Madeline Hollander

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Madeline Hollander
Born
EducationBarnard College of Columbia University, Bard College Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts
Websitewww.madelinehollander.com

Madeline Hollander is an American artist, choreographer, and dancer, living and working in New York City.[1] Her work explores the evolution of human body movement and the intersection between choreography and visual art.[2]

Early life and education[edit]

Madeline Hollander was born in 1986 in Los Angeles, California. She trained with Yvonne Mounsey while growing up in Los Angeles,[3] and she danced professionally with the Los Angeles Ballet and with Angel Corella's Barcelona Ballet.[4] She received a Bachelor's Associates degree from Barnard College of Columbia University in 2008 and attended the MFA program at Bard College's Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts from 2016 to 2019.[5]

Artistic practice[edit]

Madeline Hollander's work investigates the body's ability to communicate and respond within the limits of everyday systems. Since 2013, Hollander has been adding to Gesture Archive, a longitudinal research project surveying expressive human movement in all its variety.[4] She uses performance and dance to communicate how the space in contemporary art can be experienced rather than the space being simply a reaction to the art object.[2] These dances and performances build on the ballets Hollander danced growing up. The movements often reflect her observations of gesture and emulate the everyday. Benjamin Millepied, the artistic director of L.A. Dance Project and a former New York City Ballet principal, said "there's a clear understanding of classical craft when it comes to the architecture of her dances."[3] Hollander's fascination with systems goes beyond repeating existing systems. She constructs systems of her own that involve placing the body in conversation with various contexts, such as molecular or mechanical arrangements.

As well as creating choreography, Hollander has developed an intuitive and organic system of color codes and pictographs to recall her movements. She has stated that, "The drawings are only meant to be understood by me and the dancers. It's a system for recall. To remind the bodies who already lived through the movements."[6] As well as creating an extensive body of her own work, Hollander collaborates as a choreographer with other artists.[7] She made her debut in Hollywood, as a movement consultant and choreographer for Jordan Peele's "Us". In addition, she has helped develop physical vocabularies for the characters' 'dueling' selves.[3] Hollander participated in Helsinki Contemporary's, "Future Delay", a show curated by New York-based Amanda Schmitt, where she, Pearla Pigao, and Hans Rosenström were commissioned to explore the future potential of technological immortality.[8] Hollander consistently seeks inspiration by drawing her choreography's vocabulary from varied sources such as the interaction of interface design (Illegal Motion, 2015);[9] sports referee gestures (Mile, 2016);[10] and building evacuation procedures (Drill, 2016).[11]

Heads/Tails[edit]

Hollander's work "Heads/Tails" is her first major exhibition without human actors. The installation consists of hundreds of used automobile headlights and taillights, covering opposite walls of the gallery, synched with the traffic signal at the nearby intersection of Walker Street and Broadway.[12]

Cars driving along Walker Street trigger the installation's taillights when they break, resulting in their illumination. These effects are modeled after the behaviors of various New York City drivers. The lights of the installation turn off when the street light changes to green. At sunset the headlights in the installation change to a "brights" setting and at sunrise they revert to a "fog light" setting in a perpetual cycle.

Alongside the installation of car lights, Hollander exhibits a series of watercolors that mirror the pictographs she uses to help her and her dancers recall their movements. A text by A.E. Benenson addressing the history of New York City traffic and its regulation of movement vis-a-vis concepts of progress, performance and order accompanies the exhibition. It is presented alongside a small bronze statue of Mercury, one of the 104 that adorned the tops of traffic lights along Fifth Avenue from 1931 to 1964, and have since largely gone missing.[12]

New Max[edit]

As with all Hollander's work to date, the dancers' choreography references or "cites" everyday physical activities. The project notes for "New Max" describe the installation as, "Performance begins at 65 degrees Fahrenheit, and dancers continuously hit a new maximum temperature each round."[13]

The starting temperature in the room is 65 degrees Fahrenheit as this is the museum standard for storing works of art. The choreography is a series of scripted movements that create body heat, raising the room's temperature to 85 degrees. This change in room temperature takes place over a series of sixteen rounds. Each round with a new min and max temp and the goal of Round 1 is to get to 70 degrees, triggering the air conditioning units to turn on and cool the room. This begins round two at a starting temperature of 66 degrees. As this pattern continues, two Dancers track their progress by the room's lights that are attached to a temperature sensor and become brighter as the room heats up. When the temperature reaches the maximum, the lights turn off, the air conditioning units turn on, and the dancers rest. Once the minimum temperature is reached again, the dancers are back in motion.[4]

Performances and choreography[edit]

Grants, residencies and awards[edit]

  • 2015 - Fountainhead Studios Artist Residency, Miami, FL[2]
  • 2015 - Choreographic Coding Lab: Motion-Bank, Center for the Art of Performance, UCLA[25]
  • 2015 - Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture[17]
  • 2016 - Socrates Sculpture Park Emerging Artist Fellowship[26]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Studio Visit: Madeline Hollander by Mikkel Rosengaard - BOMB Magazine". bombmagazine.org.
  2. ^ a b c "Madeline Hollander". The Fountainhead.
  3. ^ a b c Burke, Siobhan (17 September 2019). "At the Whitney Biennial, Flood Preparation as Social Dance". New York Times.
  4. ^ a b c "Madeline Hollander". The Artist's Institute.
  5. ^ "CV/Contact". Madeline Hollander.
  6. ^ Rosengaard, Mikkal (21 September 2018). "Studio Visit: Madeline Hollander by Mikkel Rosengaard". BOMB Magazine.
  7. ^ Greenberger, Alex (26 March 2019). "A Dance for Two: Artist Madeline Hollander on Working with Jordan Peele to Choreograph His Film 'Us'". ARTnews.
  8. ^ Jeffreys, Tom (10 August 2019). "Are We Choreographing Machines, Or Are They Choreographing Us?". Frieze.
  9. ^ "Illegal Motion". Madeline Hollander.
  10. ^ "Mile". Madeline Hollander.
  11. ^ "Drill". Madeline Hollander.
  12. ^ a b "BORTOLAMI-Madeline Hollander-Heads/Tails Press Release" (PDF). Bortolami Gallery.
  13. ^ Schwendener, Martha (1 March 2018). "What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week". New York Times.
  14. ^ "Madeline Hollander Edition". JOAN.
  15. ^ "Futurevisions". Torrance Shipman.
  16. ^ "Elizabeth Jaeger - Exhibitions - Jack Hanley Gallery". www.jackhanley.com.
  17. ^ a b "Madeline Hollander (A '15)". Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture.
  18. ^ "In Practice: Under Foundations". www.sculpture-center.org.
  19. ^ "Artist Madeline Hollander Sees Choreography All Around Us". Cultured Magazine. 12 December 2017.
  20. ^ "Who is choreographing whom?". Gagosian Quarterly. 7 September 2018.
  21. ^ "Madeline Hollander". The Artists Institute.
  22. ^ "Urs Fischer: PLAY with choreography by Madeline Hollander, West 21st Street, New York, September 6–October 13, 2018". Gagosian. 17 August 2018.
  23. ^ Bradley, Laura. "How Men in Black, Get Out, and Meryl Streep Inspired Us's Climactic Fight". HWD.
  24. ^ "Whitney Museum Announces 2019 Biennial Participants, But One Artist Withdraws". Hyperallergic. 2019-02-26. Retrieved 2019-04-08.
  25. ^ Palop, Benoit (22 September 2015). "Dance Meets Cutting Edge Digital Creativity at an LA Workshop". Creators.
  26. ^ "Madeline Hollander". Socrates Sculpture Park. 2016. Retrieved 10 May 2019.