The prize-winner of the 2nd Austrian Frederick Kiesler Prize for Architecture and the Arts:
Judith Barry
Judith Barry was nominated by an international jury chaired by Peter Noever (Austria) and made up of Massimiliano Fuksas (Italy), Zaha Hadid (Great Britain), Vittorio Magnago Lampugnani (Switzerland), and Peter Weibel. The jury was especially concerned with coming up to Frederick Kiesler's innovative and experimental attitude. By nominating Judith Barry, the Frederick Kiesler Prize for Architecture and the Arts has been opened to multi-disciplinary and exploratory endeavors transcending the boundaries between traditional disciplines.
In her multimedia installations, video productions, and theoretical writings, Judith Barry investigates the complex mutual influences between human beings, architecture, and the media. Architecture, as a mass medium, has an impact on social behavior. It reveals the relation to the world one lives in. With her work, Judith Barry aims at the interrelation between human vision, historical memory, and architectural perception. In this regard, her interest focuses especially on the use and construction of private and public spaces. She employs a variety of techniques: video and slide projection, computer graphics, surveillance techniques, and other forms of electronic communication constitute a field where the visual arts, architecture, and urbanism intersect.
Manifold conceptual threads connect Judith Barry's theoretical and artistic endeavors with Frederick Kiesler's work. A number of links are to be found concerning Kiesler's visionary 'correalistic' theory, which is centered around an investigation of the continuous interrelation between people and their natural and technological surroundings. Judith Barry reinforces this tendency by transforming the spectator into a equally productive and interactive object of her work.
The Austrian Frederick Kiesler Prize 2000 will be presented by Dr. Michael Häupl, Mayor of the City of Vienna and Dr. Peter Marboe, Vienna Executive City Councellor for Cultural Affairs in the City Hall on November 23rd, 2000 at 5 pm.
Biography
Judith Barry was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1954. Her education includes training in architecture, art, literature, film theory and computer graphics. She studied at the University of California in Berkeley and received her artistic education (MA Communication Arts, Computer Graphics) at the New York Institute of Technology. She also writes critical essays and fiction and has contributed to a number of contemporary art publications. Judith Barry lives and works in New York.
Selected Solo Exhibitions, Performances and Screenings
2000 |
The terror and the possibilities in the things not seen, Rosamund Felsen Gallery, Los Angeles, USA |
1998 |
The terror and possibilities in the things not seen, Luis Serpa Galeria, Lisbon, Portugal |
1996 |
Au bout des lèvres, Xavier Hufkens, Brussels, Belgium |
1992 |
Imagination, Dead Imagine, Model for Stage and Screen, The Renaissance Society at The University of Chicago, Chicago, USA |
1991 |
Public Fantasy, 4 installations and the publication of "Public Fantasy", Institute of Contemporary Art, London |
1988 |
Loie Fuller: Dance of Colors, Nouvelles Scènes, Dijon, Biennale de la Danse, Lyon, (Performance with Brygida Ochaim) |
1986 |
Echo, Projects 2, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA |
1982 |
Ideology/Praxis, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA |
Selected Group Exhibitions, Performances and Screenings
2001 |
Offical USA representative to Cairo Biennale, Egypt |
2000 |
Commission of New Work, Palacio de los Condes de Gaba, Granada, Spain |
1998 |
Voices, Witte de With, Rotterdam and MIRO Foundation, Barcelona |
1997 |
"Coleccion de arte contemporaneo", Fundacion 'la Caixa', San Esteban, Spain |
1996 |
Urban Evidence, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, USA |
1994 |
22. Internationale Biennale von Sao Paulo, Brasil |
1993 |
Le Génie du Lieu, L'Usine Fromage, Rouen, Frankreich |
1991 |
Ars Memoriae Carnegiensis, The Carnegie International, Pittsburgh, USA |
1990 |
Depense: A Museum of Loss, TSWA Four Cities Project, Glasgow, Scotland |
1989 |
Forest of Signs, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, USA |
1988 |
Aperto, La XLIII Biennale da Venezia, Venice, Italy |
1987 |
First and Third, Whitney Biennale, New York, USA |
1983 |
Scenes and Conventions-Artists' Architecture, ICA, London, UK |
1982 |
Vision in Disbelief, 4th Biennale of Sydney, Australia |
Credits
LINE (book award) (1978)
The New York Foundation for the Arts, emerging forms fellowship (1988, 1990, 1997)
The New York State Council on the Arts (1988)
Art Matters (1988, 1989)
The National Endowment for the Arts, artists fellowship (1989)
Wexner Center for the Arts Residency in Video (1996)
J. Barry, Model for a Stage and Screen, 1987
© Courtesy Judith Barry and the galleries Xavier Hufkens, Luis Serpa, Rosamund Felsen
J. Barry, Imagination, Dead Imagine, 1991
© Courtesy Judith Barry and the galleries Xavier Hufkens, Luis Serpa, Rosamund Felsen
Austrian Frederick Kiesler Prize for Architecture and Art, Judith Barry, Vienna 2000
© Austrian Frederick and Lillian Kiesler Private Foundation