Thursday, July 5, 2007

Halt Video 2007



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Artist Richard Jochum saws himself off the branch he sits on and falls. Sound: sawing noises, and branch cracking. New York 2007. Continuation of a performance series which started in Vienna 2001.

Halt Video 2001



Watch video

Artist saws himself off the branch he sits on. He falls and lands on the same bough. Presented and cut as a loop. Sounds: birds twittering, sawing noises, and branch cracking. Vienna 2001

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Artist Statement

"Halt" (2001-ongoing)

My performance series Halt (2001-ongoing) deals with our at times damaging ways of being in the world. Some of our actions seem to be very considerate, prolific, and seminal, yet they are not. And even what is being done with the best intentions can end up in a disaster. As well, what’s good for an individual must not be beneficial for the society as a whole. So what makes our doing valuable or sustainable then?

“Halt” is a performance project that comes with the winking of an eye. We all know the metaphor of cutting oneself off the branch one sits on which we understand to be a popular expression for counterproductive behavior and doing against better knowledge. Seeing an artist performing the sawing for real, induces humor in such a kind of action; and it is humor what makes a disastrous, traumatizing way of being in the world bearable; empathic, and affectionately absurd.

Richard Jochum

Biography

Richard Jochum is a Visiting Scholar and Artist at Columbia University. He works as a media artist since the late 1990s setting up exhibitions all over the world. Being an Austrian citizen Richard received his MA in philosophy from the University of Innsbruck, and his PhD from the University of Vienna dealing with strategies of coping with complexity in contemporary philosophy. He got his MFA in sculpture and media art from the University of Applied Arts in Vienna before he moved first to Berlin and later to New York. Richard’s art practice is accompanied by publications and lectures in the field of cultural theory and contemporary art. He has been awarded several grants and prizes. His most recent installation - an oversized prayer necklace as a communal sculpture – is exhibited on the roof top of the American University in Cairo, March – July 2007. More information can be found at http://richardjochum.net