SFCINEMATHEQUE

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Sunday, November 17, 2002

Discrete and Continuous Border Crossings: The Multi Media Art of Lynn Marie Kirby

Program 1: Location of the Boundary

San Francisco Art Institute





For over twenty years, San Francisco-based artist Lynn Marie Kirby has been locating her personal voice, and probing the boundaries, between virtually every timebased medium. Kirby has created a body of work that includes film, video, performance, installation and sound art. Kirby invests in all of her work a vibrant willingness to push the limits of each medium and has maintained a remarkable sensitivity to new potentials for expression. An over-arching concern through all of her work is a fascination with the rhythms and architecture of time, or as she thinks of her recent work, with “time dilations.” Each of the programs in this mid-career retrospective has been conceived around a different set of questions and gestures. Each program will feature a combination of old and new work and each will include at least one installation or performance. (Steve Anker)

There will be a concurrent gallery show of Kirby’s other recent digital work “en passant ” at Ampersand International Arts, 1001 Tennessee Street, San Francisco, open Thursday and Friday, 11am to 5pm and by appointment. Call (415) 285 0170 or email andartsf@aol.com. The show runs from November 22 through December 20, a public reception for the artist will be held on Friday, November 22, from 5:00pm — 8:00pm.

A monograph of Kirby’s work will be available at the shows and a companion web site will be accessible at www.Culturelounge.org.

These works explore different aspects of working site-dependently and look at one’s relation to ‘place’ through history, memory and conversations with another discipline or another artist’s work. Films and videos include Across the Street; July 4th; La Entre, Passage et Salon: 61 rue de Mauberge; Photons in Paris: image encoding series; In Search of the Baths of Constantine and the installation C to C: Several Centuries After the Double Slit experiment. (Lynn Marie Kirby)