Artists & Archives:
A Pacific Standard Time Symposium
A Pacific Standard Time Symposium
Archival Program Information
For current Research Institute events, please see The Getty Event Calendar
For current Research Institute events, please see The Getty Event Calendar
Symposium
Part One (1:14:32)
Opening Remarks
Marcia Reed, Getty Research Institute
Introductions
John Tain, Getty Research Institute
Liza Kirwin, Archives of American Art
Keynote Address
Un-Knowing, Getting Lost, Linking Points in Space: The New Archival Practice
Sven Spieker, University of California, Santa Barbara
Marcia Reed, Getty Research Institute
Introductions
John Tain, Getty Research Institute
Liza Kirwin, Archives of American Art
Keynote Address
Un-Knowing, Getting Lost, Linking Points in Space: The New Archival Practice
Sven Spieker, University of California, Santa Barbara
Part Two (1:35:11)
Artist Presentations
George Herms, Suzanne Lacy, and Mario Garcia Torres
George Herms, Suzanne Lacy, and Mario Garcia Torres
Part Three (1:04:44)
Conversation with the Artists
Moderated by Julia Bryan-Wilson, University of California, Berkeley
Closing Remarks
Michael Lobel, Purchase College, State University of New York
Moderated by Julia Bryan-Wilson, University of California, Berkeley
Closing Remarks
Michael Lobel, Purchase College, State University of New York
Saturday, November 12, 2011
1:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m.
Museum Lecture Hall
The Getty Center
In recent decades, artists have become increasingly interested in archives both as inspiration and as an artistic medium. Accumulating and sorting—the same impulses that drive the creation of an archive—feed the process of making assemblages and collages. Conceptual and performance art continue to blur the line between art and documentation. And more recently, many artists draw on the archive to revisit and reenact earlier works. This symposium considers how archives not only trace the creative process but also become part of that process and even of the work itself.
A panel of artists and scholars explores the ways contemporary artists incorporate archives into their work. Invited speakers include artists George Herms, Suzanne Lacy, and Mario Garcia Torres, and scholar Sven Spieker.
Artists & Archives is presented in conjunction with Greetings from L.A.: Artists and Publics, 1950–1980—a Pacific Standard Time exhibition rooted in the archival holdings of Getty Research Institute's Special Collections.
1:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m.
Museum Lecture Hall
The Getty Center
In recent decades, artists have become increasingly interested in archives both as inspiration and as an artistic medium. Accumulating and sorting—the same impulses that drive the creation of an archive—feed the process of making assemblages and collages. Conceptual and performance art continue to blur the line between art and documentation. And more recently, many artists draw on the archive to revisit and reenact earlier works. This symposium considers how archives not only trace the creative process but also become part of that process and even of the work itself.
A panel of artists and scholars explores the ways contemporary artists incorporate archives into their work. Invited speakers include artists George Herms, Suzanne Lacy, and Mario Garcia Torres, and scholar Sven Spieker.
Artists & Archives is presented in conjunction with Greetings from L.A.: Artists and Publics, 1950–1980—a Pacific Standard Time exhibition rooted in the archival holdings of Getty Research Institute's Special Collections.