Laurel Jay Carpenter is a visual art performer + researcher. More information at links:
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A Year of Roadkill, new conceptual project

A one-year project, A Year of Roadkill is a conceptual work engaging witness and empathy, repetition and duration; all certainly related to my performance practice. The publication is a small document of the work; both the project and its record are scaled to fit inside my much too busy workdays leading a university art department.
But of course I know the small can carry big meanings—the urging of presence, of private mourning, of quiet resistance. See a short excerpt of the internal pages now on my website.
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"10 Together" WINS Best Publication Award at PQ2023
In their beautifully crafted book, the authors document and critically question the 10 years of their collaboration across time, across national and continental borders, and against cultural expectations. Playful and poetic in their practice, Longva and Carpenter explore basic human needs in a variety of settings, often physically tasking. They pose questions about the rare and raw predicament of being a vulnerable and fragile human in a world in crisis. —Pavel Drábek, Best Publication Award curator with jurors Donatella Barbieri and Aziza Kadyri

The PQ Best Publication Award 2023 was announced as part of the awards ceremony at the Prague Quadrennial festival in Prague, CZ, 13 June 2023. On stage with the Jurors (L to R): Pavel Drábek, Aziza Kadyri, Terese Longva, Laurel Jay Carpenter and Donatella Barbieri.

Introducing the book at the Shortlisted Author’s Roundtable, PQTalks, the evening before the awards ceremony.
We are grateful!
#performance#performance art#art#artist book#monograph#live#artist books#pq2023#pq best publication award#prague quadrennial#visual art performance#pq awards#prague quadrennial 2023
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Exhibition of new work: coming April 2023


TENDER CUSPS is a new series of performative video and printed textile works. Informed by the artist’s thirty-year practice in visual performance, the exhibition reconsiders the body in our current era, extending intimacy and duration to domestic material processes and digital technologies. This particular body: white, female, fleshy and aging, attempts to suspend time and prolong the tipping point: the moment right before collapse, dangling, almost falling, almost overflowing. During the months of pandemic anxiety and countless self-tests, the artist noticed a large white spot forming in her throat. The doctor said it was of no concern, just a seed under the surface, gradually getting coated. The image of becoming like an oyster, the body under strain producing pearls, inspired two body-based videos and a series of textile works with beaded embroidery. Interior images of the artist’s own body—including a capture of the white spot and various medical scans from breast to eye to brain—are pigment ink printed on oxford cloth, lightly altered with kitchen solvents, and hand-stitched with glass beads and actual pearls, indicating the vulnerability, familiarity, and lusciousness of the flaws within. The exhibition also includes an edition of diptych Riso prints, as transportable and affordable companion pieces to ‘Horizon,’ a 5.5-meter (18-foot) textile work. http://www.oberwelt.de/

#art#fiberart#fibreart#embroidery#embroideryart#body#performative#soloshow#soloexhibition#bodyinart#stuttgartkunst#video art#performance video#videoperformance
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Now, Shortlisted!
Pleased that our pandemic project is still stretching toward discourses around practice-based research, feminism and equity. Thanks for the nod of recognition, PQ! Our work here is not yet done!

Prague Quadrennial Best Publication Award Short List.
“The Norwegian publication '10 Together: Performances by Longva+Carpenter 2010–2020' (PABlish Forlag) is a beautiful and even moving account documenting and reflecting on a decade of collaborative work between artists Laurel Jay Carpenter (USA) and Terese Longva (Norway) that they realised across half a dozen countries in the Northwestern sphere.
[…]
Of particular importance are the works that examine feminist, post-colonial, decolonial, intercultural and ecological perspectives, given the current state of affairs. Furthermore, the presence of practice-based publications, such as '10 Together' […] in the “Competing” list, alongside academic works, is equally significant. This inclusion has the potential to foster a more equitable environment and horizontal space…”
-from statement by Pavel Drábek, Curator of Publications and other PQ Best Publication 2023 Jurors: Donatella Barbieri and Aziza Kadyr
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Best Publication longlist
Pleased to learn that our book, 10 Together: Performances by Longva+Carpenter has been longlisted for the Best Publication Award at the Prague Quadrennial. Honored to be in such a diverse and international group of fellow author/editors foregrounding Performance Design in the expanded field. Here's a throwback image to 2013 to celebrate--that's the fabric for the dresses on the book cover!

#bookaward#longlist#pq#bestpublicationaward2023#praguequadrennial2023#longvacarpenter#10together#visual art performance#performance art#performance#art#performance design
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New Year, New Art: Into 2023

A new art newsletter, covering the previous 3 years, is now available. New work! New methods! New thinking! And a reflection on timelining a life. (Are we there yet?)
Link to newletter, here.
#performance art#performance#art#live#art newsletter#textile art#body#video art#visual performance#performance for video
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NEW Performance Publication AVAILABLE TODAY!

10 Together: Performances by Longva+Carpenter is an artist-edited monograph of collaborative practice in durational visual performance, providing a chronology of work presented from 2010 to 2020 in galleries and public spaces, in city centers and small towns from the rural USA to islands in Norway, with stops between in Finland, Poland, Germany and Czechia. With vibrant images and descriptions of each work in English and Norwegian, the performances are made accessible to a public beyond the initial viewers at each site. The publication provides an international, intersectional and practice-focused survey of the collaboration with insightful essays which detangle and designate the artists' creative methodologies as vital to current performance discourse.
ORDER NOW! longvacarpenter.com
and please join us: BOOK RELEASE PREVIEW: August 20, Between Sky & Sea performance festival
Longva Artist Residency Skuløya, Møre og Romsdal, Norway • LAUNCH READING + RECEPTION: September 3 at 2pm, Hordaland Kunstsenter, Bergen, Norway
#performance#performance art#visual#visual art#visual art performance#live#live art#art#art book#publication#artist book#monograph#longva#carpenter#visual performance#visual archive
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Upon the Cusp

25 November: Honored to have been in the company of artists Francesca Steele, Traci Kelly, EL Putnam, Elizabeth Short and Lady Helena Vortex to share experiences of the cusp: spaces and states of mid-transition. We each shared our understandings of cusps in our work or body or world: if we define them, how we manage them, what modes and methods we use to derive meanings from them. The idea for the on-line conversation, Upon the Cusp arrived as I was reconsidering performance practices in the Covid-era, and experimenting to extend live and embodied practices to digital realms. This transition of personal creative practices, reflected against the shifting socio-political landscape, catalyzed a sharpened awareness of the cusp as its own experience: we had departed, but not yet arrived. I was curious to delve additional aspects of art and life in the midst of transition, from the micro to the macro—including partisanship and the pandemic, midlife and the middle path, gesture and gestalt.
Noticing the array of online seminars which have focused on either the waiting game of isolation or, more so now, the momentum of re-connecting, I devised Upon the Cusp to open the conversation to the problems and potentials of the space between these defined states of stasis and haste. What is the capacity of the transition-in-process? How can we embrace the unknown of the cusp? Photo: Redd via Unsplash
#performance art#body art#feminism#feminist#cusp#art#creative research#video art#performance#embodiment#live#live art
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Near Far

Chuffed, as they say, to be working with peer-mentors extraordinaire Francesca Steele and Traci Kelly to uncover new modes, methods and meanings in my practice, supported by Arts Council England. A sneak peek includes this video still (working title: Near Far, 2021).
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‘Say Ahhh’ is an up-close, 28-minute performance for video. Wooden depressor pushed to tongue, pin light searching the frame of the wide-open mouth, I allow the camera to expose the cavity of palate and throat and tonsils in a messy test of self-diagnosis, revealing the site of anxiety, the cause of this extended isolation.
Drawing on a long practice of durational performance, ‘Say Ahhh’ pushes up to the limits of the body—jaw tightening, breathing labored, throat filling and becoming quickly red and raw—as the visual becomes increasing abstracted, and the sound aligns with a chant or drone. I encourage all types of engagement: perhaps coming and going along the timeline, similar to how the public encounters the performances I usually make over 8 or 10 or 15 hours, or staying with it: a surrender to subtle shifts in a tight frame and a reassessment of proximity and sensuality, scale and scope.
In reconsidering the intersection between the live and the mediated, performance and its document, I use this work to till the lineage of Peggy Phelan’s purist ontology of performance toward Philip Auslander’s redefinition of liveness, and further reference Laura Mark’s collapsing of the visual and the haptic. As a visual performer, I have particular spatial, durational and embodied experience, but I have been video-resistant in my own practice, so in this suspended Covid time I began looking back in order to move forward, and this piece certainly pays tribute to both Annie Sprinkle’s 1990 live performance ‘Public Cervix Announcement’ as well as VALIE EXPORT’s 2007 video work in which her vocal cords were recorded with a medical camera, ‘the voice as performance, act and body.’
I am thankful for this opportunity with the Performance Research Network at Newcastle University to uncover new possibilities in my practice, and from within my lineage, as I explore what liveness means now.
Exhibition ‘LIVENESS’ now on view: https://speccollstories.ncl.ac.uk/liveness/index.html
#performance#performance art#duration#durational performance#long duration#durational#video art#mouth#tonsil#gums#teeth#say ah#live#art#live art
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"After all, monumentalizing a woman, in any form, is still a radical act."
I quote myself, above, and feel it with clarity and certainty these days after the US Primary Election results.
Taking up space as a feminist intention gets discussed further, in terms of my art practice, in the podcast with scholar Paula Blair. It’s a meander through my current and previous work in a conversational interview. Nostalgia blends with some new knowledge: Audiovisual Cultures Podcast #61 "Alone in the Beauty, Together."
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Short Interview

I'll be performing at the Performance Art Oslo festival in late November. As part of PAO's mission, they interview and archive commentary from the invited artists, to build a significant resource, over many years, of first-hand information about process and procedure by performers. Here is a peek at my short interview. (photo: Arto Polus)
Interview here.
#performance#art#performance art#artist#interview#Oslo#PAO#visual#visual art performance#visual performance
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No Silence No Sound

Honored to be invited to this year's festival "No silence - No Sound - How to Hear a Performance" orchestrated by Performance Art Oslo. As a phonophobic (imagined or real?) I anticipate a wild sonic ride. Trying to hear the sound of a pin drop, in the performance, I utter “shhhhhhhhhhhhhh.” More info on the PAO site here.
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I Live in this Dress
The new art journal "Afterimages" out of the The Academy of Fine Art in Łódź, Poland is launched this month. It is huge and gorgeous! The premiere issue focuses on fashion in the expanded field and includes a stunning 10-page spread of my recent work using the sculptural garment in performance, with some tendrils reaching back to older work too. The essay I authored is titled, "I Live in this Dress: Materiality and Identity in Visual Art Performance." It's been translated to Polish, so here's a look at just the first overleaf. Thank you to editor (and fellow performer) Marta Ostajewska for the invitation to contribute.


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Sliding Scale

Comparing works from the span of my career, ‘Sliding Scale: Oversized Dresses and Small Moments in Visual Art Performance’ traces the elasticity and slippage in the consideration of scale through a reflective analysis of the sculptural wearable. The body serves as a standard measure; the oversized garments in Red Crest (2003), Again with Gusto (2009) and Of Wanting (2017) each adjust the scale of the performer with a linear extension from the back, connecting and conflating the body with larger space and site. The woman extends, connecting to architecture, to earth and to the surrounding community. In these performance garments, she is also tethered, contained and burdened. Yet, her determination transcends the circumstance, overlapping and inverting multiple measures—shifting scale to scope, and revealing subtle gradations across additional aspects of each performance, from spectacle to intimacy, archetype to identity, and self to collective. This is the sliding scale of scale: the range of small to big, equally balanced, and big to small, revealing how scale, in its relationality, can never be fixed.
LINK to journal. photo: Bjarte Bjørkum
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All by Our Selves: A one-day, interdisciplinary symposium: Friday, October 5, 2018, 9am – 5pm The Hedley Suite, Sandyford Building 4th floor, Northumbria University, Newcastle UK
Free and open to the public
All by Our Selves is a symposium tracing our understanding of personae or segmented selves as they function across disciplines: including law, sports, education, spiritual practices and art. “Persona” or “Alter Ego” are terms widely used within theatrical and literary traditions, as well as more broadly across the politics of identity in contemporary cultural studies. The theatrical persona is a third entity that mediates the real person and the fictional character, and is related to how it was first described in ancient philosophy. In Cicero’s theory, persona is the taking on of public roles that extract aspects of the Self rather than suppressing it. For Seneca, as later for psychoanalyst Carl Jung, persona represented the façade, a fraud concealing the true self beneath. So, from the earliest history of the word, persona took on a dual meaning—as both exterior and essence, performance and performer.
In the current socio-political climate, the construct of a binary Self, one or the other, has expanded to a spectrum. This re-examination includes the multiplicity of roles we all embody each day: social, intimate, private and professional personas can overlap and diverge; strands of the Self are able to be dissected—the worker, the parent, the partner, the peer, the citizen—as functioning independently, but in tandem. We are all all these things. This is a step away from the actor/character or truth/mask divide, in that the Self is holistic in its complexity. The emerging field of Persona Studies foregrounds the manifestation of faceted and strategic selves, conspicuous in celebrity culture and within the upsurge of social media sharing. In education, we often discuss the “Teaching Persona,” in law the “Court Room Persona;” these coexist with our familial, sexual and/or civic selves.
In this one-day symposium practitioners and thinkers from a variety of disciplines, with several speakers with particular interests in performance, will present and discuss how multiple/other selves inform their work, allowing places of rupture and intersection in considering identity. Our culture is replete with notions of archetypes, avatars, social roles, and states of awareness; do the specifics of these inform and direct how and in fact, who we are in the world today?
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