BERYL KOROT
Born in New York (United States), 1945Lives & works in New York (United States) Very active in: 2000s, Current decade
More links:
http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/korot/index.html
Beryl Korot is an early video-art pioneer and an internationally exhibited artist, her multiple-channel (and multiple-monitor) video installation works, where she explored the relationship between programming tools as diverse as the technology of the loom and multiple-channel video.
For most of the 1980s, Korot concentrated on a series of paintings that were based on a language she created that was an analogue to the Latin alphabet. Drawing on her earlier interest in weaving and video as related technologies, she made most of these paintings on hand-woven and traditional linen canvas.
More recently, she has collaborated with her husband, the composer Steve Reich, on ?Three Tales,? a documentary digital video opera in three acts and a prologue. It began in 1998 with ?Act 1 - Hindenburg.? While the Prologue contains biblical text about human creation, Act 1 begins with documentary footage of Paul von Hindenburg, last president of the Weimar Republic (who made Hitler chancellor in 1933), and ends with footage of the Hindenburg zeppelin and its explosion at Lakehurst, New Jersey, in 1937. ?Act 2 - Bikini,? is based on footage, photographs, and text from the atom bomb test on Bikini Island and the subsequent removal of the Bikini people. ?Act 3 - Dolly,? explores the issues revolving around the first cloning of a sheep in Scotland, in 1997. Together, the three individual acts form a progressive investigation of the way technology creates and frames our experience.
In the context of Korot?s body of work, which began with her early video tapestries, ?Three Tales? extends and deepens her interest in both technology as a material in which to make work?video, weaving?and as a relevant exploration of history in which to base her work.