology, for Teknolust, Hamptons International Film Festival, East Hampton, NY

Cyber Identities, Tribute and Retrospective, Feminale Film Festival, Cologne, Germany

Funding, for the production of Agent Ruby, The Daniel Langlois Foundation, Montreal, Canada[8]

Golden Nica Award (Grand Prize) in Interactive Art, for The Difference Engine #3, Prix Ars Electronica, Linz, Austria

Anne Gerber Award, for Paranoid Mirror, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA

ZKM/Siemens Media Art Prize, Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie, Karlsruhe, Germany

Cyberstar Award, for The Venus Home Page, WDR (Westdeutscher Rundfunk) /GMD, Cologne, Germany

Honorary Mention in Interactive Art, for America's Finest, Prix Ars Electronica, Linz, Austria

Reaching through the Screen: A Tribute to Lynn Hershman, Special Tribute, San Francisco International Film Festival, San Francisco, CA

Honorary Mention in Interactive Art, for Room of One's Own, Prix Ars Electronica, Linz, Austria

Barbara Aronofsky Latham Memorial Award, for Conspiracy of Silence, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Jonas Mekas Award, for Shadow's Song, Humboldt International Short Film Festival, Arcata, CA

First Prize, for Seeing Is Believing, Festival Internacional de Video Cidade de Vigo, Vigo, Spain

Trophée de Cristal (Grand Prize), for Longshot, Montbéliard Video and Television Festival, Montbéliard, France

Prix du Public, for Longshot, Festival du Nouveau Cinéma, Montréal, Canada

Film of the Year, for Longshot, London Film Festival, British Film Institute, London, England

Golden Gate Award, for Confessions of a Chameleon, San Francisco International Film Festival, San Francisco, CA

References

  1. ^ Wardrip-Fruin, Noah, and Nick Montfort, eds. The New Media Reader. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003, p. 643.
  2. ^ http://www.lynnhershman.com/investigations/voyeurism/lorna/lorna2.html
  3. ^ http://www.lynnhershman.com/investigations/voyeurism/lorna/lorna.html
  4. ^ "Lynn Hershman Leeson bio/cv". bitforms gallery, New York, NY. 2009. http://www.bitforms.com/images/pdf/biocv/hershman_bio.pdf. 
  5. ^ "Lynn Hershman Leeson at Gallery Paule Anglim". Gallery Paule Anglim, San Francisco, CA. 2009. http://www.gallerypauleanglim.com/Gallery_Paule_Anglim/Lynn_Hershman_Leeson_Biography.html. 
  6. ^ "The Art and Films of Lynn Hershman Leeson". 2009. http://lynnhershman.com. 
  7. ^ Jacques Perron (2006). "Life to the Second Power: Animating the Archive". Daniel Langlois Foundation. http://www.fondation-langlois.org/html/e/page.php?NumPage=1829. Retrieved October 5, 2006. 
  8. ^ Jacques Perron (2004). "Agent Ruby". Daniel Langlois Foundation. http://www.fondation-langlois.org/html/e/page.php?NumPage=167. Retrieved October 5, 2006. 

External links