Silvia Kolbowski
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Silvia Kolbowski is an Argentine-born American artist who works primarily with video and installation formats, as well as photography, often using historical figures and events to analyze cultural phenomena and power imbalances. Her widely-exhibited video project "an inadequate history of conceptual art," (2000) recorded the videotaped responses of 22 artists who were asked by Kolbowski to describe a work of conceptual or performance art that they had witnessed in the 1960s and ‘70s, without doing contemporary research. The identities of artists speaking were not revealed and the speakers were instructed not to name the artist or the title of the work they described. Kolbowski maintains anonymity visually by filming only the hands of the respondents as they speak, later projected at large scale in a room separate from the audio. Kolbowski is neither seen, nor does she interact with the speakers. Although in the title Kolbowski identifies this work as a “history” of conceptual art, and the ensuing testimonies, at first, appear to constitute an archive of documentary evidence supporting that claim to historicity, by qualifying that history as inadequate, Kolbowski foregrounds the fallacies inherent in claims to stable historical fact. An Inadequate History of Conceptual Art is also a work of conceptual art in its own right, shaped by an artist who is conspicuous in her absence. Her video projects on Ulrike Meinhof and Rosa Luxemburg reanimate historical figures who speak to contemporary issues of violence and political resistance. Her works are also informed by aspects of feminist and psychoanalytic theory. For example, in an early series, ''Model Pleasure'' (1982), Kolbowski appropriated images of women from mass-media sources to create grids of images that make allusions to the ways that women are defined by such imagery. Her work has been exhibited in The Tapei Biennial, the Villa Arson (Nice), the Whitney Biennial, and the Hammer Museum, and others. She has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art (Ljubljana), the Center for Contemporary Art (Warsaw), The Secession (Vienna), LAX<>ART (Los Angeles), and the Bina Ellen Gallery (Montreal). Silvia Kolbowski was born in 1953 in
Buenos Aires Buenos Aires, controlled by the government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southwest of the Río de la Plata. Buenos Aires is classified as an Alpha− glob ...
,
Argentina Argentina, officially the Argentine Republic, is a country in the southern half of South America. It covers an area of , making it the List of South American countries by area, second-largest country in South America after Brazil, the fourt ...
. She earned an associate degree from the experimental Franconia College], New Hampshire in 1974. Kolbowski earned her B.S. from
Hunter College Hunter College is a public university in New York City, United States. It is one of the constituent colleges of the City University of New York and offers studies in more than one hundred undergraduate and postgraduate fields across five schools ...
, graduating ''magna cum laude'' in 1980. She was a fellow at
The Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies The Institute for Architecture & Urban Studies is a non-profit architecture studio and think tank located in Manhattan, New York, United States. The original Institute existed from 1967 to 1984, where it was a hub for experimental architectural ...
from 1980 until 1983. Kolbowski was a co-editor of ''
October October is the tenth month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian calendars. Its length is 31 days. The eighth month in the old calendar of Romulus , October retained its name (from Latin and Greek ''ôctō'' meaning "eight") after Januar ...
'' journal between 1993 and 2000. She has taught at the Whitney Independent Research Program, the CCC program of the Ecole Superiéure d'Art Visuel, Geneva, the Architecture Department of Parsons The New School for Design, NY, and the School of Art at The Cooper Union. In 2019 her archive was acquired by the Bard College, Center for Curatorial Studies Archive. In 2023, MAMCO Geneve acquired a collection of 14 of her works.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kolbowski, Silvia 1953 births Living people Academic journal editors American artists Argentine emigrants to the United States Franconia College alumni Hunter College alumni Artists from Buenos Aires 20th-century American women artists 21st-century American women