Alex Da Corte in “Everyday Icons” - Season 11 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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  • Опубликовано: 25 апр 2023
  • Art21 proudly presents an artist segment, featuring Alex Da Corte, from the "Everyday Icons" episode in the eleventh season of the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" series.
    "Everyday Icons" premiered in April 2023 on PBS.
    In a darkened gallery, artist Alex Da Corte appears projected on the wall in Slow Graffiti (2017) as Boris Karloff, performing as both the actor himself and his 1931 role as Frankenstein's monster, blurring the lines between actor and character. In his work, the artist never appears as himself, but rather, embodies the larger-than-life characters who influence or intrigue him: Mr. Rogers, the Wicked Witch of the West, Marcel Duchamp, and the Pink Panther are but a handful. Studying these characters who exist in worlds of fantasy and cartoon and integrating them into his own expansive artistic vision, Da Corte hopes to gain a deeper understanding of them and learn new ways of thinking.
    Alex Da Corte was born in Camden, New Jersey, in 1980 and lives and works in Philadelphia. The artist received his BFA from the University of the Arts in 2004, and an MFA from Yale University School of Art in 2010. Da Corte creates vibrant and immersive large-scale installations, including wall-based works, sculptures, and videos. Colorful and surreal, his work combines personal narrative, art-historical references, pop-culture characters, and the glossy aesthetics of commercial advertising to reveal the humor, absurdity, and psychological complexity of the images and stories that permeate our culture.
    Learn more about the artist at:
    art21.org/artist/alex-da-corte/
    CREDITS | Executive Producer: Tina Kukielski. Series Producer: Nick Ravich. Director & Producer: Ian Forster. Editor: Bryan Chang. Director of Photography: Jarred Alterman.
    Assistant Curator: Jurrell Lewis. Associate Producer: Andrea Chung. Design & Animation: Ryan Carl, Nikita Iziev. Composer: Andrew Orkin. Additional Music: Annie Clark, Austin Fisher. Additional Vidoe Editor: Addison Post. Additional Photography: Sean Hanley, John Marton, Simon Weyhe. Location Sound: Jeffrey Archer, Jackson Derbish, Marco Diallo.
    Video Post-Production Services: Cut + Measure. Video Post-Production Producer: Alex Laviola. Colorist: Chris Ramey. Video Post-Production Coordinator: Catherine DiRosa. Online & Conform: David Gauff. Additional Animation: Andy Cahill. Audio Post-Production Services: Konsonant Post. Re-Recording Mixer & Sound Editor: Gisela Fullà-Silvestre. Assistant Editors: Ellen Askey, Michelle Hanks. Audio Description: 3Play Media. Station Relations De Shields Associates. Legal Counsel: Withersworldwide. Additional Curatorial Research: Susan Thompson.
    Additional Art21 Staff: Lauren Barnett, Hannah DeGarmo, Lolita Fierro, Joe Fusaro, Molaundo Jones, Emma Nordin, Anna Pruett, Jessica Svenson, Noor Tamari, Nora Wimmer. Interns: Stephanie Ades, Sekou Cherif, Yeon Cho, Michaela Esteban, Emma Flood, Renee Rienecker, James Santiago, Adam Varca, Dani Wieder.
    Artwork Courtesy: Alex Da Corte; Matthew Marks Gallery; Sadie Coles HQ; Brancusi ©Succession Brancusi - All rights reserved (ARS) 2023; Duchamp, © Association Marcel Duchamp / ADAGP, Paris / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York 2023; Oldenburg, © The Museum of Modern Art / Licensed by SCALA / ArtResource, NY. Archival Materials: Hans Hammarskiöld Heritage, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
    Special Thanks: The Art21 Board of Trustees, Danielle Brock, Carnegie Museum of Art, Americo Da Corte Jr., David Zwirner Gallery, Sasha Hecht, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Cara Monroe, Philadelphia Museum of Art, William Pym, Scott J. Ross, Maartje Oldenburg, Whitney Museum of Art.
    Major underwriting for Season 11 of Art in the Twenty-First Century is provided by PBS, National Endowment for the Arts, Lambent Foundation, The Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Toby Devan Lewis, Robert Lehman Foundation, and Nion McEvoy & Leslie Berriman.
    Series Creators: Susan Dowling and Susan Sollins.
    ©2023 Art21, Inc.
    #AlexDaCorte #EverydayIcons #Art21
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Комментарии • 20

  • @jumbajambaddada191
    @jumbajambaddada191 Год назад +10

    Da Corte's so humble it's embarrassing to call him brilliant. Had the surprise of a lifetime stumbling into his solo-exhibition in Copenhagen. I was floored by the endless flood of his creativity. He has a mastery of commenting on society in new and interesting ways. Thank you Alex for bringing your life to life.

  • @escorpiontutuguri
    @escorpiontutuguri Год назад +2

    just when I thought I was getting bored of art I see this video! Fantastic! great! Thank you!

  • @urbangardan1
    @urbangardan1 Год назад +3

    Thank you Alex and thank you Art 21. Wish I had this when I was 16

  • @Sachaannstarart
    @Sachaannstarart Год назад +1

    At first I was like, what is happening?! Now, I say thank you ! 👏🏽

  • @dandoescreative
    @dandoescreative Год назад +1

    How light, how lovely, beguiling and unassuming. Brilliant!

  • @DarjaSum
    @DarjaSum Год назад +2

    that's so exiting to follow his ideas through this video!

  • @letty3164
    @letty3164 Год назад +1

    Wow. Just wow. Thank you.

  • @eduardl.l.e.e
    @eduardl.l.e.e Год назад +3

    Great video, keep up the valuable productions!

  • @petergordon4456
    @petergordon4456 Год назад +1

    Loved it if only could be there I would let my imagination run wild with you & the over Artist .Best peter Scotland xx

  • @pameladaley955
    @pameladaley955 Год назад +1

    So great and squishy and lovable! Smiling and grinning the whole time. Not that it's funny; it's warm soft lovey.

  • @luzvenegas319
    @luzvenegas319 Год назад +1

    Loved this.

  • @OngoingBox
    @OngoingBox Год назад

    very cool

  • @apollicino2824
    @apollicino2824 Год назад

    only a minute in, so glad I clicked on this video :) (shout out to the blue bird of happiness, if you know, you know)

  • @juanjosez6881
    @juanjosez6881 Год назад

  • @stuartday1330
    @stuartday1330 Год назад

    I'll call this person when I need my Halloween costume customized.

  • @sergiorozo2143
    @sergiorozo2143 Год назад

    dadaism

  • @ueckbueck
    @ueckbueck Год назад

    I’m kinda surprised by the way the PMA displays the works of Brancusi.. I’d prefer walking all the around sculptures instead of being stopped right in front of them. Seeing someone seeing the works like that made me feel so … blocked(?)😅 excluded(?) pushed away(??) 😅😅

  • @rembrandx
    @rembrandx Год назад +1

    Just practically: aren't all his subjects copyright protected? How does he get around to using them without getting into lawsuits? It's not parody or satire. Not really recontextualized, as it's presented without context (to my eyes anyway).

  • @tralexan
    @tralexan 2 месяца назад

    Alex Da Corte seems to try a bit too hard. The consequence of which is to overstate. Overstatement can lead to ideas and objects that are parodies of themselves. That happens from time to time in the work shown here.