Internationally Acclaimed Artist/Architect To Lecture At The University

Bridge photoFAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Internationally acclaimed artist, architect and provocateur Vito Acconci will lecture at the University of Arkansas at 6:00 p.m. on Monday, March 1 in Giffels Auditorium. Co-sponsored by the School of Architecture and the Department of Art, the lecture is untitled but may draw on any aspect of Acconci's complex array of work, which ranges from intensely personal body art pieces to large-scale urban remodeling plans.

Acconci began his career as a writer, primarily a poet, but in the late 60s he broke from the private realm of the page, developing performance art pieces that took place in the street, gallery and other public spaces. Acconci pushed the boundaries between public and private in works such as "Claim" (1971), where he barricaded himself into a narrow space and defended it violently, and in "Following Piece" (1969), where the artist randomly followed strangers on the street. Acconci also experimented with body work in pieces such as "Trademarks" (1970), when he applied printer's ink to bite marks he'd made on his body and transferred the impressions to other surfaces. Acconci later moved into video, sculpture, furniture and interactive architectural installations - structures activated by viewers, often using swings, bicycles or carts attached to pulley systems. In recent years, Acconci has worked in collaboration with Acconci Studio, based in New York City, to develop a wide variety of public projects, from bus shelters and transit lounges to parks, plazas and urban plans.

Acconci views art as a process: "I think of art as having a kind of instrumental use . . . So when I say 'make art,' I don't mean a kind of self-enclosed art, but I mean art as this kind of instrument in the world."

From 1968 to 1971 Acconci taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York, and he has participated in numerous visiting artist programs at institutions such as Cooper Union, New York, Yale University, New Haven, and Parsons School of Design, New York. Acconci has been featured in solo exhibitions at the Sonnabend Galley, New York (1971), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (1978), Kunstmuseum, Lucerne (1978), Kölnischer Kunstverein, Cologne (1981), Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1983), and the Museum of Modern Art, New York (1988), among many others. The lecture is free and open to the public. For more information on Acconci, please visit www.acconci.com.

Contacts

Kendall Curlee, communications coordinator, School of Architecture (479)575-4704, kcurlee@uark.edu

Shannon Dillard Mitchell, gallery director, Department of Art (479)575-7987, smitche@uark.edu

 

Headlines

PetSmart CEO J.K. Symancyk to Speak at Walton College Commencement

J.K. Symancyk is an alumnus of the Sam M. Walton College of Business and serves on the Dean’s Executive Advisory Board.

Faulkner Center, Arkansas PBS Partner to Screen Documentary 'Gospel'

The Faulkner Performing Arts Center will host a screening of Gospel, a documentary exploring the origin of Black spirituality through sermon and song, in partnership with Arkansas PBS at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 2.

UAPD Officers Mills and Edwards Honored With New Roles

Veterans of the U of A Police Department, Matt Mills has been promoted to assistant chief, and Crandall Edwards has been promoted to administrative captain.

Community Design Center's Greenway Urbanism Project Wins LIV Hospitality Design Award

"Greenway Urbanism" is one of six urban strategies proposed under the Framework Plan for Cherokee Village, a project that received funding through an Our Town grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Spring Bike Drive Refurbishes Old Bikes for New Students

All donated bikes will be given to Pedal It Forward, a local nonprofit that will refurbish your bike and return it to the U of A campus to be gifted to a student in need. Hundreds of students have already benefited.

News Daily