Typical Girls
-------- Original Message -------- To:
nicmarshall@nzfa.org.nz For your
attention, with thanks. Communications Manager The New
Zealand Film Archive mobile +64 21 256
4737 ph +64 4 384 7647 ext 823 www.filmarchive.org.nz 27 SEPTEMBER, FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE The New Zealand Film Archive from 13
October Typical girls can't control
themselves Typical girls are so
confusing Typical girls - you can always
tell” Galloway feels that increasingly mediated beauty
standards, and the contemporary cult-of-youth within
hypercapitalism, are mocking earlier feminist achievements.
"The time is right for a show like Typical Girls, by
women who twist current female stereotypes in a way that is
both playful and empowering." Galloway, a multi-media
artist and lecturer at Massey Wellington's School of Fine
Arts is perhaps best known for his work in the 90s with
lo-fi art pop group Wendyhouse and his more recent fanzine
Incredibly Hot Sex with Hideous People. In 2011
Galloway's zine was anthologised into a single publication
by Auckland art books publisher Clouds. Galloway also
co-organizes Wellington Zinefest, held each year in November
and has always been interested in things lo-fi. Typical
Girls represents Galloway's first foray into curation.
Galloway's own videos deal with similar issues as the
artists in Typical Girls, though from a male
perspective. Six of the artists are graduates of Massey
University’s School of Fine Arts, while the seventh is a
current student. Galloway lectures at the same institution
where he met many of the women whose work he is now curating
into a show as the work of peers and fellow
artists. Typical Girl's Bek Coogan was lucky enough to
interview The Slits' lead singer Ari Up for radio NZ
before the singer's death in 2010. A portion of this
interview is transcribed for the exhibition's catalogue,
available free from the New Zealand Film Archive during the
show.
Subject:
Typical Girls (The New Zealand Film Archive media
release)
Date: Tue, 27 Sep 2011 11:19:57
+1300
From: Nic Marshall
Nic
Marshall
Typical Girls
Curated by Bryce
Galloway
“Typical girls get upset too
quickly
That’s Typical Girls according to
all-girl 70s punkers The Slits, though we’re sure
they’d be delighted to hear that a show of the same name
presents girls (women really) who’re more likely to
perform Freddie Mercury impersonations or odd stunts with
pubic hair. Typical Girls brings together seven
female video artists from Wellington: Sarah Jane Parton, Bek
Coogan, Gemma Syme, Emily Jolliffe, Erica Sklenars, Claire
Harris and Natalie Ellen-Eliza. All are artists that curator
Bryce Galloway realised had something in common. All play
with gender stereotypes, consciously or otherwise, and
utilise self-deprecating humour as they perform to
video.
Natalie Ellen-Eliza is the 2011 DEBLYN
artist-in-residence at Toi Poneke Arts Centre. Eliza
completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Hons) with First Class
honours from Massey University and was awarded Massey
Scholar 2010.
Emily Joliffe is currently in the
3rd year of her BFA at Massey University and works across
sculpture, video and performance. Her endurance based video
performances usually explore physical limitations of the
body and a beer can.
Claire Harris’
background is in photography and self-published indie
comics. Her current practise includes narrative media such
as video, installation and live performance, with an
emphasis on fan made/home made objects and fan and celebrity
cultures.
Gemma Syme has completed a Masters in
Fine Arts at Massey University, Wellington and through her
work engages with concepts of gender without holding onto
lingering binarisms, playfully complicating conventional sex
differences.
Sarah Jane Parton graduated with
an honours degree in Timebased Art from Massey University in
2003, showing and and performing work here in New Zealand,
and in Australia, Europe, Asia and the United
States.
Bek Coogan holds a MFA from Massey
University Wellington 2004, and a BFA from Wanganui Regional
Community Polytechnic 1999. Coogan works in a variety of
media, including live performance, music, video, gallery
installation, photography, drawing and
collage.
Erica Sklenars completed her MFA in
2011 at Massey University in Wellington, New Zealand. She
currently lives and works in Berlin. Sklenars works
predominantly in the mediums of performance and video with a
low-fi aesthetic, examining the dynamic of humour in
contemporary feminism, investigating social conventions and
the absurdity of human existence.
Bryce Galloway says,
“I love the work of these seven artists, and once I’d
recognised the commonalities in what they do, I figured they
should meet under a single banner.”
The shows title
was chosen because The Slits embodied an aggressive
reworking of 1970s “womanhood” with all the anarchic
absurdity of early punk. The Slits are cited by many
as the antecedents to more familiar female voices in popular
culture.
ENDS