Juan Downey

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Juan Downey
Born(1940-05-11)May 11, 1940
New York, NY
NationalityChilean
EducationPontificia Universidad Católica of Chile
MovementVideo Art, Kinetic Art

Juan Downey (May 11, 1940 – June 9, 1993) was a Chilean artist who was a pioneer in the fields of video art and interactive art.

Early life and education

Downey was born in Santiago, Chile.

Pontificia Universidad Católica of Chile.[3][4] In 1961, to further his studies and develop his artistic practice, Downey traveled to Europe. He spent a few months in Barcelona and Madrid, followed by Paris,[3] where he lived for three years studying printmaking at Stanley William Hayter's legendary Atelier 17.[4] During that time, he befriended artists Eugenio Téllez, Roberto Matta, Julio Le Parc, and Takis.[4][5][6][7]

In 1965, Downey traveled to Washington, D.C., at the invitation of the Organization of American States to present a solo show of his work.[8] It was there that Downey would meet his future wife, Marilys Belt.[9] Downey stayed in Washington for a couple of years before moving with his family to New York in 1969.[6] Downey was an associate professor of art at the Pratt Institute in New York from 1970 until 1993.[6] He died in New York on June 9, 1993, as a result of cancer.[1][10]

Career

In New York, Downey would become involved with the groups Radical Software and Raindance collective, both of them early proponents of using video for artistic and political means.[11][12][13]

Downey is recognized as a pioneer and early adopter of video art,[1][14][15] but during his artistic career, he created an extensive body of work that also includes electronic and video sculptures, photography, painting, drawing, printmaking, performance, installation, and writing.[1] Downey's drawings are especially remarkable and remained a constant practice of his.[16] All of his major works were accompanied by drawings. They reflect not only his “sureness of hand,” as curators David Ross and James Harithas noted,[17] but also his compelling ideas and visions, and they reveal a sustained practice of drawing over a lifetime.

The early period of Juan Downey's artistic practice consisted of painting, drawing, writing, and printmaking. After moving to the United States in 1965, he began to experiment with numerous forms of art that included creating interactive electronic sculptures, performances, happenings, and, in the late 1960s, video art. He wrote: “The universe is not an assemblage of independent parts, but an overlapping, interrelated system of energy. All my work relates to this vision.”[18] These media permitted Downey to investigate ideas about invisible energy as well as to invite active participation by viewers of his work.

Two seminal series in Downey's career were Video Trans Americas, begun in 1971,[19][20] and The Thinking Eye, begun in the mid-1970s. Video Trans Americas (VTA.) is often divided into two groups: the first group was developed from 1973 to 1976, and the second from 1976 to 1977. The two series stress Downey's preoccupation with political discourse, the self, the history of art, Western civilization, and Latin American identity.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Solo exhibitions featuring Juan Downey's work include:

Group exhibitions

Downey's work was included in numerous group exhibitions as follows.

  • Some More Beginnings: An Exhibition of Submitted Works Involving Technical Materials and Processes, organized by Experiments in Art and Technology, in collaboration with the Brooklyn Museum, Brookly, NY and The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY (1968);[2][30][33]
  • New Learning Spaces & Places, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN (1974);
  • Whitney Biennial Exhibition, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY (1975,[7] 1977, 1981, 1983,[34] 1985, 1987,[34] 1989, 1991);[34][35]
  • Documenta 6, Kassel, Germany, (1977);
  • Venice Biennale, US Pavilion, Venice, Italy, (1980);[34]
  • Sydney Biennale, Sydney, Australia, (1982);[36]
  • II Bienal de La Habana, Havana, Cuba, (1986);
  • The Thinking Eye, International Center for Photography, New York, NY, (1987);
  • Passages de l’image,
    Musée national d'Art moderne- Centre Georges Pompidou
    , Paris, France, (1990);
  • Video Art: The First 25 Years, The Museum of Modern Art, and The American Federation of Arts, New York, NY, (1995);
  • Info Art ’95,
    Kwangju Biennale
    , Kwangju, Korea, (1995);
  • Electronic Highways, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, (1997);
  • Rational/Irrational, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany, (2008-2009)
  • The Looking Glass: Artist Immigrants of Washington, American University Art Museum, Washington, DC (2016)[37]
  • VIVA ART VIVA, Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy, (2017);[38]

Selected works

Interactive art

Performance art

  • Imperialistic Octopus, 1972[43]
  • Energy Fields, 1972[16][43]
  • Video Trans Americas Debriefing Pyramid, 1974[43]

Video art

Early works

  • Fresh Air, 3/4" NTSC format, b/w 16 min., 1971[5]
  • Plato Now, b/w, 30 min., 9 channels, 1972[31][44]
  • Monument to the Charles River, b/w, 27 min., 2 channels, 1973[44]
  • Rewe, video installation, 1991[45][46][28]

Video Trans Americas

The Video Trans Americas (VTA) Series was a video-installation composed of videos recorded with a Sony portapak during Downey’s travels from North to Central and South America between 1973 and 1976.[47][48] The first complete screening of the VTA video-installation was in the exhibition Landscape Studies in Video curated by David Ross at the Long Beach Museum of Art in 1975.[20] The VTA video-installation in subsequent exhibitions at other museum institutions such as the Whitney Museum of American Art (1976) was exhibited differently. This was largely due to the spatial component entailed in the presentation of the work, a key concern for Downey, as well as his own artistic liberty to make changes or integrate other components in the installation. Therefore, there are a number of different versions in the way the VTA video installation was exhibited. The following videos were included in the installation:[citation needed]

  • Rumbo al Golfo, b/w, 27 min., 1973[28][44]
  • Zapoteca, b/w, 27 min., 1973[44]
  • Yucatán, 1973
  • Chile, color, 13 min., 1974[44]
  • Guatemala, b/w, 27 min., 1973[44]
  • New York/Texas I & II, b/w, 27 min., 2 channels, 1974[2]
  • Nazca I & II, b/w 11 min., 2 channels, 1974[44]
  • Lima/Machu Picchu, b/w, 27 min., 1975[44]
  • Cuzco I & II, 1976
  • Inca I & II, 1976
  • Uros I & II, 1975
  • La Frontera I & II, 1976

Additional videos that are part of the VTA series:

  • Moving, b/w, 27 min., 1974[44]
  • Publicness, b/w, 30 min., 1974[44]
  • Central Zone, b/w, 27 min., 1975[49]
  • Videodances, b/w, 30 min., 1975[44]
  • Inca Split, 1976
  • Bi-Deo, 1976
  • In the Beginning, 1976
  • Guahibos, color, 26 min. 1976[49]
  • Yanomami Healing I, b/w, 1977[49]
  • Yanomami Healing II, b/w, 1977[49]
  • The Circle of Fires, 1978 (video installation comes in 2 versions)[50][51]
  • More Than Two, 1978 (installation)
  • The Abandoned Shabono, 1979[52]
  • The Laughing Alligator, 1979[53][54]
  • Chiloe, color, 18 min., 1981[16][44]
  • Chicago Boys, color, 16 min., stereo, 1982–83[44]
  • About Cages, 1986 (installation)
  • The Motherland, 1986
  • The Return of the Motherland, 1989

The Thinking Eye Series

  • Las Meninas (Maids of Honor), color, 20 min., 1975[55]
  • Venus and Her Mirror, 1980 (video-installation)[56][57]
  • The Looking Glass, 1981[58]
  • Information Withheld, 1983[59]
  • Shifters, 1984[59]
  • Sinage, 1984 (video-installation)
  • Obelisk, 1985 (video-installation)[49]
  • J.S. Bach, 1986[59]
  • Bachdisc, 1988 (interactive video-disc)[60]
  • Hard Times and Culture: Part One, Vienna fin-de-siecle, 1990[61][62]

Collections

Downey’s work can be found in private collections and in the collections of major museums. Selected museum collections include:

Awards

Downey was a Guggenheim fellow in the area of fine arts in 1971.[68]

Selected bibliography

  • Valerie Smith, ed. Juan Downey: The Invisible Architect. Leipzig: MIT List Visual Art Center & The Bronx Museum, 2011.
  • González, Julieta, Nicolás Guagnini, Carla Macchiavello, and Valerie Smith. Juan Downey: el ojo pensante. Santiago: Fundación Telefónica, 2010.
  • Arévalo, Antonio, Marilys Belt de Downey, Juan Downey, José Goñi Carrasco, and Luisa Ulibarri Lorenzini. Juan Downey: La Biennale di Venezia, 49 Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte. Milan: Rodrigo Figueroa Schirmer, 2001.
  • Bonet, Eugeni, Douglas Davis, Juan Downey, Nuria Enguita, Coco Fusco, Juan Guardiola, John G. Hanhardt, James Harithas, and David Ross. Juan Downey: With Energy Beyond These Walls (Con energía más allá de estos muros). Valencia: Institut Valencià d’Art Modern and Centre del Carme, 1997-98.
  • Hanhardt, John G., and Ann D. Hoy. Juan Downey of Dream Into Study. Santiago: Editorial Lord Cochrane, 1987.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Juan Downey, 53, A Pioneer Of Video as a Medium for Art - NYTimes.com
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ a b Stanton Loomis Catlin; Terence Grieder (1966). Art of Latin America Since Independence. Yale University.
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ a b Juan Downey: Chile : La Biennale di Venezia. publisher not identified. 2001.
  6. ^ a b c "The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation".
  7. ^ .
  8. .
  9. ^ Qué pasa. Segunda Editorial Portada. 1986.
  10. ^ Umbrella. Umbrella Associates. 1992.
  11. .
  12. ^ a b Juan Downey - Exhibition at Tate Modern | Tate
  13. .
  14. ^ Linda Frye Burnham (1987). High Performance. Astro Artz.
  15. .
  16. ^ .
  17. ^ (Juan Downey: With Energy Beyond These Walls, p. 329)
  18. .
  19. ^ Social Media: Juan Downey’S Video Trans Americas |
  20. ^ a b Kathy Rae Huffman; Long Beach Museum of Art (1984). Video: a retrospective : Long Beach Museum of Art, 1974-1984. Long Beach Museum of Art.
  21. ^ Project MUSE - Electronically Operated Audio-Kinetic Sculptures, 1968
  22. ^ Arts Magazine. Art Digest Incorporated. March 1970.
  23. ISSN 0148-7736
    .
  24. .
  25. ^ Whitney Museum of American Art (1979). Bulletin of the Whitney Museum of American Art. Whitney Museum of American Art.
  26. ^ Juan Downey: University Art Museum, November-January 1978. The Museum. 1978.
  27. ^ La Biennale di Venezia. Premiato Stabilimento C. Ferrari. 2001.
  28. ^ .
  29. .
  30. ^ .
  31. ^ .
  32. ^ Julieta González. "Juan Downey A Communications Utopia".
  33. ^ Brooklyn Museum (N.Y.); Museum of Modern Art (N.Y.) (1968). Some More Beginnings: An Exhibition of Submitted Works Involving Technical Materials and Processes Organized by Staff and Members of Experiments in Art and Technology.
  34. ^ .
  35. ^ Video Artist Juan Downey, 53 - tribunedigital-chicagotribune
  36. .
  37. ^ Anderson, John (2016-07-16). ""The Looking Glass: Artist Immigrants of Washington" At the Katzen Arts Center, Reviewed". Washington City Paper. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  38. ^ "La Biennale di Venezia - Artists". www.labiennale.org. Archived from the original on 2017-06-29. Retrieved 2017-02-22.
  39. .
  40. .
  41. ^ Juan Downey | Frieze
  42. ^ Arts/Canada. 1973.
  43. ^ a b c Finkel, Jori (15 March 2016). "The Pacific Standard Time Initiative Seeks to Rescue Fugitive Art". The New York Times.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Juan Downey of Dream Into Study. Editorial Lord Cochrane. 1989.
  45. ^ Mapuche people, and art, survive – The Denver Post
  46. ^ AFTEREFFECTS: Mapping the experimental ethnography of Juan Downey in The Invisible Architect | The Brooklyn Rail
  47. .
  48. ^ MoMA | Juan Downey. Map of America. 1975
  49. ^ a b c d e Juan Downey; Visuala Galería (Santiago, Chile) (1987). Festival Downey: video porque te ve. Ediciones Visuala Galería.
  50. ^ The 2017 Venice Biennale's Neo-Shamanism | artnet News
  51. ^ "The Circle of Fires".
  52. ^ "El shabono abandonado - 31a Bienal".
  53. ^ "The Laughing Alligator | www.li-ma.nl".
  54. ^ "Juan Downey. The Laughing Alligator. 1979 | MoMA".
  55. ^ a b Juan Downey. Las Meninas (Maids of Honor). 1975 | MoMA
  56. ^ Juan Downey (1987). The Thinking Eye. International Center of Photography.
  57. .
  58. ^ Electronic Arts Intermix: The Looking Glass, Juan Downey
  59. ^
    ISSN 0028-7369
    .
  60. .
  61. ^ "ART | "Reflections on Place & Culture"".
  62. ^ Electronic Arts Intermix: Hard Times and Culture: Part One, Vienna 'fin de siècle', Juan Downey
  63. ^ Juan Downey 1940-1993 | Tate
  64. ^ Juan Downey | MoMA
  65. ^ La personne Juan Downey - Centre Pompidou
  66. ^ Juan Downey - Video Trans Americas
  67. ^ Artworks Search Results / American Art[permanent dead link]
  68. ^ John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Juan Downey

External links