Stuart Sherman (artist)

Stuart A. Sherman was a performance artist, playwright, filmmaker, videographer, poet, essayist, sculptor and collagist. He was born 9 November 1945 to Helen Gordon and Samuel Sherman in Providence, Rhode Island. Soon after attending Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, Sherman moved to Manhattan and began a career in the arts which would span the next three decades. Before mounting his own work, Stuart Sherman worked extensively with Charles Ludlam in the early days of the Ridiculous Theatrical Company and with Richard Foreman's Ontological-Hysteric Theater (Sherman appeared as Max in Foreman's "Pain(t)" in 1974).

Sherman was possibly best known for his solo "spectacles": programs of very short playlets performed on portable tabletops propped open on the sidewalk—or in the park, or someone’s apartment—in which he would physically manipulate and create semantic "dramas" around inanimate objects.[1] He created and performed eighteen "spectacles" in all (12 solo and 6 group performances) as well as larger-scale dramatic works, including Chekhov, Brecht and Strindberg (1985–86), a trilogy of short plays adapting and commenting obliquely on those authors, Slant (concerning Emily Dickinson) (1987), and Solaris (1992).

Stuart Sherman also made over forty films and videos (rarely lasting more than five minutes), many of the most haunting of which were portraits of friends: Portrait of Benedicte Pesle (1984), Mr. Ashley Proposes (Portrait of George) (1985), Liberation (Portrait of Berenice Reynaud) (1993), and the 73-second Edwin Denby (1978). Nearly all of Stuart Sherman's film works are in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art. Although best known for his performances and video, Sherman practiced in a variety of visual and literary mediums. He considered all of his artistic practices to share a performative dimension, and denied any guiding aesthetic principle. Sherman was wary of attributing any strict meaning to his work and assumed an essential polysemy in its interpretation. This assumption critically aligned Sherman's work with that of many of his downtown contemporaries.

Akin to the many distinct forms his art took, Sherman's work found an international audience. Although perhaps most at home with his New York contemporaries, he performed, exhibited, and lectured throughout the US (San Francisco, Cambridge, Boston, Indianapolis, Chicago) and abroad (Germany, the Netherlands, France, Wales, Japan, Australia).

Stuart Sherman received numerous awards for his work, including a Prix de Rome, a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Obie, a MacDowell Colony fellowship, an Asian Cultural Council grant, a DAAD grant for residency in Berlin, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Sherman died of AIDS in San Francisco on 14 September 2001.[2]

In 2009 Sherman was honored with two exhibitions in New York. Beginningless Thought/ Endless Seeing: The Works of Stuart Sherman, curated by John Hagan, Yolanda Hawkins, and John Matturri and organized by Jonathan Berger. exhibited at 80WSE Gallery New York University October 21 - December 19, 2009.[3] Stuart Sherman: Nothing Up My Sleeve, curated by Jonathan Berger, exhibited as part of Performa 09 at PARTICIPANT, INC. New York, Nov. 8-Dec. 20, 2009.[4] Both exhibitions were reviewed in many publications including The New York Times,[5] Freize Magazine,[6] Art in America[7] In 2013, Sherman was the subject of a new film by Robin Deacon, Spectacle: A Portrait of Stuart Sherman

Stage works

Filmography

Videography

Awards

References

  1. Schwarting, Jen (February 2010). "Stuart Sherman: Nothing Up My Sleeve". The Brooklyn Rail.
  2. Gussow, Mel (September 20, 2001). "Stuart Sherman, 55, Performance Artist and Playwright". New York Times. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  3. Sherman, Stuart (2011). Beginningless Thought / Endless Seeing: The Works of Stuart Sherman. New York: 80WSE, New York University. ISBN 978-0982986127.
  4. Berger, Jonathan (2010). Nothing up my sleeve : an exhibition based on the work of Stuart Sherman. New York: Participant, Inc., Regency Arts Press Ltd. ISBN 9780980232417.
  5. Carter, Holland (November 29, 2009). "A Tabletop Conjurer, Rediscovered". New York Times. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  6. Stern, Steven (March 2010). "Stuart Sherman". Frieze Magazine (129). Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  7. Farzin, Media (October 23, 2009). "The Many Spectacles of Stuart Sherman". Art in America.

External links

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