Lisa Oppenheim

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Lisa Oppenheim
Born 1975
New York City
Nationality American
Field Multimedia, Video, Photography
Training Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts, Bard College
Alma mater Brown University

Lisa Oppenheim (born 1975) is an American multimedia artist.

Education

Lisa Oppenheim was born in New York City. She earned her Bachelor's degree from Brown University in 1998, concentrating in Modern Culture and Media, Art and Semiotics. In 2001, she earned her MFA in Film and Video from Milton Avery Graduate School for the Arts, Bard College. She completed a Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 2003.[1]

Work

Oppenheim's work plays with the process of creating photographs and film. Her pieces often question the documentary genre as well as the concept of an archives.[2] In utilizing archival sources, she interrogates and reappropriates the archival function of narrative-making and -omitting, and how narrative and imagery are intertwined but ultimately separate.[3]

In work such as Lunagrams, 2010, in which she exposed archival glass negatives using moonlight, Oppenheim experiments with time as a force of art and imagery.[4]

Oppenheim has had the honor of many solo and group exhibitions at international venues including the Museum of Modern Art and the New Museum in New York City, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain, the Museum of Modern Art of Republika Srpska in Bosnia, and the Royal Academy of Arts in London.

Collections

Her work is included in the public collections of:

  • FRAC Nord-Pas Calais, France
  • FRAC Piemonte, France
  • Israel Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel
  • Shpilman Institute of Photography, Tel Aviv, Israel
  • Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA
  • MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, MA, USA
  • Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
  • Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, UK[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Lisa Oppenheim Biography". The Approach. Retrieved 1 February 2014. 
  2. "New Photography 2013: Lisa Oppenheim". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 1 February 2014. 
  3. O’Connell, Brian (Summer 2007). "Between Appropriation and Reconstruction". ART&RESEARCH 1 (2). ISSN 1752-6388. Retrieved 1 February 2014. 
  4. Sholis, Brian (May 2013). "Lisa Oppenheim: Elemental Process". Aperture. Retrieved 1 February 2014. 

External links

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