On Demand
Getting in on the Action
By Claudia La Rocco
November 12, 2008
“The Art of Participation,” installation view at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; photo: Ian Reeves, courtesy SFMOMA
Museums, as we’ve discussed, are eager to engage with their public in ways that move beyond handing out headphones. It’s all about interactivity and live art, from the Whitney’s mostly unsuccessful foray into participatory art during the last biennial (You can hear my radio spot on that here) to the Guggenheim’s current relational aesthetics show, “theanyspacewhatever.”
Now, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has upped the ante with “The Art of Participation,” a survey of interactive art that spans almost six decades. It’s the art world’s answer to Choose Your Own Adventure books:
Download Video Videographer: Tammy Fortin, courtesy SFMOMA
I spoke with the museum’s curator of media arts, Rudolf Frieling, about the new exhibit, including the pitfalls and possibilities of participatory art:
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Mortier, We Hardly Knew Ye
By Claudia La Rocco
November 7, 2008
The rumors were true: Gerard Mortier ain’t coming.
Sadness.
Who will do the “Brokeback Mountain” opera now???
Iron Man, really?
By Nathan Lee
November 6, 2008

A press release arrived in my inbox this morning announcing the launch of “The Contenders,” a new annual film series at MoMA “that offers filmgoers the opportunity to see a wide spectrum of films made in the last 12 months that are contenders for the upcoming awards season, “cult classic” status, and/or lasting historical significance, as determined by curators in the Museum’s Department of Film.”
Oh great, so now even MoMA has joined the award season hype? On paper, this sounds like a totally unnecessary and misplaced use of MoMA’s deep pockets and institutional muscle. But maybe they’ve come up with a good program?
No. They’ve picked the most obvious of recent Hollywood blockbusters, none of which, good as they may be, has any legitimate reason to clog up a screen at MoMA (”The Dark Knight,” “Iron Man,” “Wall-E”). On the serious side, they have elected to revive some equally predictable documentaries (”Encounters at the End of the World,” “Man on Wire,” “Trouble the Water,” “Standard Operating Procedure”), a few well-publicized indies and foreign films (”Frozen River,” “Happy-Go-Lucky”), and a tiny smattering of titles you might legitimately call overlooked (”The Pool,” “The Silence Before Bach”). Rounding out the program will be screenings of movies that will probably still be in theaters at the time of their MoMA showing (”Milk,” “Slumdog Millionaire”).
All in all, it’s the least imaginative, most irrelevant program I’ve seen in some time.
Seven Easy Pieces
By Claudia La Rocco
November 6, 2008
“Les sept planches de la ruse.” Photos by Richard Termine.
I write fortified with Riesling.
I have just been to see Compagnie 111 and Scenes de la Terre’s “Les sept planches de la ruse” (The Seven Boards of Skill) at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, where it had its U.S. premiere as part of the Next Wave Festival. Call it theater, call it dance, call it cirque nouveau, whatever: no matter the genre(s), this was pure, enragingly empty, well-financed international spectacle, the kind BAM specializes in all too often these days.
What You Are Doing Today
By Claudia La Rocco
November 4, 2008
Even the undead are obsessed with this election. Photo by Andrea Silenzi
I don’t know about you all, but I’ve officially given up trying to get anything accomplished until after the election is over. I’m throwing in the towel.
But I’m also trying to avoid spending the entire day obsessing over exit polls. Instead, I am making lists - lists for you, dear reader. Below you will find lots of little clickable tidbits, always handy when your boss, sick of obsessing over polls, wanders over and wonders why your computer screen is blank.
Booted Out
By Nathan Lee
October 31, 2008
The Pioneer Theater is no more. Tonight’s midnight screening of “Night of the Living Dead” will be its last.

De Keersmaeker Reichs the House
By Claudia La Rocco
October 23, 2008
Rosas. Photos by Jack Vartoogian
So, ok, I have, maybe, from time to time, been a little bit snarky about the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Next Wave Festival, which might better be known these days as the “Greatest Hits from the Avant-Old-Garde.” Or maybe the Icons Festival. Take the title of last night’s show, for example: “Steve Reich Evening.” Come on, people.
But. This show. Is. Amazing.
It celebrates the choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s relationship with Reich’s music. Lots (way too many) choreographers use Reich. It’s hard to take most of them seriously after you get a taste of the work De Keersmaeker has done. She is a masterful artist, and the response Reich elicits in her is breathtaking. The show runs through Saturday: get thee to the Icons Festival.
Up two screens / down 55,000 movies
By Nathan Lee
October 23, 2008

It’s been a good news/bad news kind of week for NYC movie culture, and considering that it’s nothing bad news everywhere else - bonus! First came word that Kim’s Video on St. Marks was shutting down its fabled rental department, surely the best in the city, before it moves to a new location on 1st Ave. Mr. Kim hopes to place the entire 55,000 collection intact with a new business or institution.
On the plus side, The Beekman Theater is reopening at 1271 Second Avenue between 66th and 67th. Programmed by the team behind the Paris theater, the two-screen Beekman promises a mix of art and commercial fare. Launching this friday, somewhat inauspiciously, with Barry Levinson’s bomb-in-progress “What Just Happened” and the better-received “Tell No One,” the Beekman will soon be the Upper East Side home for one the year’s critic’s darlings: Arnaud Desplechin’s virtuoso ensemble drama “A Christmas Tale.”



