Christian Marclay

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (10 ratings)
  • Born: San Rafael, CA
  • Years Active: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s

Albums

Biography All Music Guide Wikipedia

All Music Guide:

Christian Marclay was the first non-rap DJ to make an art form out of the turntable, treating the instrument as a means to rip songs apart, not bridge them together. A long-time associate of Downtown improv figures John Zorn, Elliott Sharp, and Butch Morris as well as the Kronos Quartet, Marclay was inspired artistically by Joseph Beuys and musically by John Cage and the Fluxus group after a period studying at the Massachusetts College of Art. He noted the experimental applications made possible by using the turntable in ways hardly recommended by owners manuals and began performing as early as 1979. Marclay's methods included standard scratching, playback on damaged turntables, the actual destruction (and reassembly) of vinyl to record the results, and creating musical juxtapositions by mixing together a variety of radically different artists. His 1985 installation Footsteps included a gallery floor lined with thousands of records for people to walk over (the results were packaged and sold). His 1988 LP More Encores featured tributes to a variety of musical figures, including "John Cage" (recorded by gluing together pieces of several records to create one) and "Louis Armstrong" (using a hand-cranked gramophone to alter the pitch). Though he recorded much more sparingly in the 1990s, Marclay continued to appear on Zorn projects, including several editions of his Filmworks series. The Atavistic label has released the retrospective Records 1981-1989. Moving Parts was released in mid-2000.

Wikipedia:

Christian Marclay (b. 11 January 1955, San Rafael, California, USA) is a Swiss-American visual artist and composer.

Marclay's work explores connections between sound, noise, photography, video, and film. A pioneer of using gramophone records and turntables as musical instruments to create sound collages, Marclay is, in the words of critic Thom Jurek, perhaps the "unwitting inventor of turntablism." His own use of turntables and records, beginning in the late 1970s, was developed independently of but roughly parallel to hip hop's use of the instrument.

Biography

Christian Marclay was born on 11 January 1955 in San Rafael, Marin County, California to a Swiss father and an American mother and raised in Geneva, Switzerland. He studied at the Ecole Supérieure d'Art Visuel in Geneva (1975–1977), the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston (1977–1980, Bachelor of Fine Arts), and the Cooper Union in New York (1978). As a student he was notably interested in Joseph Beuys and the Fluxus movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Long based in Manhattan, Marclay has in recent years divided his time between New York and London.

Drawn to the energy of punk rock, Marclay began creating songs, singing to music on pre-recorded backing tapes. Unable to recruit a drummer for his 1979 performances with guitarist Kurt Henry, Marclay used the regular rhythms of a skipping LP record as a percussion instrument. These duos with Henry might be the first time a musician used records and turntables as interactive, improvising musical instruments.

Marclay sometimes manipulates or damages records to produce continuous loops and skips, and has said he generally prefers inexpensive used records purchased at thrift shops, as opposed to other turntablists who often seek out specific recordings. In 1998 he claimed never to have paid more than US$1 for a record. Marclay has occasionally cut and re-joined different LP records; when played on a turntable, these re-assembled records will combine snippets of different music in quick succession along with clicks or pops from the seams – typical of noise music – and when the original LPs were made of differently-colored vinyl, the reassembled LPs can themselves be objets d'art.

Some of Marclay's musical pieces are carefully recorded and edited plunderphonics-style; he is also active in free improvisation. He was filmed performing a duo with Erikm for the documentary Scratch. His scene didn't make the final cut, but is included among the DVD extras.

Marclay released Album Without a Cover on Neutral Records in 1986, "...designed to be sold without a jacket, not even a sleeve!" Accumulating dust and fingerprints would enhance the sound. A review in Spin at the time cited Marclay's "coolest theatrical gesture" in his live performances of phonoguitar: the artist strapped a record player onto himself and played, for example, a Jimi Hendrix album.

Thom Jurek writes that "While many intellectuals have made wild pronouncements about Marclay and his art – and it is art, make no mistake – writing all sorts of blather about how he strips the adult century bare by his cutting up of vinyl records and pasting them together with parts from other vinyl records, they never seem to mention that these sound collages of his are charming, very human, and quite often intentionally hilarious."

Marclay has performed and recorded both solo and in collaboration with many musicians, including John Zorn, William Hooker, Elliott Sharp, Otomo Yoshihide, Butch Morris, Shelley Hirsch, Flo Kaufmann and Crevice; he has also performed with the group Sonic Youth, and in other projects with Sonic Youth's members.

At the 2011 Venice Biennale, Marclay was recognised as the best artist in the official exhibition, winning the Golden Lion for The Clock, a 24-hour compilation of time-related scenes from movies that debuted at London's White Cube gallery in 2010. Newsweek responded by naming Marclay one of the ten most important artists of today. Accepting the Golden Lion, Marclay invoked Andy Warhol, thanking the jury "for giving The Clock its fifteen minutes".

Selected exhibitions

The Clock – March to June 2012 - Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, AustraliaThe Clock – 10 February to 21 May 2012 (extended) - National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, CanadaThe Clock – 19 September to 31 December 2011 – Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MAThe Clock – 23 August to 20 October 2011 – Israel Museum, JerusalemThe Clock – 4 June to 27 November 2011 – Corderie dell'Arsenale, Venice Biennale, ItalyThe Clock – 26 May to 31 July 2011 – Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California, USAThe Clock – 16 February to 17 April 2011 – Hayward Gallery, London, EnglandThe Clock – 21 January to 19 February 2011 – Paula Cooper Gallery, New York City, New York, USAThe Clock – 15 October to 13 November 2010 – White Cube, London, EnglandThe Record: Contemporary Art and Vinyl – 2010 – Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USAVinyl – 2009 – Lydgalleriet, Bergen, Norway (with Flo Kaufmann, Janek Schaefer and Otomo Yoshihide)Broken English – 2009 – Seiler+Mosseri-Marlio Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland (with Justin Bennett, Shana Lutker, Euan Macdonald, Navid Nuur and Mungo Thomson)Replay – 2009 – DHC/Art, Montréal, CanadaYou Said He Said She Said – 2008 – Seiler+Mosseri-Marlio Galerie, Zurich, SwitzerlandHonk If You Love Silence – 2008 – Mamco, Geneva, SwitzerlandSnap! – 2008 – Galerie Art and Essai, Rennes, FranceReplay – 2007–08 – Australian Centre for the Moving Image, Melbourne, AustraliaReplay – 2007 – Cité de la Musique, Paris, FranceChristian Marclay – 1999 – Paula Cooper Gallery, New York City, New York, USAPictures at an Exhibition – 1997 – Whitney Museum of American Art at Philip Morris, New York City, New York, USAArranged and Conducted – 1997 – Kunsthaus, Zurich, SwitzerlandAccompagnement Musical – 1995 – Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva, SwitzerlandAmplification – 1995 – Chiesa San Staë, Venice Biennale, Venice, ItalyChristian Marclay – 1994 – Daadgalerie, Berlin, Germany; and Fri-Art Centre d'art contemporain Kunsthalle, Fribourg, SwitzerlandChristian Marclay – 1993 – Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles, CaliforniaThe Wind Section – 1992 – Galerie Jennifer Flay, Paris, FranceChristian Marclay – 1991 – Interim Art, London, EnglandDirections: Christian Marclay – 1990 – Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., USAChristian Marclay – 1987 – The Clocktower, P.S. 1 Museum, New York City, New York, USA

Interviews

Journal of Contemporary Art (Spring 1992).Perfect Sound Forever (March 1998).Interview with Akira Sanematsu (28 March 2002).KultureFlash (July 2003). Site broken 25 June 2011.Some Assembly Required (12 June 2006).Daily Telegraph (1 March 2008).
more »