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Helen Mirra

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Helen Mirra
File:Mirra Berlin studio.jpg
Born(1970-12-31)December 31, 1970

Helen Mirra is an American conceptual artist. Her practice is centered around the activity of walking[1] and is influenced by buddhism[2][3], especially zen[4]. Mirra has been artist-in-residence at University of California at Berkeley,[5] and a guest of the DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program.[6]

Education

Mirra received a BA from Bennington College, Vermont, in 1991 and a MFA from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1996.[7]

Career

Mirra has worked in mediums as diverse as film, poetry, music, sculpture, and video. Travel and the landscape have been reoccurring themes in her work, as are childhood and labor, and she tends to stay within a restricted palette.[8][9] Her first solo gallery exhibition was in Chicago in 1999 and included a 16mm silent film, textile works, and the vinyl record Along, Below, all relating to geography, and her first one-person institutional exhibition was at the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago in 2001. An open-ended and ecologically-minded brevity has been a continuous aspect of her idiosyncratic practice.[10][11][12]

She has had projects and exhibitions in North and South America, Europe, and Japan,[13][14] and participated in broad international exhibitions such as the 11th Havana Bienal, the 30th São Paulo Art Biennial and the 50th Venice Biennial. A fifteen-year (1995-2009) survey of her work, Edge Habitat, was presented in 2014 at Culturgest in Lisbon, Portugal, and the corresponding publication Edge Habitat Materials was published by WhiteWalls.[15]

She taught for some years, including as Senior Lecturer in Visual Art and Cinema & Media Studies at the University of Chicago[16] and as Loeb Associate Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University.[17]

Selected solo exhibitions

References

  1. ^ ""This is my interest anyway - to not-demand" - Interview with Helen Mirra - Features - Metropolis M". Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  2. ^ "HIGH LINE ART COMMISSION: Helen Mirra, Half-smiler | Friends of the High Line". The High Line. Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  3. ^ "Large Glass". www.largeglass.co.uk. Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  4. ^ ""Not-knowing is most intimate": Helen Mirra in Conversation with Emmalea Russo - artcritical". artcritical. 2015-09-13. Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  5. ^ "ARC Visiting Artists".
  6. ^ "Berliner Künstlerprogramm".
  7. ^ "CV" (PDF). Nordenhake. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  8. ^ "Helen Mirra: Skywreck". Renaissance Society. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  9. ^ "About This Artwork: Map of Parallel 52 North at a Scale of One Foot to One Degree". Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  10. ^ Eleey, Peter (January 2006). "Reference Material". Frieze Magazine.
  11. ^ "Public art by Helen Mirra appearing across the University of Chicago campus". March 31, 2006.
  12. ^ "Helen Mirra in conversation with Emmalea Russo". artcritical. September 13, 2015.
  13. ^ "Bienal de Cuenca". e-flux.
  14. ^ "Helen Mirra at Taka Ishii Gallery".
  15. ^ "Edge Habitat Materials, Helen Mirra, survey 1995-2009". University of Chicago Press.
  16. ^ "University of Chicago Humanities Open House". 2002.
  17. ^ "Visual and Environmental Studies faculty".
  18. ^ Richard, Frances (2002). "From Land and Sound to Thought" (PDF). Whitney Museum brochure.
  19. ^ Farzin, Media (October 13, 2014). "Helen Mirra's "Waulked"". Art Agenda.
  20. ^ Andersson, Axel (September 1, 2015). "Tid omvandlad till konkret rumslighet". Kunstkritikk.