gonightclubbing

    GoNightclubbing GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

    GoNightclubbing is a collaboration between video artists Pat Ivers and Emily Armstrong, who worked together to document the New York punk rock scene beginning in 1977. Ivers had previously worked with Metropolis Video from 1975 until their dissolution in 1977. Originally, Ivers and Armstrong were known as Advanced TV, but they incorporated as GoNightclubbing in 2001.


    Background


    Ivers and Armstrong videotaped hundreds of bands between 1977 and 1981 at venues like CBGB’s, Max’s Kansas City, Mudd Club and Hurrah’s. Described as “the Lewis and Clark of rock video,” they used hand held cameras and audio from the sound board of the clubs to make their Gonightclubbing archive. The use of this equipment created a visual style that fit the scene that it documented—Michael Shore of Rolling Stone called their "visual fidelity" "perfect." Their archive was arguably the premiere video record of the Downtown punk scene.
    In 1979, their music series Nightclubbing debuted on Manhattan Cable TV’s Channel 10. It was a weekly half-hour program, showcasing live performances of bands they had documented from their vast archive.
    Nightclubbing was nominated for a Cable Ace award for best variety series in 1980. It was shown at Anthology Film Archives as a late night weekly screening between January and March,1980.
    In May, 1980, they worked at the original incarnation of the nightclub Danceteria, pioneering the concept of the VJ (Video Jockey) and designing the first standalone Video Lounge. Originally designed as a one-night-only art installation, it proved so successful that it became a regular nightly feature of the club. With multiple TV sets arranged as living room groupings, Ivers and Armstrong showed a mix of found footage, music videos, artists work and selections from their own archive and also documented bands live, feeding the video up to the Lounge in real time. After the club was closed by the State Liquor Authority, a robbery occurred, costing them a third of their video archive. The tapes were never recovered.
    In 1981, Ivers and Armstrong toured the country with their GoNightclubbing video programs, showing at museums and nightclubs in Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, Minneapolis and San Francisco.
    In 2000, GoNightclubbing resurfaced at the opening of the Pioneer Theater, an independent cinema in the East Village, with a five-week series of programs. Ivers and Armstrong resumed shooting with a series of interviews of veterans of the punk scene, including Lenny Kaye and Jay Dee Daugherty of the Patti Smith group, Richard Lloyd of Television, Cheetah Chrome and Jeff Magnum of the Dead Boys. The same year, they were invited to the Institute of Contemporary Art in London to host a series of screenings. The Guardian applauded it as “five priceless programs… capturing the raw visceral energy of bands unhindered by MTV self-consciousness."
    In 2001-2002, they toured the US, invited to the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, the Experience Music Project in Seattle and the Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis, with stops in Portland, Chicago and San Francisco as well.
    In 2010, New York University’s Fales Library and Special Collections digitized and restored the GoNightclubbing Archive as part of their Downtown Collection. The archive is now available for use by scholars and researchers. With videos of over 82 bands at 112 performances, 27 on camera interviews, hundreds of photos, ephemera, music videos, and video art, this "massive" collection offers a snapshot of the time and culture of Downtown New York in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
    In 2012, Bedford and Bowery, part of the New York Times Magazine, invited Ivers and Armstrong to write about the restoration of their archive in a weekly feature, which ran for nearly a year.
    To celebrate the acquisition by the Downtown collection, in 2014, Ivers and Armstrong created “GoNightclubbing: A Modern Punk History,” a multi-media project including video screenings at the Museum of Art and Design, a photo and ephemera exhibition at Fales, live talks, and a recreation of the iconic Video Lounge and larger than life images of punk icons at the 80 Washington Square East Gallery.
    In 2015, Ivers and Armstrong premiered “Alone At Last: an Interactive installation Exploring Gender, Identity and Desire Before the Aids Crisis” at the Howl! Happening gallery. Using the trope of the Times Square peep show booth, "Alone at Last" examines the broad spectrum of sexual expression that existed in the heady days of downtown bohemia before AIDS struck the artistic community there. Fifty video seducers invite the viewer/participant to share some time in the dark with a stranger and question what s/he really wants. Anticipating YouTube and cyber hookups, "Alone At Last" can be described as a cultural record of a time gone by and a celebration of its freedom.


    Screenings and exhibitions




    = 2000–present

    =
    Austin Film Society Cinema, Austin 2018
    University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 2016
    Cine Theater, Athens, Georgia 2016
    Howl! Happening Gallery, New York, New York 2015
    Tropic Cinema, Key West, Florida, 2015
    Key West Museum, Key West, Florida 2015
    Tracey-Barry Gallery at New York University Fales Library, New York, NY 2014
    80 Washington Square East Gallery, New York, New York 2014
    Museum of Art and Design, New York, New York 2014
    International House, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 2014
    CBGB Festival, New York, New York 2013
    CBGB Festival, New York, New York 2012
    Pop Montreal Festival, Montreal, Quebec, Canada 2012
    Big Sky Documentary Film Festival, Missoula, Montana 2012
    Guggenheim Lab, New York New York 2012
    Webster Film Festival, St. Louis, Missouri 2011
    Exile on Bowery, New York, NY 2011
    Downtown Show II, New York, NY 2010
    Howl Festival, New York, NY 2008
    Galatos Art Center, Auckland, New Zealand, 2007
    North By Northwest Music Festival, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, June 2007
    The Downtown Show, New York City, March 2006
    Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Cleveland, Ohio, September 2004
    The Knitting Factory, Los Angeles, California 2003
    Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, November 2002
    Gene Siskel Theater, Chicago, Illinois, October 2002
    Snake Pit, Denver, Colorado, August 2001
    Bluebird Theater, Denver, Colorado, May 2001
    Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, March 2001
    VIEWPOINT Documentary Film Festival, Ghent, Belgium, February 2001
    Experience Music Project, Seattle, Washington, January 2001
    Clinton Street Theater, Portland, Oregon, January 2001
    Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, January 2001
    Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK, December 2000
    Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, September 2000
    ARTHOUSE, Dublin, Ireland, August 2000
    Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK, July 2000
    Pioneer Theater, New York City, February 2000


    = 1970s–1980s

    =
    Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York
    National Video Festival, American Film Institute, Washington, DC
    Beauborg Centre, Paris, France
    Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, England
    MoMA PS1 Opening, Long Island City, New York
    Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
    Long Beach Museum of Art, Long Beach, California
    BACA Video Festival, Brooklyn, NY
    544 Natoma Performance Gallery, San Francisco, California
    Roxy Cinema, San Francisco, California
    Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois
    Kitchen Center for Art and Music, New York, New York
    Anthology Film Archives, New York, NY
    New Cinema, New York, NY
    Women Make Movies, New York, NY
    Buffalo Media Center, Buffalo, NY
    UCLA Film Center, Los Angeles, California
    Video Art Telethon, Channel 10, New York, NY
    Women’s One World Festival, New York, NY
    Monumental Art Show, Brooklyn, NY
    Times Square Show, New York, NY
    Avantgarde Festival, New York, NY
    Seattle Video Festival, Seattle, Washington
    Danceteria, New York, New York
    Mudd Club, New York, New York
    Zerozero, Los Angeles, California
    Youthinasia, New York, New York
    9:30 Club, Washington, DC
    Neo, Chicago, Illinois
    Café Argyle, Los Angeles, California
    Café de Grande, Los Angeles, California
    Flipper, Los Angeles, California
    688 Club, Atlanta, Georgia


    Public collections


    The GoNightclubbing archives are held as part of the Downtown Collection at the New York University Fales Library and Special Collections.


    Awards and nominations


    Acker Award for Achievement in the Avant Garde


    References




    External links


    Archive at Fales Library, New York University
    Artist webpage

Kata Kunci Pencarian: gonightclubbing