Bruce Charlesworth

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Bruce Charlesworth (born 1950) is an American artist, known primarily for his photographic, video and multimedia works.

Early life and education[]

Charlesworth was born in 1950 in Davenport, Iowa.[1][2] He received his BA degree in Art from the University of Northern Iowa (1972) and his MFA degree in Painting from the University of Iowa in 1975.[1][3]

Work[]

Charlesworth began to exhibit in New York and internationally with the photo-novellas Eddie Glove (1976–79), and Special Communiqués (1981). Other staged photographic series followed, including Trouble (1982–83), Fate (1984–87), Man and Nature (1988–91), Confiscated Objects (1999–2000), and Serum (2003–08).

Surveillance (1981) was the first of many of what Charlesworth termed narrative environments, works that use video and/or audio to power a narrative within a designed space. Projectile (1982), Wrong Adventures (1984), Private House (1987), Reality Street (1994) and Airlock (2004) are a few subsequent multimedia installations.

Video and film works include Communiqués for Tape (1981), Robert and Roger (1985), Dateline for Danger (1987), A Stranger's Index (1990) and The Happiness Effect (2004). Throughout much of the 1990s Charlesworth worked on his feature-length experimental film project Private Enemy - Public Eye. In the book entitled, Private Enemy, Public Eye: The Work of Bruce Charlesworth (1989), was also the name of a survey exhibition of his work at the International Center of Photography. The interactive video installation Love Disorder was featured in the Zero1 Biennial (2008) in San Jose, California and in the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art's Wisconsin Triennial (2010).[4] Love Disorder featured a 12 foot tall screen with an uncomfortably close view of a face, and sensors in the room would change how the face reacts to the viewers movements.[4]

Exhibitions and collections[]

Charlesworth's work has been shown at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, London's Tate Gallery, The American Film Institute, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Museum of American Art in Washington, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago and many other museums and galleries.[citation needed]

His work is included in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[5] the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis,[6] and the Houston Museum of Fine Arts,[7] among others.

Awards and honors[]

In 2007, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation for his work in interactive video installation.[8]

Charlesworth was the first artist-in-residence at the Capp Street Project in San Francisco in 1984.[9]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b James Casebere; Walker Art Center (December 1987). Cross-references: sculpture into photography : James Casebere, Bruce Charlesworth, Bernard Faucon, Ron O'Donnell, Sandy Skoglund, Boyd Webb. Walker Art Center. ISBN 9780935640267.
  2. ^ Borofsky, Jonathan (1982). Eight Artists: The Anxious Edge : Walker Art Center, 25 April-13 June 1982. Walker Art Center. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-935640-10-6.
  3. ^ Towner, Mark (1991). Three Decades of Midwestern Photography, 1960-1990. Davenport Museum of Art.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Smith, Jennifer A. (2010-05-27). "MMoCA's Wisconsin Triennial is all over the place, to its credit". Isthmus | Madison, Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  5. ^ "Bruce Charlesworth - Untitled - The Met". The Metropolitan Museum of Art, i.e. The Met Museum.
  6. ^ "Walker Art Center". walkerart.org.
  7. ^ "Variation on #34". The MFAH Collections. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
  8. ^ "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Bruce Charlesworth".
  9. ^ "Capp Street Project Archive". CCA Libraries. Retrieved 2020-04-26.

Sources[]

  • Charlesworth, Bruce (1989). Private Enemy Public Eye: The Work of Bruce Charlesworth. New York: Aperture Book. ISBN 0-89381-337-0. OCLC 317910715.

External links[]

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