LONDON.- American artist Joan Jonas (b. 1936) is announced today as the third artist to be awarded the
Whitechapel Gallery Art Icon.
The Whitechapel Gallery Art Icon honours the lifetime achievements of one of our greatest artists. The award will be presented to Joan Jonas at a special gala dinner hosted by Whitechapel Gallery Director Iwona Blazwick OBE on 25 February 2016.
Joan Jonas lives and works between New York and Cape Breton, U.S. and emerged as a key figure in the performance art and feminist movements of the 60s. The year 1979 saw Jonas UK debut at the Whitechapel Gallery. She presented video works and series of live performances titled The Juniper Tree, which incorporated movement, sound, film, mirrors and props in a reinterpretation of the Brothers Grimm fairy tale of the same name.
Over six prolific decades Jonas has built a reputation as one of Americas most influential multimedia artists. Trained in art history and sculpture, her body of work is distinctive in its layering of sound, images and ideas in sophisticated and ethereal multimedia collages, encompassing video, drawing, installation, sound, performance and text. She draws regularly from literary influences - from Dantes epic Divine Comedy to the Icelandic writer Halldór Laxness writings on the spiritual aspects of nature, which served as an important reference point for They Come to Us without a Word (2015), her recent critically-acclaimed work for the U.S. Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (9 May 22 November 2015).
Jonas was chosen as the third Whitechapel Gallery Art Icon by a panel of art experts chaired by Iwona Blazwick, including Stephen Deuchar, Director, The Art Fund; Ann Gallagher, Director of Collections (British Art), Tate; and Jackie Wullschlager, Chief Art Critic, The Financial Times.
To celebrate the Whitechapel Gallery Art Icon 2016, guests are invited to buy tickets to a celebratory gala dinner at the newly restored Christ Church Spitalfields, located in the heart of east London, on Thursday 25 February 2016. An auction of works by leading contemporary artists, led by Sothebys Oliver Barker will also take place. All funds raised support the Whitechapel Gallerys Education and Community programmes, which work with thousands of children and young people each year.
Whitechapel Gallery Director Iwona Blazwick OBE said, Joan Jonas is an icon of the American avant-garde and has been a true pioneer since her early experimentation in performance and conceptual art. She has embraced artistic exploration since the 1960s with the then brand new medium of video and she continues to use technologies to inform her work both as an artist and as professor emerita at MIT. The natural world and how we live in it, the ritual, the mythological are amongst her inspirations; the places and cultures she encounters all make their way into her effervescent performances, videos and installations. On behalf of the jury, we are honoured that Joan accepts this award in recognition of how her intimate and moving practice has had a deep resonance on successive generations of artists.
Joan Jonas (b.1936 in New York City, U.S.) studied at Mount Holyoke College, Mount Holyoke, Massachusetts (1958); the School of the Museum of Fine Arts School, Boston, Massachusetts (1961) and Columbia University (1965). In 2015 she was the U.S. representative at the 56th Venice Biennale and was presented in solo exhibitions at Malmö Konsthall, Malmö, Sweden; MIT List Visual Arts Centre, Boston, U.S.; and Galerie Reinhard Hauff, Stuttgart, Germany. Further recent exhibitions include Light Time Tales, curated by Andrea Lissoni, HangarBicocca, Milan (2014); Masks, Dolls and Baskets, Proyecto Paralelo, Mexico (2013); and Reanimation, WAKO Works of Art, Tokyo (2013).