Sun, Sep 25 at 3:30 PM

Ron Athey: Our Lady of the Spasm

Los Angeles, California
Free

Solo Performance: Sunday September 25th | Doors open 7:30pm

Modular Theater Performances featuring Karen Lofgren, Micaela Tobin, Christos Tejada, Avery Collinsbyrd, and André Atkins: Friday, September 30th | Doors open 7:30 pm

Mask wearing is highly recommended indoors. N/95, KN/95, Surgical masks suggested and provided.

In solo performance developments which include elements from the healing temples known as Asclepeion: dream chambers and healing water. Sections to be worked on and performed include a vocal but non-lingual litany, fountain action, and first attempts to develop a supernatural lighting installation. Expanding, but also restricting a pivotal action to an 8 x 4-foot rectangular box (bigger than a coffin smaller than a stage).

Ron Athey invited 4 artists to make work that is both autonomous but modular to this concept. Karen Lofgren, Micaela Tobin, Christos Tejada & Avery Collinsbyrd will be working as part of the residency and showing live work on September 30th!

Title is both an homage to an event created with Nacho Nava, and ongoing esoteric Christianity research. Moving through the Stations and Sorrows, Athey lands on the schism where Station 4 and Sorrow 4 meet: the spasm of St. Mary as she met Christ on the road to Golgotha. Her shudder, or psychic spasm, is marked by the Armenian Catholic Chapel of Our Lady of the Spasm in Jerusalem. -- Ron Athey

Ron Athey has been working at the vanguard of performance art for 25 years. Self-taught, his work developed out of post-punk/pre-goth scenes and begins with Premature Ejaculation (PE), an early 1980s collaboration with Rozz Williams. Their approach to performance art was informed by the club actions of Johanna Went and the formulation of Industrial Culture, the idea of psycho/neuro acoustics in sound performance. In the 1990s, Athey formed a company of performers and made Torture Trilogy, a series of works that addressed the AIDS pandemic directly through memorializing and philosophical reflection.

This work is characterized by the physical intensity of 1970s body-art canon, such as COUM Transmission, Carolee Schneeman and the Viennese Actionists, which toured internationally. The trilogy’s final chapter, Deliverance, was commissioned and premiered at the ICA London. In the 2000s, Athey developed genre-stretching theatrical works like Joyce and The Judas Cradle, and a series of major solo performances such as The Solar Anus, Sebastiane, Self-Obliteration Solo and Incorruptible Flesh, a series of solo performances that reflect Athey’s collaborations with the late Lawrence Steger.

Coaxial Arts Foundations' artist in residence program is supported by the Department of Cultural Affairs, Los Angles & the National Endowment for the Arts.

Support by purchasing a Ron Athey & Coaxial Arts residency 𝐎𝐮𝐫 𝐋𝐚𝐝𝐲 𝐓'𝐬 in collaboration with Mario Luna are available in our bio along side original artworks, writings, performance relics, and flyers from 1999 Los Angeles featuring the work of iconic artists along side Vaginal Davis.

https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/coaxial-residency-our-lady-of-the-spasm#/

All of the proceeds go to supporting Ron Athey’s new experimental work and workshop.


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