Live Bates: Structured improvisations inspired by the David Bates exhibition

Live Bates:  Structured improvisations inspired by the David Bates exhibition

Contemporary Dance/Fort Worth will present structured improvisations inspired by the works on display in the David Bates exhibition  Appearances will be scattered periodically throughout the evening, 5-8 pm.  With original costumes by Crickett Pettigrew, themes from the works on display will be reflected in movement sequences and “still life” arrangements in the format of a “happening.”

MODERN ART MUSEUM OF FORT WORTH ANNOUNCES IMPORTANT GIFT, THE CLEANING TABLE, 1990, BY ARTIST DAVID BATES

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 4, 2014
Fort Worth, TX
Kendal Smith Lake

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth Presents FOCUS: Fred Tomaselli January 12-extended through March 23, 2014

UPDATE 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

January 23, 2014

Fort Worth, TX

 

UPDATE: The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth Presents FOCUS: Rirkrit Tiravanija April 6 through June 1, 2014

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

January 15, 2014

Fort Worth, TX

 

TUESDAY EVENINGS AT THE MODERN LECTURE SERIES Spring 2014 Schedule

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 9, 2013
Fort Worth, TX
Kendal Smith Lake
Manager of Communications
817.738.9215 x167

11.17.13. Day 2 with Michael Morris

Class began with Michael screening his video I Can’t Wait To See You There. The work functions as an elegy and a prayer for musician Kurt Cobain. The twelve-minute video is not only an emotional record of the effect Cobain’s music had on the artist as a teenager, but also a meditation on the subjective experience of public mourning and the ways recorded media affect our understanding of mortality.

11.10.13. Day 1 with Michael Morris

Today was our first day with Michael Morris, an artist and educator who works in video, film, and expanded cinematic forms. Class began in the lecture room, where Michael introduced himself and shared one of his essayistic videos, Confessors. Confessors is a short, personal essay that attempts to retrace bits of lost or inaccessible family histories. The artist’s grandparents gave him a can of film marked “X-rated” without explanation, as well as an old 8 mm camera. The film was lost before he was able to watch it.