Artist Conversation: Sondra Perry and Morehshin Allahyari, Manual Override

JAN 9, 6 pm
Learn more about the exhibition with a curator-led artist conversation

Tickets

This event is free with paid admission to Manual Override. Purchase your ticket in advance here. Please note that seating is first come, first served.
Morehshin Allahyari, She Who Sees the Unknown: Kabous, The Left Witness and The Right Witness, 2019, in Manual Override at The Shed, New York, November 13, 2019 – January 12, 2020. Photo: Dan Bradica.
A person lying on a bed with a VR headset on, the bed is at the center of an outline of white light mimicking a room's footprint, two sculptures hang over the bed
Morehshin Allahyari, She Who Sees the Unknown: Kabous, The Left Witness and The Right Witness, 2019. VR video. Courtesy the artist.
Sondra Perry, you out here look n like you don’t belong to nobody: heavy metal and reflective, 2019, in Manual Override at The Shed, New York, November 13, 2019 – January 12, 2020. Photo: Dan Bradica.
A photo of an artwork by Sondra Perry including a metal panel in the foreground and a video installation in the background
Sondra Perry, you out here look n like you don’t belong to nobody: heavy metal and reflective, 2019. Color video with sound. Courtesy the artist.
Morehshin Allahyari, She Who Sees the Unknown: Kabous, The Left Witness and The Right Witness, 2019, in Manual Override at The Shed, New York, November 13, 2019 – January 12, 2020. Photo: Dan Bradica.

About

As part of the closing week of Manual Override, the exhibition’s guest curator Nora N. Khan will discuss the driving curatorial themes of the exhibition in an opening talk. She will then lead a conversation with artists Sondra Perry and Morehshin Allahyari about the embedded ideas and process of creating their new commissions. Perry’s installation, you out here look n like you don’t belong to nobody: heavy metal and reflective (2019), and Allahyari’s, She Who Sees the Unknown: Kabous, The Left Witness and The Right Witness (2019), were both developed over the past year explicitly for Manual Override.

In Manual Override, artists Morehshin Allahyari, Simon Fujiwara, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Sondra Perry, and Martine Syms, critique the social, cultural, and ethical issues embedded in emerging technological systems.

Participants

Portrait of Morehshin Allahyari
Morehshin Allahyari
A portrait of Nora N. Khan
Photo: Rigoberto Lara.
Nora N. Khan
Morehshin Allahyari
Artist
Morehshin Allahyari is a media artist and activist who uses computer modeling, 3D scanning, and digital fabrication techniques to explore the intersection of art and activism. Inspired by concepts of collective archiving and cultural contradiction, Allahyari’s 3D-printed sculptures and videos challenge social and gender norms. She wants her work to respond to, resist, and criticize the current political and cultural situation that is experienced on a daily basis. Recent accolades include a commission by the Whitney Museum of American Art (2018), residency at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn (2018), a research residency at Eyebeam Art + Technology Center (2016 – 17), and a sculpture award from the Institute of Digital Art (2016). Foreign Policy magazine named her a Leading Global Thinker of 2016. Her work has been part of numerous exhibitions, festivals, and workshops at venues throughout the world, including the New Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, Centre Pompidou, Venice Biennale di Archittectura, and Museum für Angewandte Kunst among many others.
Nora N. Khan
Guest Curator

Nora N. Khan is a writer. She writes criticism on emerging issues within digital visual culture, experimental art and music practices, and the philosophy of emerging technology. She is a professor at RISD, Digital and Media, where she teaches graduate courses in critical theory and artistic research, critical writing, and the history of digital media. She is a longtime editor at Rhizome, and is currently editor of Prototype, Google’s Artist and Machine Intelligence Group’s book forthcoming in 2019.

Khan’s writing practice extends to a range of collaborations, which includes shows, performances, exhibition essays, scripts, and sometimes, librettos. Last year, she collaborated with Sondra Perry, Caitlin Cherry, and American Artist to create A Wild Ass Beyond: ApocalypseRN at Performance Space, New York. She has contributed essays and fiction to exhibitions held at Serpentine Galleries, Chisenhale Gallery, and the Venice Biennale, as well as to books published by Koenig Press, Sternberg Press, and Mousse.

Her writing has been supported by many awards over the last decade, including, most recently, a Critical Writing Grant given through the Visual Arts Foundation and the Crossed Purposes Foundation (2018), an Eyebeam Research Residency (2017), and a Thoma Foundation 2016 Arts Writing Award in Digital Art for an emerging arts writer. She publishes criticism in forums like 4Columns, Art in America, Flash Art, Mousse, California Sunday, Spike Art, The Village Voice, and Rhizome. Last year, she wrote a small book with Steven Warwick, Fear Indexing the X-Files, published by Primary Information.

Sondra Perry
Artist
Sondra Perry makes videos and performances that foreground the tools of digital production as a way to critically reflect on new technologies of representation and to remobilize their potential.

Location and dates

This event takes place in The Griffin Theater.
Thursday, January 9
6 pm

Details

  • Running time: Approximately 90 minutes
In The Works