Showing posts with label Background. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Background. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

PBS Biography


Andrea Zittel was born in Escondido, California, in 1965. She received a BFA in painting and sculpture in 1988 from San Diego State University, and an MFA in sculpture in 1990 from the Rhode Island School of Design. Zittel’s sculptures and installations transform everything necessary for life—such as eating, sleeping, bathing, and socializing—into artful experiments in living. Blurring the lines between life and art, Zittel’s projects extend to her own home and wardrobe. Wearing a single outfit every day for an entire season, and constantly remodeling her home to suit changing demands and interests, Zittel continually reinvents her relationship to her domestic and social environment. Influenced by modernist design and architecture from the early part of the twentieth century, the artist’s one-woman mock organization, “A–Z Administrative Services,” develops furniture, homes, and vehicles for contemporary consumers with a similar simplicity and attention to order. Seeking to attain a sense of freedom through structure, Zittel is more interested in revealing the human need for order than in prescribing a single unifying design principle or style. “People say my work is all about control, but it’s not really,” she remarks. “I am always looking for the gray area between freedom—which can sometimes feel too open-ended and vast—and security—which may easily turn into confinement.” Her “A-Z Pocket Property,” a 44-ton floating fantasy island off the coast of Denmark commissioned by the Danish government, contrasts the extremes of a creative escape with the isolation that occurs when a person is removed from society. Altering and examining aspects of life that are for the most part taken for granted, Zittel’s hand-crafted solutions respond to the day-to-day rhythms of the body and the creative need of people to match their surroundings to the changing appearance of life. Zittel lives in California and New York.
Source - http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/andrea-zittel

Andrea Zittel Biography



Critical Space is the first comprehensive survey of Andrea Zittel’s work to take place in the United States. Over the last fifteen years Zittel has used her own day-to-day living - her needs and fantasies relating to food, furniture, clothing, and shelter - as the impetus for her artwork. From designing clothing to be worn every day for six months, to devising diets based on dehydrated food, to producing furniture that changes one’s sense of hierarchies and space, there is no area of daily living, no matter how basic, that she has not been willing to examine.
Born in 1965 in Southern California, Zittel moved to New York City around 1990. The contrast between the cleanliness of suburban California modernity and New York’s gritty urbanism provided fodder for early works such as Repair Work(1991), a presentation of badly damaged objects that she collected off the street and on which she performed extremely rudimentary repairs.
In 1991, Zittel established A-Z Administrative Services. Zittel used this company name - derived from her initials - as a corporate banner under which she produced and marketed her work. The name not only suggested her interest in questioning how individuals function in a society dominated by branding and corporate identities, but also hinted at her ambition for encyclopedic competency. While it later functioned as a naming device or brand identifier for all her works,A-Z Administrative Services initially allowed her to negotiate fluidly with animal breeding companies that would not have been as responsive or immediately trusting had she presented herself as an artist. At that time, contact with these companies was important to her exploration of breeding and husbandry as analogous to ideas of selection and judgment both in the art world and in society at large. However, these interests would quickly shift from animals to humans. Even as she began to gain attention for works such as the A-Z Breeding Unit for Averaging Eight Breeds (1993) that was presented in the 1993 Venice Biennale, her interest in human behavior was evident in sculptural models such as the Family Tree Apartment Complex (1991) and drawings such as Clone Series (1992). In fact, Zittel almost immediately began to see herself as the subject of her investigation and her lifestyle as a source of creative potential.
A-Z Administrative Services was established in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in the first of a series of live/work spaces that was critical to the evolution of her work. A 200 square-foot storefront space had to contain all Zittel’s living and working needs: 100 square-feet in front as a public work space and the back left for private needs. This constrained environment motivated the first experimental structures that she designed to facilitate all her eating, cleaning, socializing, and storage needs in no more than 60 square-feet. The Management and Maintenance Unit 003 (1992), is the earliest extant work of this type and the precursor to the A-Z Living Unit (1993). A portable version of the same idea, the A-Z Living Unit could fold down to the size of a steamer trunk and be reassembled wherever necessary. In 1994, Zittel expanded on this idea by collaborating with her clients: she would provide the basic structure and work with her clients to customize the details according to their needs and desires. Her next series, A-Z Escape Vehicle (1996), took this process of collaboration from the realm of utility to the realization of her clients’ escapist fantasies. Adorning a small portable pod with anonymous metal siding, Zittel created an interior environment that, like the -, could be customized according to personal preference. Instead of specifying surface details or choosing objects, clients imagined their own detailed and intimate environments such as a flotation tank, a cave-like grotto, and a lounge based on customized panel vans popular in the 1970s. The A-Z Escape Vehicles touched upon ways that people often attempt to escape a large and increasingly uncontrollable world by creating personal limitations for themselves.
In 1995, Zittel purchased a small three-story building in Williamsburg that was christened The A-Z. In this environment, she produced furniture prototypes and held social events for people in the community. By turning her home into a showroom and testing ground for her work, Zittel began an investigation into the socially constructed divisions that we make between private and public life in contemporary society. After the establishment of A-Z West in Joshua Tree, California in 2000, the Williamsburg space became known as A-Z East. While the work Zittel produced in New York often explored ways in which urban constraints could be addressed creatively, works produced at A-Z West, such as the A-Z Cellular Compartment Units (2001) and A-Z Homestead Units (2001-05), carried her living experiments into the ex-urban and frontier environments of Southern California.
One of the highlights of the exhibition is a representative selection of Zittel’s A-Z Uniforms (1991-2005). Like A-Z Administrative Services, the A-Z Uniforms were a solution to maximize Zittel’s extremely limited resources. These works began as an attempt to produce clothing that she could wear for all work and social engagements over a six-month period, allowing her to look stylish but avoid the expense of seasonal fashion changes. In the uniforms one can see both an expression of personal fantasy - unusual combinations of color and material - and a clear evolution of material choices. This begins with multi-functional black-and-white garments, followed by simple rectangles of woven cloth inspired by the Russian Constructivists. Zittel then reduced the rectangular ‘panel’ of fabric to the strand - which was successively knitted, crocheted, and finally hand knotted. Most recently, in the A-Z Raugh Uniforms, she works with the purest medium of raw wool. This process led her to realize that it is easier to be creative when the parameters are narrowed than when all options are possible. Zittel coined the term Raugh (pronounced “raw”) in relation to her use of simple materials and elemental design strategies to make objects that will look better as they become naturally worn or undone as a result of lived experience.
Zittel’s drive for direct control and immediacy often parodies the methods of industrial
production and corporate branding while exploring the ironic way that so-called progressive designs often refer to supposedly pure or primitive models. She uses A-Z in all her titles, as one would a logo or brand. The production of the early uniforms on a regimented season-by-season basis plays off the rhythms of the fashion industry, while the annual variations of the A-Z Living Units, A-Z Comfort Units, and A-Z Escape Vehicles operate much as a suburban home model or car brand gets modified and modernized each year. Ultimately, Zittel uses her own lifestyle as a vehicle for experimentation to raise questions about responsibility and emancipation in a consumer culture in which promises of leisure-time freedom have worn thin.
-Trevor Smith, Curator, New Museum of Contemporary Art.
Source - http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/397

MoMA Biography of Zittel


SOURCE: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

American sculptor and installation artist. She studied painting and sculpture at San Diego State University in San Diego, CA, graduating in 1988. She then went on to study for her MFA in sculpture at the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, RI, graduating in 1990. In 1992 she set up A–Z Administrative Services, a company which aimed to streamline domestic objects and rituals. For Prototypes for Container, Cover, Support (1993; see 1993 exh. cat., pp. 29–30), Zittel made the objects itemized in the title and gave them to a group of volunteers who then recorded their experiences of using them. Each object was designed to be as multi-functional as possible: the container, for example, could be used as a bowl, a holder and a vase. Zittel expanded on these ideas of functional living by making self-contained units for dining, study and recreation. In 1993 she began to customize the units according to the client for whom they were designed, such as the A–Z Comfort Units Customised for the Cincinnati Art Museum (1994; Cincinnati, OH, A. Mus.), in which each unit housed items from the museum’s collections. In the mid-1990s she made a series of customized trailers as complete living environments that attempted to create a completely functional, yet individualized domestic space: see, for example, Travel Trailer Unit (1995; San Francisco, CA, MOMA). Zittel’s work draws on Modernist concepts of design and architecture reminiscent of those promoted by the Bauhaus School of Design. Her use of a commercial style in the promotional literature for her ‘products’, and of A–Z Administrative Services as the front for her practice, situates her art within the convenience culture of American society.
Catherine M. Grant
From Grove Art Online
© 2009 Oxford University Press
Source - http://www.moma.org/collection/artist.php?artist_id=7525

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Andrea Zittel Portrait

Source - http://fashionbeyondfashion.files.wordpress.com/2010/08/andrea-zittel-portrait.jpg