Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Bruce Charlesworth

American artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Bruce Charlesworth (born 1950) is an American artist, known primarily for his highly stylized and constructed photographic, video and multimedia works.

Quick facts Born, Education ...
Remove ads

Early life and education

Charlesworth was born in 1950 in Davenport, Iowa.[1][2] He received his BA degree in Art from the University of Northern Iowa (1972) and his MFA degree in Painting from the University of Iowa in 1975.[1][3]

Work

Summarize
Perspective

Style and themes

Charlesworth is known for manipulating lighting, color, form, space, and sound to create large scale, stylized environments which he refers to as “narrative environments”. The narrative environments act as the backdrop for his video, photography, and interactive pieces. Charlesworth’s work is staged and constructed. Objects and set pieces are stripped down to their most basic form and intense colors, patterns, and lighting work together with performers to create narrative tension and absurd humor.

Themes in his work include contemporary living, media, surveillance, and conditioning. When talking about his work and process to the Rose Gallery, Charlesworth says this:

"I’ve always embraced the potential for thematic crossover between multiple media. For most of my projects, I develop a conceptual framework before adding concrete details. Although my finished works often contain characters, dialogue, emotions and narrative, I always start in an abstract place. An idea may begin as a shape, color relationship or directional lines. The architecture will often come next, with characters and stories evolving out of a sense of place. My themes include lighting and color as visual disruptions, layers created by barriers and screens, extremes of distance and contrasts of vastness with confined space. The anthropomorphic potential of inanimate objects is another recurring theme in my work."[4]

Notable work

Charlesworth began to exhibit in New York and internationally with the photo-novellas Eddie Glove (1976–79), and Special Communiqués (1981). Other staged photographic series followed, including Trouble (1982–83), Fate (1984–87), Man and Nature (1988–91), Confiscated Objects (1999–2000), and Serum (2003–08).

Surveillance (1981) was the first of many of what Charlesworth termed narrative environments, works that use video and/or audio to power a narrative within a designed space. Projectile (1982), Wrong Adventures (1984), Private House (1987), Reality Street (1994) and Airlock (2004) are a few subsequent multimedia installations.

Video and film works include Communiqués for Tape (1981), Robert and Roger (1985), Dateline for Danger (1987), A Stranger's Index (1990) and The Happiness Effect (2004). Throughout much of the 1990s Charlesworth worked on his feature-length experimental film project Private Enemy - Public Eye. In the book entitled, Private Enemy, Public Eye: The Work of Bruce Charlesworth (1989), was also the name of a survey exhibition of his work at the International Center of Photography. The interactive video installation Love Disorder was featured in the Zero1 Biennial (2008) in San Jose, California and in the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art's Wisconsin Triennial (2010).[5] Love Disorder featured a 12 foot tall screen with an uncomfortably close view of a face, and sensors in the room would change how the face reacts to the viewers movements.[5]

Remove ads

Exhibitions and collections

Selected exhibitions [citation needed]

Permanent collection

Awards and honors

Fellowships

Artist in residence

Remove ads

References

Sources

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads