Jill Magid: Closet Drama / MATRIX 237 (March 20–June 12, 2011)

Jill Magid's recent work explores the intersection of governmental power and current events. For MATRIX she considers a mysterious shooting she witnessed at the Texas State Capitol in relation to Goethe's Faust.

Berkeley, CA, March 16, 2011-(Download a PDF version of this press release.)The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) presents Jill Magid: Closet Drama / MATRIX 237. Jill Magid's work involves infiltrating systems of authority and power to explore issues of vulnerability, observation, and trust. By drawing institutions closer, exploiting their loopholes, seducing their agents, repeating their logic, and pushing the limits of revelation, she has developed a highly conceptual, performance-based practice. Her collaborators include police officers in New York, Liverpool, and Amsterdam, and, most visibly, the Dutch Secret Service. Her work here varies in form-video, photographs, sculptures, installations, printed text, books-yet most have some connection to the documentation of her process.

Magid's more recent work engages the written word and its use as an agent of control, manipulation, and distortion. A Reasonable Man in a Box (2010) concerns the Bybee Memo, a.k.a the Torture Memos, which made the legal case for United States officials to engage in “enhanced interrogation.” Using video, collage, and text, Magid's work revealed the instability of language, its malleability evidenced by the multivalence of interpretation and the gaps in translating word into action.

Magid's MATRIX commission Closet Drama also has its roots in present-day events as they intersect with governmental power. Magid witnessed a mysterious shooting on the steps of the Texas State Capitol by Fausto Cardenas in January 2010. Nothing is known of Cardenas's motivations, but his gesture of shooting into the sky from the Capitol steps-in full view of security- reads as a tragic and poetic dramatic act. For this project, Magid connects Fausto's action to Goethe's Faust, originally written as a “closet drama,” a kind of intimate reading that functions as a theater of the mind. In Faust, Magid finds both thematic connections and a form of performative exhibition, as symbolic and narrative triggers from the play Faust and the actions of Fausto intermingle in the galleries. The exhibition takes the form of a stage for a closet drama scripted by Magid in the space between these two references, as word and action fold around one another like a Möbius strip. She infiltrates the historic text and its many translations, insinuating the present, and engaging larger themes of truth and fiction, language and translation, history and legend, gesture and performance, revelation and redaction, individual and institution.

Closet Drama is a co-commission with Arthouse at the Jones Center, Austin, TX.

Jill Magid's solo exhibitions include those at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Tate Modern, London; Stroom and the AIVD (Dutch Secret Service), Amsterdam; and Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at The Singapore Biennial; The New Museum, New York; Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; Center for Contemporary Art Ujazdowski Castle, Warsaw; Townhouse Gallery, Cairo; Hessel Museum of Art, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Storefront for Art and Architecture, New York; Museum of Contemporary Arts, Taipei; and Tate Museum, Liverpool, among others. She has performed at venues including Location One, New York; Museum Tamayo, Mexico City; and Museum of Modern Art, New York. She was a resident at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam and received her M.S. in Visual Studies from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Magid currently lives and works in New York.

Jill Magid: Closet Drama / MATRIX 237 is curated by Phyllis Wattis MATRIX Curator Elizabeth Thomas.

Artist's Talk
Sunday, March 20, 3 p.m.
Museum Theater
Admission is free.

For more information about the exhibition and special programs visit: http://bampfa.berkeley.edu/exhibition/237

About BAM/PFA
The Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) is the visual arts center of the University of California, Berkeley, one of the nation's leading research universities. BAM/PFA aims to inspire the imagination and ignite critical dialogue through contemporary and historical art and film, engaging audiences from the campus, Bay Area community, and beyond. One of the largest university art museums in the United States in both size and attendance, BAM/PFA presents fifteen art exhibitions and 380 film programs each year. The museum's collection of more than 15,000 works, distinguished by artistic excellence and innovation, intellectual exploration, and social commentary, includes exceptional examples of mid-twentieth-century painting, including important works by Hans Hofmann, Jackson Pollock, Eva Hesse, and Mark Rothko, as well as historical and contemporary Asian art, early American painting, Conceptual and contemporary international art, and California and Bay Area art. The PFA film and video collection now includes the largest group of Japanese films outside of Japan, as well as impressive holdings of Soviet silents, West Coast avant-garde cinema, seminal video art, rare animation, Central Asian productions, Eastern European cinema, and international classics.

Museum Information
Location:
2626 Bancroft Way, just below College Avenue near the UC Berkeley campus.

Gallery and Museum Store Hours: Wednesday through Sunday, 11–5. Open L@TE Fridays until 9 p.m. Closed Monday and Tuesday.

Admission: General admission is $10; admission for seniors, disabled persons, non–UC Berkeley students, and young adults (13–17) is $7; admission for BAM/PFA members, UC Berkeley students, staff, and faculty, and children under 12 is free. Reservations are required for group visits; for information, rates, and schedule, please e-mail sgvisits@berkeley.edu. Admission is free on the first Thursday of each month.

L@TE Admission: On L@TE Fridays, general admission to the BAM/PFA galleries is $7 after 5 p.m. Show your ticket for a same-day PFA screening or gallery visit and get in free. Admission is always free for BAM/PFA members and UC Berkeley students, faculty, and staff. For updates on L@TE programs and to purchase tickets, visit bampfa.berkeley.edu/late.

Information: 24-hour recorded message (510) 642-0808; fax (510) 642-4889; TDD (510) 642-8734.

Website: bampfa.berkeley.edu

For a selection of media images, please contact Peter Cavagnaro at (510) 642-0365 or pcavagnaro@berkeley.edu.

Posted by admin on March 16, 2011