Ann-Marie LeQuesne: Double Exposure, Crescendo 1 & 2, Reading on the Train
July 17 - July 26, 2014
Opening Reception: July 17, 6 - 8pm
This event is free and open to the public.
Ann-Marie LeQuesne stages performances with groups of people in public places. Her invitation to participate is an open one. The actions are simple, but are often disrupted or altered by their location. LeQuesne invites both the participation of her collaborators and the attention of those passing by. The action is then filmed or photographed, becoming material for a subsequent restaging from the documentation.
In Double Exposure (2004), LeQuesne simultaneously photographed two groups in distant cities that were linked via cell phone. Participants stood on the steps in front of the National Gallery, London, and the Lutheran Cathedral, Helsinki. Following directions on prompt cards, the two groups attempted synchronized global communication. Crescendo 1 & 2 (2009) asked participants to create a crescendo with their stature and voices by singing as they walked in line according to height. Once the line was complete and the crescendo at its loudest, the shortest person left and immediately stopped singing. The rest of the group then followed in sequence. In Reading on the Train (2010) participants read from books about trains as they processed through Crouch End station, a disused London railway line that closed in 1954.
BIOGRAPHY
LeQuesne grew up in the United States, but has lived most of her life in the United Kingdom. She has a wide range of experience in collaborative performances, including events in the Tate Modern, the Tate Britain, a performance at the Arsenal Football Grounds, and a staged event on an icebreaker in the Arctic Circle.