LADA Screens #6: Ron Athey

Ron Athey

Sebastiane (2015)

HD Video, 15 mins

Live Confession de Ron Athey (1998)

Super 8, 12 mins

Jennifer Doyle in conversation with Ron Athey (2015)

HD Video, 18 mins

Online 14 – 28 December 2015

Launch event Monday December 14 at 7pm 

 

For the final LADA Screens live launch event of 2015 we have a Ron Athey triple bill.  We’ll be showing the film of ‘Sebastianne’, Ron Athey’s final performance in London before he relocated to Los Angeles; a rare screening of ‘Live Confession de Ron Athey’ by Gabriel Greeb from 1998; and a film Ron has made with Jennifer Doyle especially for this event reflecting on ‘Sebastianne’ and his time in London.

 

Sebastiane

Ron Athey has been using the image of St. Sebastian in his performance work since 1990, first as short actions, then in the performances ‘Martyrs and Saints’ (1992), ‘4 Scenes In A Harsh Life’ (1994), ‘Sebastian Suspended’ (2000), ‘St./Sebastian/50’ (2012), and at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles (2014). ‘Sebastiane’ takes the image and action of martyrdom to archetypal recovery and is inspired by the religious paintings of St.Irene tending to the body of the wounded saint. The film of ‘Sebastiane’ showing on LADA Screens is from the performance as part of ‘Torture Garden: Body Probe’ at The Coronet, London April, 2015. It was performed by Ron Athey, Paul King, Mona Mock, Russell MacEwan and Sage Charles.

 

Live Confession de Ron Athey

This Super 8 film was made by Gabreilla Greeb at the Festival de l’Etrange, Vidéotheque de Paris. Produced by Homemade FIlms.

 

Jennifer Doyle in conversation with Ron Athey

A specially filmed conversation between Ron Athey and writer Jennifer Doyle. Filmed in LA for LADA Screens by Brittany Neimeth

Watch the film for free on the  LADA Screens video channel for two weeks, between 14 and 28 December 2015.

About LADA Screens

LADA Screens is a series of free, online screenings of seminal performance documentation, works to camera, short films/video and archival footage. It is part of Live Online, LADA’s dedicated space where you can watch short videos and films drawn from LADA’s Study Room or generated through our programmes and initiatives.

Each screening will be available to view for a limited time only, and will be launched with a live event at the White Building in Hackney Wick, London. Online art magazine, thisistomorrow will also feature the films on their website for the duration of the screenings.

 

Biography

Ron Athey is an iconic figure in the development of contemporary art and performance. In his frequently bloody portrayals of life, death, crisis, and fortitude in the time of AIDS, Athey calls into question the limits of artistic practice. These limits enable Athey to explore key themes including: gender, sexuality, SM and radical sex, queer activism, post-punk and industrial culture, tattooing and body modification, ritual, and religion.

He began performing at underground galleries with Rozz Williams in 1981, in a collaboration known as Premature Ejaculation. In 1992 he began staging what was to become a performance “torture” trilogy: Martyrs & Saints, 4 Scenes In A Harsh Life, and Deliverance. Subsequent works in the new millennium include Judas Cradle, Self-Obliteration, and Gifts of the Spirit:Automatic Writing in which he explores his Pentacostal upbringing and the creation of an ecstatic experience. Additionally, Athey works in visual arts, journalism, and in 2013 celebrated the release of the first publication dedicated to his life and work: “Pleading in the Blood: The Art and Performance of Ron Athey”, edited by Dominic Johnson.

“Ron Athey forces the body to transcend it’s confines. His brilliance manifests as exorcism not only of, and for, the cauterizing of his own pain, but by pushing the boundaries of endurance through artistic expression, he shares his compassionate epiphany: We all need to break free from the shackles placed upon the individual by society, family, religion and gender. And possibly through the catharsis of performance, and ritual, we might finally be able to lay to rest the demons who’ve sent us in search of the respite only a knife or needle could at one time provide.” – Lydia Lunch

“In his bloody self-obliterations, Ron Athey reveals the profound enigma of the body as a primary location of SELF. His flesh is a source of Life and a source of Death. Athey creates vital images drenched with human violence; his blood is spilled to placate our fear of the unknown and of mortality. Yet his performances are also implicit celebrations.” – Genesis BREYER P-ORRIDGE

 

Other LADA Screens events and screenings

LADA Screens #4 – Tehching Hsieh
One Year Performance 1981–1982 (Outdoor Piece)
Online from 12 – 26 October 2015
Launch event, with a performance by Tim Etchells – Monday October 12, 7pm at the White Building

 

LADA Screens #5 – Robin Deacon
Spectacle: A Portrait of Stuart Sherman (2013)
Online 2 to 16 November 2015
Launch event with Robin Deacon – Monday November 2, 7pm at the White Building

Latest events

LADA Screens: Maxima Smith – Online Screening

23 Mar 2024 - 20 Apr 2024

An online screening of ‘Crying with my Family‘ by Maxima Smith.

Read more

LADA Screens: Maxima Smith

22 Mar 2024

An in-person screening of ‘Crying with my Family’ by Maxima Smith.  

Read more

A Long Table on Continuing the Conversation, with Lois Weaver

08 Mar 2024

Please join us for the second of a series of Long Table events.

Read more

LADA Screens: Sahera Khan

01 Mar 2024

An in-person screening of ‘My Glow’ by Sahera Khan.

Read more

A Long Table on Returning, with Lois Weaver

02 Feb 2024

Please join us for the first of a series of Long Table events.

Read more

LADA Screens: Caroline Williams – Online Screening

26 Jan 2024 - 21 Feb 2024

An online screening of ‘A Love Letter to Penelope Cruizer’ by Caroline Williams.

Read more

LADA Screens: Caroline Williams

25 Jan 2024

An in-person screening of ‘A Love Letter to Penelope Cruizer’ by Caroline Williams.

Read more