1988-02-06 (11pm)
John Linnell & John Flansburgh doing a benefit show at Performance Space 122 in New York City, NY
seen from China
seen from Lithuania

seen from Russia

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Greece

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from Australia
1988-02-06 (11pm)
John Linnell & John Flansburgh doing a benefit show at Performance Space 122 in New York City, NY
Il materiale di origine: Jim Spellman / Oscar Isaac and Elvira Lind at the PS 122 Gala Honoring Alan Cumming at Diamond Horseshoe in New York City, NY. (4th April, 2017)
Il materiale di origine: Jim Spellman / Oscar Isaac and at the PS 122 Gala Honoring Alan Cumming at Diamond Horseshoe in New York City, NY. (4th April, 2017)
BTW, he’s not wearing that wedding ring anymore that he used for the “Life Itself” shoot last week.
#Repost @williamrockwell with @repostapp ・・・ #oscarisaac getting into taxi after #PS122 #gala
Sounds like a successful night to me...except, I wish it WAS me!
Yesterday Tomorrow - Performance Space 122
“Human artists and computer algorithms collaborate to form a concert of song, machine, gesture, light and space. Beginning with the Beatles’ “Yesterday,”evolutionary algorithms breakdown the music and gradually reconstruct it to transform into “Tomorrow” from the musical Annie. Three remarkable singers perform a live-generated score. Each performance, the spatial and musical path from the past into the future is different.”
(source)
COIL 2016 demonstrates the constant vitality of live performance in New York City and features work created locally, across the U.S, and around the world.
“COIL 2016 attacks the very concept of boundaries and of limits. The boundaries between ideologies, life and death, the contemporary and historic, human and machine, light and darkness, audience and performer. Limitations of time, identity, age and geography disappear. The work we will see this year deals with evolutionary transformation – personal, social and artistic.
I am proud that the program includes so many artists whose work has never been seen in New York. It is our most ambitious festival, ever, and the very last outside of our home at 150 First Ave.” – Vallejo Gantner, Artistic Director
This past January I photographed From A to B via C, a show choreographed by Alexandra Bachzetsis and features performances by Bachzetsis, Anne Pajunen and Gabriel Schenker. As part of COIL Festival, the show was presented by The Swiss Institute and Performance Space 122. One of my photographs was used in The New York Times Arts section for a review of the show - marking my first NYTimes published photograph. Such a beautiful experience shooting this private performance before the show opened to the public.