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{{Short description|Canadian artist}}
{{BLP sources|date=April 2015}}
{{BLP sources|date=April 2015}}
'''Perry Bard''' (born in [[Quebec City, Canada]]) lives and works in New York City. She is an interdisciplinary artist who works with film, site-specific public art installation projects around the world, and on the Internet.
'''Perry Bard''' (born in [[Quebec City, Canada]]) lives and works in New York City. She is an interdisciplinary artist who works with film, site-specific public art installation projects around the world, and on the Internet.


Many of her projects are collaborations with the public and selected communities. In 2011, her ongoing work [http://docubase.mit.edu/project/man-with-a-movie-camera-global-remake/ Man with a Movie Camera: The Global Remake] was chosen for inclusion in Google’s selected top creative uses of the Internet. In 2010 the project was named one of the [http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/online/participate/youtube-play/top-videos Top 25 Videos for the Guggenheim Museum's ''YouTube Play Biennial of Creative Video'']. For the public participation project, Bard invited interpretations of [[Dziga Vertov]]’s classic 1929 film ''[[Man with a Movie Camera]]'', through uploads to http://dziga.perrybard.net where software designed for the project archives sequences and streams a new film daily on the site. "The viewer sees two concurrent sets of images on a single screen: Vertov's original film and the remake of it that has been constructed on the Internet."<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Feldman|first1=Seth|title=On the Internet, nobody knows you're a constructivist: Perry Bard's 'The Man with the Movie Camera: The Global Remake' |journal=Jump Cut: A review of contemporary media|date=Summer 2010|volume=No. 52}}</ref> The film has been shown at the [[Moscow International Film Festival]], the [[Toronto International Film Festival]], and the [[International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam]], at the Transmediale<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://transmediale.de/de/perry-bard|title=Perry Bard {{!}} transmediale|website=transmediale.de|access-date=2016-03-06}}</ref> Berlin and won awards at [[Ars Electronica]], Liedts-Meesen, and Transitio_MX. The remade film "exists on the Web, at media festivals, and in the gallery and museum but also travels and is launched on outdoor public commons screens."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Suderburg|first1=Erika|title=Resolutions 3: Global Networks in Video, Chapter: "Database, 'Anarcheologie', the Commons, Kino-Eye, and Mash: How Bard, Kaufman, Svilova, and Vertox continue the revolution"|date=2012|publisher=University of Minnesota Press}}</ref> Evelin Stermitz quotes Bard in an interview in ''Rhizome'': "The primary idea was to use global input via the Internet to generate multiple versions of one film to be screened in public space and on the web."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Stermitz|first1=Evelin|title=Man with a Moview Camera: The Global Remake--Interview with Perry Bard|url=http://www.rhizome.org/discuss/41030|website=www.rhizome.org|publisher=Rhizome|accessdate=February 15, 2015}}</ref>
Many of her projects are collaborations with the public and selected communities. In 2011, her ongoing work Man with a Movie Camera: The Global Remake was chosen for inclusion in Google's selected top creative uses of the Internet. In 2010 the project was named one of the Top 25 Videos for the Guggenheim Museum's ''YouTube Play Biennial of Creative Video''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Top Videos |url=http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/online/participate/youtube-play/top-videos/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307040209/http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/online/participate/youtube-play/top-videos/ |archive-date=7 March 2016 |access-date=12 January 2022 |website=www.guggenheim.org}}</ref> For the public participation project, Bard invited interpretations of [[Dziga Vertov]]'s classic 1929 film ''[[Man with a Movie Camera]]'', through uploads to a web site where software designed for the project archives sequences and streams a new film daily on the site. "The viewer sees two concurrent sets of images on a single screen: Vertov's original film and the remake of it that has been constructed on the Internet."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Feldman |first=Seth |date=Summer 2010 |title=On the Internet, nobody knows you're a constructivist: Perry Bard's 'The Man with the Movie Camera: The Global Remake' |journal=Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media |volume=52}}</ref> The film has been shown at the [[Moscow International Film Festival]], the [[Toronto International Film Festival]], and the [[International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam]], at the Transmediale<ref>{{Cite web |title=Perry Bard {{!}} transmediale |url=https://transmediale.de/de/perry-bard |access-date=2016-03-06 |website=transmediale.de}}</ref> Berlin and won awards at [[Ars Electronica]], Liedts-Meesen, and Transitio_MX. The remade film "exists on the Web, at media festivals, and in the gallery and museum but also travels and is launched on outdoor public commons screens."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Suderburg |first=Erika |title=Resolutions 3: Global Networks in Video, Chapter: "Database, 'Anarcheologie', the Commons, Kino-Eye, and Mash: How Bard, Kaufman, Svilova, and Vertox continue the revolution" |date=2012 |publisher=University of Minnesota Press}}</ref> [[Evelin Stermitz]] quotes Bard in an interview in ''Rhizome'': "The primary idea was to use global input via the Internet to generate multiple versions of one film to be screened in public space and on the web."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Stermitz |first=Evelin |title=Man with a Moview Camera: The Global Remake--Interview with Perry Bard |url=http://www.rhizome.org/discuss/41030 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150216053958/http://rhizome.org/discuss/41030/ |archive-date=February 16, 2015 |access-date=February 15, 2015 |website=www.rhizome.org |publisher=Rhizome}}</ref>
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==Career==
==Career==


Bard created ''Status: Stolen'', a [[public work]] focused on [[artifact (archaeology)|artifact]]s missing from [[Iraq]]’s [[Baghdad Museum]] in 2005. A mobile truckside billboard depicting the missing artifacts traversed New York City for thirty days in June 2005. "Bard's itinerant billboard served as an ''[[aide-memoire]],'' reminding us that military victory and cultural conquest go hand in hand."<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sholette|first1=Gregory|title=Breaking and Entering|journal=Art Journal|date=2006}}</ref> A number of magazine advertisements featuring the artifacts followed in issues of ''Art Journal'' in 2006.
Bard created ''Status: Stolen'', a [[public work]] focused on [[artifact (archaeology)|artifact]]s missing from [[Iraq]]'s [[Baghdad Museum]] in 2005. A mobile truckside billboard depicting the missing artifacts traversed New York City for thirty days in June 2005. "Bard's itinerant billboard served as an ''[[aide-memoire]],'' reminding us that military victory and cultural conquest go hand in hand."<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sholette|first1=Gregory|title=Breaking and Entering|journal=Art Journal|date=2006|volume=65|issue=2|pages=6–7|doi=10.1080/00043249.2006.10791201|s2cid=191496256}}</ref> A number of magazine advertisements featuring the artifacts followed in issues of ''Art Journal'' in 2006.


Bard also writes often for ''[[Afterimage]]: The Journal of Media Arts and Cultural Criticism'', and has curated a number of exhibitions in the United States and abroad.
Bard also writes often for ''[[Afterimage]]: The Journal of Media Arts and Cultural Criticism'', and has curated a number of exhibitions in the United States and abroad.
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*''The Times'',<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.vtape.org/critical-writing-index-article?id=1105|title=Critical Writing Index Article {{!}} Vtape|website=www.vtape.org|access-date=2016-03-08}}</ref> an installation at Petrosino Park, New York City. Steel and mirror "roof," and the first paragraph of [[Charles Dickens]]' ''[[Tale of Two Cities]]'' painted backwards on the sidewalk referencing [[homelessness]]. Commissioned by the [[Lower Manhattan]] Cultural Council, 1992.
*''The Times'',<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.vtape.org/critical-writing-index-article?id=1105|title=Critical Writing Index Article {{!}} Vtape|website=www.vtape.org|access-date=2016-03-08}}</ref> an installation at Petrosino Park, New York City. Steel and mirror "roof," and the first paragraph of [[Charles Dickens]]' ''[[Tale of Two Cities]]'' painted backwards on the sidewalk referencing [[homelessness]]. Commissioned by the [[Lower Manhattan]] Cultural Council, 1992.
*''Back Seat Foot Arm Lead'', an installation at [[MoMA PS1|P.S. 1]]. Twelve desk arms mounted on steel poles with typical desk chair cast in lead; slide projection of students' feet crossing and uncrossing at the foot of the chair, 1991.
*''Back Seat Foot Arm Lead'', an installation at [[MoMA PS1|P.S. 1]]. Twelve desk arms mounted on steel poles with typical desk chair cast in lead; slide projection of students' feet crossing and uncrossing at the foot of the chair, 1991.
*''Shelters and Other Spaces'', an installation at the [[SculptureCenter]] in New York. ]]Concrete block]]s, rocks, [[slide projector]] with 81 pictures of temporary shelters on the streets of New York City projected onto glass "pillow" and cardboard shelter bought from Scott, who was living on the street.
*''Shelters and Other Spaces'', an installation at the [[SculptureCenter]] in New York. [[Concrete block]]s, rocks, [[slide projector]] with 81 pictures of temporary shelters on the streets of New York City projected onto glass "pillow" and cardboard shelter bought from Scott, who was living on the street.
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*''The Terminal Salon'', a site-specific public video projection at the [[Staten Island Ferry Terminal]], in collaboration with residents of a [[housing project]] on [[Staten Island]], commissioned by [[Sailors' Snug Harbor]] and produced in collaboration with the [[New York City Housing Authority]] and the Department of Transportation, 2000.
*''The Terminal Salon'', a site-specific public video projection at the [[Staten Island Ferry Terminal]], in collaboration with residents of a [[housing project]] on [[Staten Island]], commissioned by [[Sailors' Snug Harbor]] and produced in collaboration with the [[New York City Housing Authority]] and the Department of Transportation, 2000.
*''Walk This Way'', a rear-screen [[video projection]] in a public square in [[Middlesbrough]], UK, in collaboration with at-risk teens invited by the [[University of Teeside]], 2001.
*''Walk This Way'', a rear-screen [[video projection]] in a public square in [[Middlesbrough]], UK, in collaboration with at-risk teens invited by the [[University of Teesside]], 2001.
*''Boomerang: No Delay'', a [[Skype]] collaboration with Alejandro Jaramillio Hoyos, [[Bogota]], on remake of [[Nancy Holt]]'s and [[Richard Serra]]'s video ''Boomerang'', 2011.
*''Boomerang: No Delay'', a [[Skype]] collaboration with Alejandro Jaramillio Hoyos, [[Bogota]], on remake of [[Nancy Holt]]'s and [[Richard Serra]]'s video ''Boomerang'', 2011.


==Recent projects==
==Recent projects==


*''Hotel.'' A performance and a video installation commissioned for the First International Biennial of Art [[Cartagena, Colombia]]. Gestures of [[waiters]] [[choreograph]]ed and performed in collaboration with dancers from El Colegio del Cuerpo for the city whose largest employer is the hotel industry, 2014.[http://www.biaci.org/en/perry-bard/]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.biaci.org/en/perry-bard/|title=1ra Bienal Internacional|website=www.biaci.org|access-date=2016-03-05}}</ref>
*''Hotel.'' A performance and a video installation commissioned for the First International Biennial of Art [[Cartagena, Colombia]]. Gestures of [[waiters]] [[choreograph]]ed and performed in collaboration with dancers from El Colegio del Cuerpo for the city whose largest employer is the hotel industry, 2014.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.biaci.org/en/perry-bard/|title=1ra Bienal Internacional|website=www.biaci.org|access-date=2016-03-05}}</ref>
*''Out My Window Down the Alley Around the Corner and Up the Block.'' Houses, hotels and [[technoculture]] mix in this video where inside, outside, public and private dissolve into one [[gentrifying]] landscape. Single channel video screened in [http://press.moma.org/2014/11/documentary-fortnight-2015/ Documentary Fortnight] at the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York (2015); two channel installation with [[3D computer graphics|3D]] objects exhibited at Joyce Yahouda Gallery, [[Montreal]], 2014.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.moma.org/calendar/events/859?locale=en|title=Shorts Program: Giving Voice {{!}} MoMA|website=The Museum of Modern Art|access-date=2016-03-05}}</ref>
*''Out My Window Down the Alley Around the Corner and Up the Block.'' Houses, hotels and [[technoculture]] mix in this video where inside, outside, public and private dissolve into one [[gentrifying]] landscape. Single channel video screened in Documentary Fortnight at the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York (2015); two channel installation with [[3D computer graphics|3D]] objects exhibited at Joyce Yahouda Gallery, [[Montreal]], 2014.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.moma.org/calendar/events/859?locale=en|title=Shorts Program: Giving Voice {{!}} MoMA|website=The Museum of Modern Art|access-date=2016-03-05}}</ref>
*''Traffic,'' a documentary short film about the [[knock-off]] trade on [[Canal Street (Manhattan)|Canal Street]], New York City, as part of Documentary Fortnight, Vipe International Media Festival, [[Basel]], 2005.
*''Traffic,'' a documentary short film about the [[Dupes|knock-off]] trade on [[Canal Street (Manhattan)|Canal Street]], New York City, as part of Documentary Fortnight, Vipe International Media Festival, [[Basel]], 2005.
*''The Meaning of Bialy'', a [[video installation]] commissioned by Hybrid Dwellings, Arsenal Gallery, [[Białystok]], [[Poland]]. [[Bialy]]s are returned to Bialystok, their point of origin in this artwork which uses food to reveal cultural practices, prejudices and histories, 2001.
*''The Meaning of Bialy'', a [[video installation]] commissioned by Hybrid Dwellings, Arsenal Gallery, [[Białystok]], [[Poland]]. [[Bialy]]s are returned to Bialystok, their point of origin in this artwork which uses food to reveal cultural practices, prejudices and histories, 2001.
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==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* {{citation |last=Beaudet |first=Pascal |title=Parallels & Boundaries |work=Vanguard |date=May 1984 |page=45 |lang=en |ref=none}}

* {{citation |last=Canogar |first=Daniel |title=The Architecture of the Homeless |work=Lapiz |number=75 |year=1991 |pages=61–69 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Beaudet, Pascal. "Parallels & Boundaries," ''Vanguard'', (May, 1984), p.&nbsp;45
* {{cite news |last=Cotter |first=Holland |title=Sculpture Not Meant to Last |work=[[New York Times]] |date=1995-08-18 |page=C22 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Tourangeau, Jean. "Powerhouse Dix Ans Apres", ''Vie des Arts'', (Dec.-Fev., 1985) p.&nbsp;85
* {{cite news |last=Jarque |first=Vicente |title=Terra Infirma |work=[[El País]] |location=Madrid |date=2005-07-18 |page=18 |lang=es |ref=none}}
*Smith, Roberta. "Social Spaces," ''New York Times'', (Feb. 12, 1988) p.&nbsp;C23
* {{citation |last=Phillips |first=Patricia |title=Art That Insists – Persistence With Urgency |work=Art Journal |date=Summer 2006 |page=5 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Canogar, Daniel. "The Architecture of the Homeless", ''Lapiz'' (No.75, 1991) p.&nbsp;61-69
*Phillips, Patricia. "Perry Bard", ''Artforum'' (April, 1990), New York, p.&nbsp;173-74
* {{citation |last=Phillips |first=Patricia |title=Perry Bard |work=Artforum |date=April 1990 |location=New York |pages=173–174 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Raven, Arlene. "Perry Bard: The Times," ''Village Voice'' (Dec. 17, 1992) p.&nbsp;119
* {{cite news |last=Raven |first=Arlene |title=Perry Bard: The Times |work=[[Village Voice]] |date=1992-12-17 |page=119 |lang=en |ref=none}}
* {{citation |last=Sholette |first=Greg |title=Breaking and Entering |work=Art Journal |date=Summer 2006 |page=7 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Cotter, Holland."Sculpture Not Meant to Last," ''New York Times'' (August 18,'95) C22
*Sichel, Berta. "Perry Bard", ''Flash Art'', New York (Jan.-Feb. 1999) p.&nbsp;96
* {{citation |last=Sichel |first=Berta |title=Perry Bard |work=Flash Art |location=New York |date=January–February 1999 |page=96 |lang=en |ref=none}}
* {{cite news |last=Smith |first=Roberta |title=Social Spaces |work=[[New York Times]] |date=1988-02-12 |page=C23 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Wasilewski, Marek. “Hybrid Dwellings”, ''Springerin'', (Feb. 2001) p.&nbsp;66-67
* {{citation |last=Struppek |first=Mirjam |title=The Social Potential of Urban Screens |work=Visual Culture |year=2006 |pages=180–181 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Jarque, Vicente. “Terra Infirma”, ''El Pais'', Madrid (July 18, 2005) p 18
* {{citation |last=Tourangeau |first=Jean |title=Powerhouse Dix Ans Apres |work=Vie des Arts |date=December 1985 |page=85 |lang=fr |ref=none}}
*Sholette, Greg. "Breaking and Entering”, ''Art Journal'' (Summer 2006) p.&nbsp;7
* {{citation |last=Wasilewski |first=Marek |title=Hybrid Dwellings |work=Springerin |date=February 2001 |pages=66–67 |lang=en |ref=none}}
*Phillips, Patricia. “Art That Insists – Persistence With Urgency,” ''Art Journal'' (Summer 2006) p5
*Struppek, Mirjam.”The Social Potential of Urban Screens” ''Visual Culture,'' (2006) p180-81


==Notes==
==Notes==
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==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.perrybard.net/ Artist's website]
* [http://www.perrybard.net/ Artist's website]

{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Bard, Perry}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bard, Perry}}
[[Category:Canadian emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Artists from Quebec City]]
[[Category:Canadian emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:Interdisciplinary artists]]
[[Category:Interdisciplinary artists]]
[[Category:McGill University alumni]]
[[Category:Pratt Institute faculty]]
[[Category:San Francisco Art Institute alumni]]
[[Category:School of Visual Arts faculty]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]

Latest revision as of 11:05, 5 November 2024

Perry Bard (born in Quebec City, Canada) lives and works in New York City. She is an interdisciplinary artist who works with film, site-specific public art installation projects around the world, and on the Internet.

Many of her projects are collaborations with the public and selected communities. In 2011, her ongoing work Man with a Movie Camera: The Global Remake was chosen for inclusion in Google's selected top creative uses of the Internet. In 2010 the project was named one of the Top 25 Videos for the Guggenheim Museum's YouTube Play Biennial of Creative Video.[1] For the public participation project, Bard invited interpretations of Dziga Vertov's classic 1929 film Man with a Movie Camera, through uploads to a web site where software designed for the project archives sequences and streams a new film daily on the site. "The viewer sees two concurrent sets of images on a single screen: Vertov's original film and the remake of it that has been constructed on the Internet."[2] The film has been shown at the Moscow International Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival, and the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, at the Transmediale[3] Berlin and won awards at Ars Electronica, Liedts-Meesen, and Transitio_MX. The remade film "exists on the Web, at media festivals, and in the gallery and museum but also travels and is launched on outdoor public commons screens."[4] Evelin Stermitz quotes Bard in an interview in Rhizome: "The primary idea was to use global input via the Internet to generate multiple versions of one film to be screened in public space and on the web."[5]

Career

[edit]

Bard created Status: Stolen, a public work focused on artifacts missing from Iraq's Baghdad Museum in 2005. A mobile truckside billboard depicting the missing artifacts traversed New York City for thirty days in June 2005. "Bard's itinerant billboard served as an aide-memoire, reminding us that military victory and cultural conquest go hand in hand."[6] A number of magazine advertisements featuring the artifacts followed in issues of Art Journal in 2006.

Bard also writes often for Afterimage: The Journal of Media Arts and Cultural Criticism, and has curated a number of exhibitions in the United States and abroad.

Bard earned a B.A. at McGill University, and an M.F.A. degree at the San Francisco Art Institute. She pursued doctoral studies at the University of Wisconsin where she completed all but a dissertation in French Theatre studies. She moved to New York City in 1983. Bard has taught graduate and undergraduate art for many years in New York at the School of Visual Arts and the Pratt institute.

Early work

[edit]
  • The Times,[7] an installation at Petrosino Park, New York City. Steel and mirror "roof," and the first paragraph of Charles Dickens' Tale of Two Cities painted backwards on the sidewalk referencing homelessness. Commissioned by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, 1992.
  • Back Seat Foot Arm Lead, an installation at P.S. 1. Twelve desk arms mounted on steel poles with typical desk chair cast in lead; slide projection of students' feet crossing and uncrossing at the foot of the chair, 1991.
  • Shelters and Other Spaces, an installation at the SculptureCenter in New York. Concrete blocks, rocks, slide projector with 81 pictures of temporary shelters on the streets of New York City projected onto glass "pillow" and cardboard shelter bought from Scott, who was living on the street.

Collaborative work

[edit]

Recent projects

[edit]
  • Hotel. A performance and a video installation commissioned for the First International Biennial of Art Cartagena, Colombia. Gestures of waiters choreographed and performed in collaboration with dancers from El Colegio del Cuerpo for the city whose largest employer is the hotel industry, 2014.[8]
  • Out My Window Down the Alley Around the Corner and Up the Block. Houses, hotels and technoculture mix in this video where inside, outside, public and private dissolve into one gentrifying landscape. Single channel video screened in Documentary Fortnight at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (2015); two channel installation with 3D objects exhibited at Joyce Yahouda Gallery, Montreal, 2014.[9]
  • Traffic, a documentary short film about the knock-off trade on Canal Street, New York City, as part of Documentary Fortnight, Vipe International Media Festival, Basel, 2005.
  • The Meaning of Bialy, a video installation commissioned by Hybrid Dwellings, Arsenal Gallery, Białystok, Poland. Bialys are returned to Bialystok, their point of origin in this artwork which uses food to reveal cultural practices, prejudices and histories, 2001.

Awards

[edit]

Grants

[edit]

Selected curated exhibitions

[edit]
  • OWS New York Video Vortex 8, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia, 2012
  • Life on the Screen, Joyce Yahouda Gallery, Montreal, Canada, 2011
  • Multitude Singular, co-curated with Berta Sichel, Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid, Spain, 2009
  • Fierce Logic (En Perfecto Desorden), Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid, Spain, 2007
  • Post-Yugoslavia Video Program, Art in General, New York, 2005

Further reading

[edit]
  • Beaudet, Pascal (May 1984), "Parallels & Boundaries", Vanguard, p. 45
  • Canogar, Daniel (1991), "The Architecture of the Homeless", Lapiz, no. 75, pp. 61–69
  • Cotter, Holland (1995-08-18). "Sculpture Not Meant to Last". New York Times. p. C22.
  • Jarque, Vicente (2005-07-18). "Terra Infirma". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. p. 18.
  • Phillips, Patricia (Summer 2006), "Art That Insists – Persistence With Urgency", Art Journal, p. 5
  • Phillips, Patricia (April 1990), "Perry Bard", Artforum, New York, pp. 173–174
  • Raven, Arlene (1992-12-17). "Perry Bard: The Times". Village Voice. p. 119.
  • Sholette, Greg (Summer 2006), "Breaking and Entering", Art Journal, p. 7
  • Sichel, Berta (January–February 1999), "Perry Bard", Flash Art, New York, p. 96
  • Smith, Roberta (1988-02-12). "Social Spaces". New York Times. p. C23.
  • Struppek, Mirjam (2006), "The Social Potential of Urban Screens", Visual Culture, pp. 180–181
  • Tourangeau, Jean (December 1985), "Powerhouse Dix Ans Apres", Vie des Arts (in French), p. 85
  • Wasilewski, Marek (February 2001), "Hybrid Dwellings", Springerin, pp. 66–67

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Top Videos". www.guggenheim.org. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  2. ^ Feldman, Seth (Summer 2010). "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a constructivist: Perry Bard's 'The Man with the Movie Camera: The Global Remake'". Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media. 52.
  3. ^ "Perry Bard | transmediale". transmediale.de. Retrieved 2016-03-06.
  4. ^ Suderburg, Erika (2012). Resolutions 3: Global Networks in Video, Chapter: "Database, 'Anarcheologie', the Commons, Kino-Eye, and Mash: How Bard, Kaufman, Svilova, and Vertox continue the revolution". University of Minnesota Press.
  5. ^ Stermitz, Evelin. "Man with a Moview Camera: The Global Remake--Interview with Perry Bard". www.rhizome.org. Rhizome. Archived from the original on February 16, 2015. Retrieved February 15, 2015.
  6. ^ Sholette, Gregory (2006). "Breaking and Entering". Art Journal. 65 (2): 6–7. doi:10.1080/00043249.2006.10791201. S2CID 191496256.
  7. ^ "Critical Writing Index Article | Vtape". www.vtape.org. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  8. ^ "1ra Bienal Internacional". www.biaci.org. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
  9. ^ "Shorts Program: Giving Voice | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
[edit]