Mika Rottenberg
Mika Rottenberg (born 1976) is a contemporary Argentine video artist who lives and works in New York City.
Biography
Mika Rottenberg was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1976. She made aliyah to Israel with her family in 1977. In 1998, she graduated from Hamidrasha, Bait Berl College of Arts, Israel. In 2000, Rottenberg moved to New York to continue her education, receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts in 2000 and a Master of Fine Arts from Columbia University in 2004. She is currently represented by Andrea Rosen Gallery in New York.[1]
Rottenberg's video works feature women with various physical eccentricities, such as being very tall, large-bodied, or muscular, performing physical acts that serve as an allegory for the human condition in post-modern times. Her videos are inspired by stories where women have an unusual characteristic about their bodies that makes them a commodity, and specifically the women who advertise their unusual characteristic online to be utilized for hire. Some of the concepts her art deals with involve labor, body/environment relationships, and fictional logic.
Significant works
Mary's Cherries (2004), which shows a woman's red fingernails being grown, clipped, and transformed into maraschino cherries, was influenced by a story about a woman with a rare blood type who quit her job to sell her blood. The women featured in Mary's Cherries are all wrestlers for hire. In Cheese (2007), she shows women with very long hair milking cows and making cheese using a machine powered by the movement of the women's hair.[2] Rottenberg's work was showcased at the Whitney Biennial 2008.[3]
In 2011, Rottenberg collaborated with artist Jon Kessler on SEVEN, a performance and installation created for Performa 11 in New York City, performed at Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery. According to the Performa website, SEVEN "collapse[d] film time and real time to create an intricate laboratory that channels body fluids and colors into a spectacle on the African savannah. In New York, a “Chakra Juicer” will capture sweat from seven performers engaging in ritualistic athletic activity."[4][5]
In 2013, Rottenberg held a solo exhibition at the Israel Museum, in Jerusalem.[6]
In 2015, her work "NoNoseKnows" was featured in the Venice Biennale as part of an exhibition curated by Okwui Enwezor: "All the World's Futures."
In addition to video, Rottenberg has also exhibited paintings and photographs. She is represented by Andrea Rosen Gallery and Laurent Godin Gallery.
Awards and prizes
- 2001 Project 2001 Award, Islip University, Islip Art Museum, New York, USA
- 2002 The Dean's Fellowship, Columbia University, New York
- 2004 Prize, The Rema Hort Mann Foundation, USA
- 2006 The Cartier Award in conjunction with the Frieze Art Fair
- 2009 5x5 Castello 09 Prize Finalist, Espai d'Art Contemporani de Castello, Spain
- 2010 New Vision Programme Selection, CPH: DOX Film Festival, Copenhagen, Denmark
- 2010 The Flaherty International Film Seminar Fellow, NYC, USA
- 2011 Festival Selection, Planete Doc Film Festival, Warsaw, Poland
- 2011 Sommerakademie, Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, Switzerland
References
- ^ Mika Rottenberg at Andrea Rosen Gallery, http://www.andrearosengallery.com/artists/mika-rottenberg
- ^ Hudson, Judith (Fall 2010). "Mika Rottenberg". BOMB Magazine. New Artist Publications. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
- ^ Whitney Biennial 2008
- ^ Mika Rottenberg and Jon Kessler, SEVEN, Performa 11, http://11.performa-arts.org/event/rottenberg-kessler-performa-commission
- ^ Smith, Roberta. Mika Rottenberg and Jon Kessler, 'Seven,' The New York Times, November 10, 2011.
- ^ Squeeze, Video Works by Mika Rottenberg, Israel Museum, Jerusalem Squeeze
External links
- "Mika Rottenberg". Information Center for Israeli Art. Israel Museum. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
- Hudson, Judith (Spring 2001). "Interview with Mika Rottenberg". BOMB Magazine.
- 1976 births
- American video artists
- Israeli video artists
- Installation artists
- Living people
- Israeli women artists
- Argentine women artists
- Argentine artists
- Argentine emigrants to Israel
- Argentine Jews
- Artists from Buenos Aires
- Israeli contemporary artists
- Israeli Jews
- Columbia University School of the Arts alumni
- School of Visual Arts alumni