
The Hungarian Cultural
Center presents
MY COUNTRY
a new installation by Andrea
Dezsö and Miwa Koizumi
DATES: February 15th-April 5th, 2007
Opening Reception: Thursday,
February 15th, 6-8pm
PLACE: Hungarian Cultural Center, 447 Broadway, 5th Floor, NYC
ADMISSION: Free
Open hours Monday-Friday, 9-5pm
or weekends by appointment
press contact: Stefany Anne Golberg
In My Country, New
York-based foreign-born artists Andrea Dezsö (born in Transylvania and
ethnic Hungarian) and Miwa Koizumi (born in Japan, schooled in France], take on the
challenge of home and cultural identity.
There is much wrapped up in
reflecting upon about one’s own country—memory, patriotism, childhood,
identity. What is exactly is one’s country? For artists working in New York the question
can be even more complex. There’s your country of origin, your country of
residence, the country of your parents. There’s the place you were born and the
place you consider home. The very word “country” can conjure up complicated
emotions that are often difficult and challenging but can also be delightfully
evocative and even enlightening.
Transforming the Hungarian Cultural Center
into a series of winding corridors and intimate rooms, Ms. Dezsö and
Ms. Koizumi take visitors on a physical and psychological journey that
is at times comic and unsettling. Though quite different artists in many
respects, both Andrea Dezsö and Miwa Koizumi are distinctly
interested in the theme of memory. It is this theme that acts as the
nexus for the ideas of the artists. Ms. Dezsö tells stories through
images and creates unique personal narratives that often take on a
knowingly nihilistic tone and a love of life’s absurdities. She makes
one-of-a-kind artist’s books, paper cutouts, sculpture and embroidery. Ms.
Koizumi explores memory through the ephemerality of materials. Using
everyday garbage like plastic bags and soda bottles, she designs intricate
sculptures and interactive installations to reveal simple wonders about
our everyday existence. Continuing the theme of transience, Ms. Koizumi is
also a food artist, and often explores taste as an aesthetic experience in
her work. Both artists are careful and diligent crafters, creating beautiful
and delicate objects that are so almost in spite of their quotidian materials.
Weaving through their respective works, viewers will come to points of
collaboration between the two artists, as the “borders”, so-to-speak, become
blurred.
As My Country presents Ms.
Dezsö’s and Ms. Koizumi’s thoughtful perspectives on their
countries, it encourages viewers to reflect upon their own given homelands.
GUEST ARTISTS
My Country will feature additional established New York artists responding to the theme of
“country” during the run of the show. All events will take place at the Hungarian Cultural Center
and admission is free.
Thursday, March 8
7:00 PM Russian-born artist Dasha
Shishkin
Thursday, March 22
7:00 PM New York-based artist Coco
Fusco presents her film Operation Atropos
Friday, April 6
8:00 PM Israeli-born Dance and
Theater company LeeSaar The Company present “Moopim” a 50-minute
performance
Friday, April 13 8:00 PM CLOSING PARTY WITH MIWA KOIZUMI
For the closing of My Country,
artist Miwa Koizumi will present a food performance
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Andrea Dezsö was born in Transylvania
and is ethnic Hungarian. She has resided in New York since 1997. Dezsö has shown her
work at the Jack Tilton Gallery, The New York
Armory Show, Art Basel Miami,
Flux Factory, Galapagos, and her work has been included in prestigious
public and private collections. “Community
Garden” Dezsö’s large-scale
public art mosaic commissioned by the MTA Arts for Transit has been
recently installed in NYC in the Bedford
Park Boulevard subway station on the # 4 line.
Dezsö’s art has been published in The New York Times and on the cover of
visual design magazine Print. Dezsö’s illustrated original fiction,
“Mamushka” has been published in the art magazine Esopus, and “Names in
a Book in Random Order” appeared in the leading alternative comic publication
Blab. The literary journal McSweeney’s featured a series of short
stories she wrote drawing from her experiences growing up in Romania. A book
about Dezsö’s art, creative process and obsessions titled “Andrea Dezsö Fetish
Book” was published in 2006 by Publikum.
Andrea Dezsö is an Assistant
Professor of Media Design at Parsons The New School for Design in New York City. She has
also taught at City College, The Hungarian University of Design, The
American Museum of Visionary Art, and the Cooper-Hewitt National
Design Museum.
www.andreadezso.com Luminitza collects the green, star-shaped bellybuttons of
oranges. She keeps them in a shoebox which she shakes every now and then to
hear their bellybutton music. She says that her father works for the
Securitate. They have special stores, people who work for the Securitate, in
buildings unmarked from the outside where they enter using secret passes, where
oranges, candy bars, and bananas are sold. We are afraid of Luminitza because
if she doesn't like you her father can make a phone call, and he can get your
parents disappear one day on their way to work, never to come home again, so we
swear to give her all the bellybuttons we come by, even the ones we find on the
street, but I haven't seen oranges for years and I never find anything valuable
on the streets, yet in my dreams I sit under enormous, fragrant, blossoming orange
trees in a faraway land filling my pockets with green, star-shaped bellybuttons
for Luminitza…---from Andrea Dezsö’s “The Numbers”, McSweeney's issue 12
Miwa Koizumi was born and raised in Japan. Married to a
French-American, she primarily speaks French at her home in Brooklyn.
Before moving to New York in 2001, she studied
in France for 5 years and in
Bali, Indonesia with a group of Ethnographic
Researchers. Koizumi received an MFA from Tama Art-University in Japan,
and the DNSAP from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where she was honored with the Multimedia
Prize upon graduation. Recently she has been studying the pidgin cultures resulting
from the clash between the innumerable small tribes present in New York City.
Miwa Koizumi has exhibited
internationally in Japan, France, and the USA. Recently at ISE Foundation,
Redux Contemporary Art Center, Flux Factory, NGC244, Goliath Visual Space,
Corcoran College, Gallerie Caisse des Depots, Chateau d'Oiron, ENSBA, and Parco
Gallery. www.miwa.metm.org
In 1989, I was a student in Japan. Our
emperor changed, the Second World War criminal
was replaced, and I remember thinking, “I'm living in a really nice moment when
I don’t know any fear”. At the same time, I saw the Romanian Revolution on TV
and all of Eastern Europe shouting and moving.
I couldn't understand how people could shout out so much emotion and how so
much human energy could move people forward. So I decided to see with my own
eyes Romania, Hungary, the new Czech
Republic, and East Germany.
This was my first trip to another country. I took a ticket on the Russian
airline Aeroflot and my journey started in the Red Square in Moscow at night without a passport because
the Soviet Border Guards kept the passports of all the travelers in transit.---quote
from Miwa Koizumi on My Country
ABOUT THE GUEST ARTISTS
Coco Fusco is a New York-based interdisciplinary artist and writer.
She has performed, lectured, exhibited and curated around the world since 1988.
She is the author of English is Broken Here (The New Press, 1995), The Bodies
That Were Not Ours and Other Writings (Routledge/inIVA, 2001) and the editor of
Corpus Delecti: Performance Art of the Americas (Routledge, 1999) and Only Skin
Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self (Abrams, 2003). Fusco is a recipient
of a 2003 Herb Alpert Award in the Arts. She is an associate professor in the
Visual Arts Division of Columbia University’s School of the Arts. www.cocofusco.com
LeeSaar The Company was established in Israel in 2000 by the actress and
writer Lee Sher and The Dancer/Choreographer Saar Harari. The company uses the
different disciplines and training of Theater and Dance to create original
theater and dance performances. The company members are from England, Germany,
Italy, the United States and Israel. In 2004, after a residency
in Sydney, Australia, and two seasons in Tel
Aviv, the company moved to NYC where it is currently based. Performance Space
122 commissioned and presented the new work of the company "Herd Of Bulls”
on October 2005 and in January 2006. Following these two successful seasons and
great reviews from the NY Times and the New Yorker, the company has been
invited to create new work for a long run at Performance space 122.
(September-October 2006)
Dasha Shishkin was born in Moscow and
resides in New York City.
She received an MFA at Columbia
University and shows with
Grimm Rosenfeld Gallery. Dasha Shishkin has shown her work internationally and
recently appeared in PS1’s Greater New York show. www.grimmrosenfeld.com