Time-Based Art Festival
The Time-Based Art Festival (TBA, sometimes stylized T:BA) is an annual interdisciplinary art and performance festival presented by the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA). It occurs over a ten-day period in autumn in Portland, Oregon.
About the Festival
According to PICA, the TBA Festival is:[1]
a convergence of contemporary performance, dance, music, new media, and visual arts projects that draws artists from across the country and around the globe. TBA celebrates artists from across and in-between all mediums, and activates the entire community with art and ideas. PICA presents a festival that bridges disciplines and geography with morning workshops, daytime installations, noontime lectures, afternoon salons, evening performances, outdoor happenings, and no shortage of late-night activity. Contemporary masters and significant emerging artists mix and mingle to bring you the best art of our time.
TBA is "inspired by various European and Australian-modeled Festivals including the renowned Edinburgh and Adelaide Festivals" and features events in diverse venues across the city of Portland, OR, through partnerships with the Pacific Northwest College of Art, Reed College, Northwest Film Center, and many other local peer institutions.
Origins of the Name
The term Time-Based Media (and Time-Based Art) was first introduced by UK video art pioneer David Hall in 1972 through his writings in various publications including Studio International. He also established the first Time-Based Media undergraduate course at the University for the Creative Arts, Kent, UK in 1972 (then Maidstone College of Art). Use of the term has since rapidly spread around the world—particularly among academics—to identify moving image and sound work by visual artists, a popular development which arose comparatively recently in the mid- to late-twentieth century.[2]
History
The first TBA Festival occurred in 2003; it was curated by Kristy Edmunds, who founded PICA in 1995. As artistic director of the PICA, Edmunds curated the TBA Festival through 2005, when she left Portland for Australia, to direct the Melbourne International Arts Festival.
In 2006, PICA adopted a Guest Artistic Director model, hiring Mark Russell—former Artistic Director of P.S. 122 and current Artistic Director of the Under the Radar Festival at the Public Theater, in New York City—to curate the Festival from 2006 to 2008. Russell was succeeded by Cathy Edwards, formerly of Dance Theater Workshop and the Director of Programming for the International Festival of Arts and Ideas in New Haven, CT, who curated the 2009, 2010, and 2011 Festivals. In 2011, PICA hired Angela Maddox as the organization's first resident Artistic Director since Edmunds' departure.
The Artistic Director programs festival artists and events in collaboration with the organization's Visual Art Curator Kristan Kennedy and Performing Art Program Director Erin Boberg Doughton. Since 2006, the Festival has included a month-long series of visual art installations, curated by Kennedy, often encampassed under the banner of "The Works"—events and exhibitions specifically held at the festival's central location.[3][4]
Previous TBA Festivals
TBA:03
The inaugural Time-Based Art Festival (curated by Kristy Edmunds) was held September 12–21, 2003, and featured an opening night dance by Japanese duo Eiko and Koma in Jamison Square, along with performances by Bill Shannon (Crutchmaster), Tere O'Connor, and Miranda July.[5]
TBA:04
In 2004, the second year of the TBA Festival, which took place September 10–19, featured performances by Diamanda Galas, Khaela Maricich (The Blow), Ethel, Butoh artist Akira Kasai, and dance/theater company 33 Fainting Spells.[6]
TBA:05
TBA:05 (September 9–18, 2005) marked PICA’s 10th Anniversary and the departure of the founding Artistic Director, Kristy Edmunds. Over 6,000 people attended the free, opening night performance by Elizabeth Streb in Pioneer Courthouse Square. Artists included DJ Spooky, Daniel Bernard Roumain, and British duo Lone Twin.[7]
TBA:06
The 2006 TBA Festival (September 7–17) was Mark Russell's first as Guest Artistic Director. The events began with a multiple guitar orchestra led by John King in Pioneer Courthouse Square, which led into a public march across the Hawthorne Bridge to watch an art flotilla by artist David Eckard on the Willamette River. Other performers included seminal performance artist Laurie Anderson, choreographer Deborah Hay, the Spalding Gray Project, and the Portland premiere of Nature Theater of Oklahoma. Visual art joined the Festival for the first time with a residency project by Matthew Day Jackson, a film installation by Marina Abramović, and an exhibit by Harrell Fletcher.[8]
TBA:07
The fifth-annual TBA Festival, guest curated by Russell, was held from September 6–16, 2007. Composer Rinde Eckert led the Portland Flash Choir in an original choral performance about migratory birds, held in Pioneer Courthouse Square, Mikhail Baryshnikov danced with Donna Uchizono Company, and Elevator Repair Service performed Gatz, a seven-hour play based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. The ON SIGHT visual art program exhibited Arnold Kemp, Larry Bamburg, and Guido van der Werve, and collaborated with the Cooley Gallery at Reed College to present Peter Kreider and Marko Lulic.[9]
TBA:08
Russell's third and final TBA as curator took place September 4–14, 2008. The Festival opened with a reenactment of Anna Halprin's Blank Placard Happening and a symphonic collaboration between Antony and the Johnsons and the Oregon Symphony. Other artists who performed included Reggie Watts, Jérôme Bel, Mike Daisey, and the Superamas. Ryan Trecartin, Lizzie Fitch, Jeffry Mitchell, and Mike Kelley were all part of the ON SIGHT visual art program.[10]
TBA:09
The seventh TBA Festival was the debut of Guest Artistic Director Cathy Edwards and occurred September 3–13, 2009. The performance program of the Festival presented works by choreographers Miguel Gutierrez and Meg Stuart, Australian theater company Back to Back Theatre, playwright Young Jean Lee, and a sesquicentennial musical written by Pink Martini, entitled Oregon! Oregon. Visual artists included Fawn Krieger and Kalup Linzy in residency, performance duo robbinschilds, and local musician Ethan Rose, among others. On Labor Day, PICA coordinated with Slow Food Portland to host an outdoor, public picnic.[11]
TBA:10
TBA:10 was Edwards' second Festival, from September 9–19, 2010. Noted pop musician Rufus Wainwright performed on opening night of the Festival with the Oregon Symphony, and featured Festival projects included monologist Mike Daisey; performance troupe Nature Theater of Oklahoma; choreographer John Jasperse; and an interactive, 360-degree film by the Wooster Group, marking the company's first production in Portland. The ON SIGHT program hosted a residency by Charles Atlas, exhibits by local Whitney Biennial participants Storm Tharp and Jessica Jackson Hutchins, and the inaugural showing of People's Biennial, curated by Jens Hoffmann and Harrell Fletcher.[12]
TBA:11
Marking Cathy Edwards' final Festival as Artistic Director, TBA:11 occurred from September 8–18, 2011.[13] Dance was a frequent and prominent feature and performances by Shantala Shivalingappa, Rude Mechs, Japan's Offsite Dance Project, and Kyle Abraham. The festival again hosted Mike Daisey as he performed a 24-hour-long monologue. "Evidence of Bricks," the banner for the festival's visual art programming, included works by Claire Fontaine, Portland-based artist Jesse Sugarmann, and the Seoul-based web art duo Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries.
TBA:12
The 2012 TBA Festival, held from September 6–16, 2012, marked the tenth anniversary of the festival, the first time the festival was run by PICA's new resident Artistic Director Angela Maddox, and the last time the festival would make use of the historic Washington High School building in Southeast Portland for performances and exhibition space.[14] Notable performers included Laurie Anderson, Keith Hennessy, Gob Squad, who sought to recreate many of Warhol's films live. Sam Green and musical group Yo La Tengo's The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller, blending documentary film and performance, was also brought to the west coast a second time after having premiered at the 2012 San Francisco International Film Festival.
TBA:13
Held from September 12–22, 2013, the eleventh year of the TBA festival saw The Works and its accompanying performances and exhibitions move to a former Con-Way warehouse in northwest Portland from their longtime home in at the former Washington High School.[15] Notable performances included those by Meow Meow and Thomas M. Lauderdale, Trajal Harrell, and The Blow. The visual artist component of the festival, "…community declared itself a medium," sought to explore some of Edwards' original notions of community engagement through art as a central tenant of PICA's mission and featured exhibitions, events, and works from A.L. Steiner, Jamie Isenstein, Lucy Raven, Krystal South, and an ongoing project at PICA's new headquarters from Anna Craycroft. Con-Way's central stage hosted nightly performances with the Julie Ruin, Peter Burr, Getting to Know You(Tube), and DUBAIS. The 2013 festival introduced the a new feature in the PICA Institute, a series of workshops, conversations, and talks around the festival's works and artists.
Notes
- ↑ "PICA announces the 2010 Time-Based Art Festival". PICA Blog. Portland Institute for Contemporary Art. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
- ↑ , Media of Now: An Interview with David Hall, Joanna Heatwole, Afterimage, http://www.entrepreneur.com/tradejournals/article/182665021.html, July–August 2008.
- ↑ PICA - Leadership, http://pica.org/about/staff-and-leadership/
- ↑ PICA - History, http://pica.org/about/mission-and-values/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2003, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-03/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2004, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-04/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2005, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-05/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2006, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-06/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2007, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-07/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2008, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-08/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2009, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-09/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2010, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-10/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2011, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-11/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2012, http://pica.org/programs/tba-festival/tba-festival-past-events/tba-12/
- ↑ TBA Festival 2013, http://pica.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/TBA13_Guidebook_Email.pdf
External links
- Time-Based Art Festival (TBA) – Official webpage at PICA; incl. "History and Milestones" [PICA "About Us"].)
- Time-Based Art Festival 2006 (TBA) – At Portland Art Center, July 14, 2006. Archive: Listing of 2006 workshops and other activities]. Accessed January 13, 2008.