Lynn Hershman Leeson
{{Short description|American artist and filmmaker}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Lynn Hershman Leeson
| image = Lynn Hershman Leeson Portrait.jpg
| caption =
| birth_name = Lynn Lester Hershman
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1941|06|17}}{{cite web |title=Timeline |url=https://www.lynnhershman.com/timeline/#top |website=Lynn Hershman Leeson |date=28 November 2023 |access-date=9 June 2024}}
| birth_place = {{nowrap|Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.}}
| known_for = {{hlist|New media art|film}}
| occupation = Artist, filmmaker, new media art
| notable_works = {{hlist|America's Finest|Synthia|CybeRoberta|Tillie|Agent Ruby|DiNA|Conceiving Ada|Teknolust|Strange Culture|!Women Art Revolution}}
| education = Case Western Reserve University,
San Francisco State University
| awards = {{plainlist|
- D.velop Digital Art Award
- Sloan Prize for Writing and Directing
- Siggraph Distinguished Artist Award
- IFP Pixel Market Prize{{cite web |url=http://powertothepixel.com/news/uncategorized/flickering-flame-takes-arte-international-pixel-market-prize-2014 |title=The Flickering Flame takes out the ARTE International Prize for The Pixel Market 2014 |date=October 14, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141018221628/http://powertothepixel.com/news/uncategorized/flickering-flame-takes-arte-international-pixel-market-prize-2014 |archive-date=October 18, 2014 |url-status=dead |access-date=April 30, 2018 |df=mdy }}
}}
| website = {{URL|lynnhershman.com}}
}}
Lynn Hershman Leeson (née Lynn Lester Hershman;{{Cite web |last=Bravo |first=Tony |date=April 6, 2022 |title=At 80, S.F. artist celebrated by industry that once shunned her |url=https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/art-exhibits/at-80-artist-lynn-hershman-leeson-is-more-relevant-than-ever |access-date=2022-04-14 |website=Datebook {{!}} San Francisco Arts & Entertainment Guide |language=en-US}} born June 17, 1941) is an American multimedia artist and filmmaker.{{cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson |url=https://art21.org/artist/lynn-hershman-leeson/ |access-date=2019-09-08 |website=art21.org}} Her work with technology and in media-based practices is credited with helping to legitimize digital art forms.{{cite book|last1=Tromble|first1=Meredith|title="The Art and Films of Lynn Hershman Leeson: Secret Agents, Private I|date=2005|publisher=University of California|isbn=978-0-520-23970-8|pages=xi|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/artfilmsoflynnhe00kyle}} Her interests include feminism, race, surveillance, and artificial intelligence and identity theft through algorithms and data tracking.
Hershman Leeson has been described as a "new media pioneer" for her integration of emerging technologies into her work{{Cite news |last=Steinhauer |first=Jillian |date=2021-07-08 |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Artist Is Prescient |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/08/arts/design/hershman-leeson-review-art-museum.html |access-date=2022-11-04 |issn=0362-4331}} and is one of five artists that art historian Patrick Frank examines in his 2024 book Art of the 1980s: As If the Digital Mattered.[https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111384696/html?lang=en] Art of the 1980s: As If the Digital Mattered by Patrick Frank, Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Early life and education
Lynn Hershman was born in 1941 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her father, who had immigrated to the United States from Montreal,{{Cite web |title=Lynn Hershman (biography) |url=https://www.fondation-langlois.org/html/e/page.php?NumPage=168 |access-date=2022-11-04 |website=www.fondation-langlois.org}} was a pharmacist, and her mother was a biologist. She reports experiencing both physical abuse and sexual abuse during her childhood.{{cite web |last1=Greenberger |first1=Alex |title=A New Future from the Passed: Lynn Hershman Leeson Comes into Her Own After 50 Years of Prophetic Work |url=https://www.artnews.com/art-news/artists/a-new-future-from-the-passed-lynn-hershman-leeson-comes-into-her-own-after-50-years-of-prophetic-work-8028/ |website=ARTnews |date=28 March 2017 |access-date=9 June 2024}}
In 1963, Hershman graduated with a bachelor's degree in Education, Museum Administration and Fine Arts from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. After graduation, she moved to California intending to study painting and join the student activism at the University of California, Berkeley. She left Berkeley before registering for classes. She later completed a Master of Fine Arts degree from San Francisco State University in 1972. One aspect of Hershman's master's thesis involved writing art criticism under three pseudonyms: Prudence Juris, Herbert Goode and Gay Abandon. She received an honorary Ph.D degree from Pratt Institute in 2023.{{cite web |title=Commencement 2023 to Be Held on May 17 at Radio City Music Hall |url=https://www.pratt.edu/news/commencement-2023-to-be-held-on-may-17-at-radio-city-music-hall/ |website=Pratt Institute |date=20 April 2023 |access-date=7 June 2024}}
Career
Hershman Leeson's work concerns identity, consumerism, privacy in an era of surveillance, interfacing of humans and machines, feminism, violence, artificial intelligence and identity theft through algorithms and data tracking, and the relationship between real and virtual worlds. Her work grew out of an installation art and performance tradition, with an emphasis on interactivity.Wardrip-Fruin, Noah, and Nick Montfort, eds. The New Media Reader. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003, p. 643.
Her projects explore technology in digital media and science. Hershman Leeson was the first artist to launch an interactive piece using Videodisc, a precursor to DVD (Lorna, 1983–84), as well the first artist to incorporate a touch screen interface into her artwork (Deep Contact, 1984–1989). Her networked robotic art installation (The Difference Engine #3, 1995–1998) is an example of her tendency to expand her artwork beyond the traditional realms of art.[http://www.galeriewaldburger.com/lhershman/onroberta.pdf The Importance of Being Roberta, Katerina Gregos (2011)]
Work by Hershman Leeson is featured in the public collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the William Lehmbruck Museum, the ZKM (Zentrum fur Kunst und Medientechnologie), the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Canada, di Rosa,{{cite web|title=The Collection|url=http://www.dirosaart.org/about/the-collection/|website=dirosaart.org|date=16 June 2010 |access-date=2016-11-03}} the Walker Art Center and the University Art Museum, Berkeley, in addition to the private collections of Donald M. Hess and Arturo Schwarz, among many others. Commissions include projects for the Tate Modern, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, de Young Museum, Daniel Langlois and Stanford University, and Charles Schwab.
From 1993 to 2004, Hershman Leeson taught in the Art Studio program at the University of California, Davis, where she is currently a professor emerita.{{cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson |url=https://arts.ucdavis.edu/faculty-profile/lynn-hershman-leeson-0 |website=UC Davis |date=28 June 2013 |access-date=9 June 2024}} She was named chair of the San Francisco Art Institute film department in 2007.{{cite web |title=SFAI Proudly Welcomes Lynn Hershman Leeson as New Head of Its Film Department |url=https://www.e-flux.com/announcements/111509/sfai-proudly-welcomes-lynn-hershman-leeson-as-new-head-of-its-film-department/ |website=e-flux |access-date=9 June 2024}}
She also served as an A. D. White Professor at Large at Cornell University and was the 2013–2014 Dorothy H. Hirshon "Director in Residence" at The New School.{{cite journal |title=lynn hershman leeson archive |journal=Cornell Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art |publisher=Cornell University Library |hdl=1813.001/7761936f}}{{cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Film Screening and Q&A |url=http://events.newschool.edu/event/lynn_hershman_film_screening_and_qa#.UosAOY2E6IA |access-date=19 November 2013 |website=The New School}}
Work
= Early works =
Hershman Leeson's earlier works drew interest from themes within science fiction and assemblages of the human body and sexuality. After suffering from cardiomyopathy while pregnant in 1965, Leeson, created her piece Breathing Machine, composed of wax casts of her own face with dyes and assemblages as well as the recordings of her struggled breathing during her illness. The recording includes the voice asking the viewer a series of personal and uncomfortable questions.
Her 1968 piece Breathing Machine II is composed of a wax face with a wig and butterflies contained in a wood and plexiglass display, expressing the a dichotomy of life and entrapment within the female body. Shaped by her experiences, Leeson's early works were political in nature and characterized as being closer inspections of femininity and gender roles.{{Cite web|date=2015-05-31|title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: Origins of the Species (Part 2) review – always alert to the future|url=http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/may/31/lynn-hershman-leeson-review-modern-art-oxford-origins-of-the-species-part-2|access-date=2021-03-26|website=The Guardian|language=en}}
= Alter egos =
From 1974 until 1978, Hershman Leeson 'developed' a fictional persona and alter ego named "Roberta Breitmore." It consisted not only of a physical self-transformation through make-up, clothing, and wigs, but a fully-fledged personality existing over an extended period of time and whose existence could be proven in the world through physical evidence, such as a driver's license, credit card, and letters from her psychiatrist.{{Cite web|url=http://fictive.arts.uci.edu/roberta_breitmore|title=Breitmore, Roberta (Lynn Hershman Leeson)|website=fictive.arts.uci.edu|language=en|access-date=2018-03-08|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131110030405/http://fictive.arts.uci.edu/roberta_breitmore|archive-date=2013-11-10|url-status=dead}}{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/27/arts/design/pardon-me-but-the-art-is-mouthing-off.html|title=Pardon Me But the Art is Mouthing Off|last=Finkel|first=Jori|work=New York Times|date=2005-11-27|access-date=2022-04-13|language=en}}
This was later taken to further lengths when Hershman Leeson introduced another three 'Robertas', by hiring other performers to enact her character. These 'clones' of Roberta adopted the same look and attire, engaged in some of Roberta's correspondence and also went on some of Roberta (Hershman Leeson's) dates. Towards the end, the 'original' Roberta withdrew from her character leaving the three 'clones' to continue her work, until they were retired in a performance at the Palazzo dei Diamanti in Ferrara, Italy in 1978, during an exorcism at the grave of Lucrezia Borgia. What remains are the physical artefacts of any life: documentation and personal effects such as legal and medical documents and a diary.
Between 1995 and 2000, Roberta transformed into the CybeRoberta, an interactive artificial intelligent sculpture on the web. In 2006 Roberta Breitmore developed into a character in Second Life. After Stanford University acquired her archive, Leeson worked with Henry Lowood (Stanford Humanities Lab) to convert parts of the archive into something for a broader public. They worked to recreate and re-enact both Roberta Breitmore and The Dante Hotel in a virtual space.{{cite journal|last=Aceti |first=Lanfranco |url=http://www.leoalmanac.org/hacking-the-codes-of-self-representation-lea-magazine-article/ |title=Hacking the Codes of Self-representation LEA Magazine Article |publisher=Leoalmanac.org |date=2011-08-06 |access-date=2014-04-04}}
= ''Lorna'' (1983) =
Described as the first interactive laser artdisk art project, Hershman Leeson's 1983 work Lorna tells the story of an agoraphobic woman who never left her one-room apartment. As Lorna watched the news and advertisements, watched the news and ads, she became fearful, afraid to leave her tiny room. Viewers were invited to liberate Lorna from her fears, using remote control units, and have the option of directing her life into several possible plots and endings.{{cite web|url=http://www.lynnhershman.com/lorna/ |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson – Lorna |publisher=Lynnhershman.com |date=2011-02-23 |access-date=2014-04-04}}
The plot has multiple variations that can be seen backwards, forwards, at increased or decreased speeds, and from several points of view. There is no hierarchy in the ordering of decisions. And the icons were often made of cut-off and dislocated body parts such as a mouth, or an eye.
= ''Room of One's Own'' (1990–1993) =
From 1990 to 1993, Lynn Hershman Leeson produced a project called Room of One's Own.{{Cite web|title=Brooklyn Museum: Lynn Hershman Leeson|url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/about/feminist_art_base/lynn-hershman-leeson|access-date=2021-04-16|website=www.brooklynmuseum.org}} The project is said to be inspired by Thomas Edison's kinetograph, a device where a film is displayed on loop and an individual is allowed to view it through a peephole.{{Cite web|date=2021-03-20|title=Room of One's Own|url=https://www.lynnhershman.com/project/room-of-ones-own/|access-date=2021-04-16|website=Lynn Hershman Leeson|language=en-US}} The project, Room of One’s Own, allows the viewer to peer inside of a box through a small periscopic device and see a bed, telephone, chair, television, and some clothes on the floor.{{Cite web|title=Lynn Hershman : Room of One's Own|url=https://www.fondation-langlois.org/html/e/page.php?NumPage=169|access-date=2021-04-16|website=www.fondation-langlois.org}} In the back of the small room, a woman appears on a screen and it is there where she asks the following: “What are you doing here? Please look somewhere else!”. There are about 17 segments and depending on where the viewer is focusing, a different video plays in the back wall. Throughout the experience, the viewer is positioned to be a voyeur, an individual who gains sexual gratification by watching an unsuspecting individual either partly undress, get naked or engage in sexual activities, but any pleasure that is gained, is quickly frustrated in many different ways. At the end, the viewer's reflection is shown in a small television in the back of the room.
= ''Agent Ruby'' =
Hershman Leeson created the "Agent Ruby" website as a companion to her 2002 film Teknolust. Agent Ruby used artificial intelligence to hold conversations with online users. These conversations shaped Agent Ruby's memory, knowledge, and moods. In 2013 the SFMOMA presented Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Agent Ruby Files, a digital and analog presentation which reinterpreted dialogues drawn from the decade-long archive of text files of Agent Ruby's conversations with online users to reflect on technologies, recurrent themes, and patterns of audience engagement.{{cite web |url=http://www.sfmoma.org/exhib_events/exhibitions/512 |title=Exhibitions + Events | Calendar | Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Agent Ruby Files |publisher=SFMOMA |access-date=2014-04-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140407071419/http://www.sfmoma.org/exhib_events/exhibitions/512 |archive-date=2014-04-07 |url-status=dead }}
Films and documentaries
{{Main|Lynn Hershman Leeson filmography}}
Lynn Hershman Leeson has directed 26 films, including six feature-length films.{{Cite web |date=2016-06-16 |title=Film |url=https://www.lynnhershman.com/film/ |access-date=2022-10-18 |website=Lynn Hershman Leeson |language=en-US}} According to Leeson:
The films are all about loss and technology. Ada Lovelace invented computer language, but was never credited and was basically erased from history. Teknolust is about artificial intelligence clones: the bots that escape into reality and interact with human life, in effect a symbiosis between technological life and human life, and how the two can marry. Strange Culture again was about misidentity, where the media created a fictional character that they blame this crime on, rather than the actual person. All of these works are about erasure of identity and how technology adds to it and creates it. And how you can defeat that.
A 1990 documentary, Desire Inc. features a series of seductive television ads in which a sexy woman asked for viewers to call her.
Hershman Leeson's six feature films - Strange Culture, Teknolust, Conceiving Ada, !Women Art Revolution, [https://kadist.org/work/tania-libre/ Tania Libre], and [https://www.lynnhershman.com/project/electronic-diaries/ The Electronic Diaries][https://www.lynnhershman.com/project/electronic-diaries/ -] have been part of the Sundance Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival and The Berlin International Film Festival, among others, and have won numerous awards. Hershman's ground-breaking 2011 release, !Women Art Revolution, was a feature-length documentary about the feminist art movement in the United States, distributed by Zeitgest Films. Artists interviewed for the film include Judy Chicago, Guerilla Girls, Miranda July, Mike Kelley, Joyce Kozloff, Howardena Pindell, Yvonne Rainer, Faith Ringgold, Martha Rosler, Carolee Schneemann, Cecilia Vicuña, and many others, including the artist herself.{{Cite web |last1=University |first1=© Stanford |last2=Stanford |last3=California 94305 |date=2016-08-25 |title=Artist, Curator & Critic Interviews |url=https://exhibits.stanford.edu/women-art-revolution/feature/artist-curator-critic-interviews |access-date=2022-10-18 |website=!Women Art Revolution - Spotlight at Stanford |language=en}} The film is currently held by Stanford University in their archives, and can be accessed through the university's [https://exhibits.stanford.edu/women-art-revolution website documenting the project].
As part of her 2014 exhibition "How To Disappear," she premiered her video The Ballad of JT LeRoy, which examined Laura Albert's use of the literary persona JT LeRoy. Reflecting on the parallels between JT LeRoy and Roberta Breitmore, Hershman Leeson has commented:
The concept of an alter ego is not new at all. Writers have been protecting themselves in that way for centuries. Mary Shelley did it. Of course Laura took this practice further and I think that was very smart and I do not think she deserves the kind of condemnation that she got. If I had done the Roberta thing ten years later, I would have faced the same problems.In 2017, Leeson released Tania Libre, composed of the therapy sessions between Cuban-artist and activist Tanya Bruguera and Dr. Frank M. Ochberg revolving around the subjects of political surveillance, past trauma and the aftermath of imprisonment in Havana after her prior advocating for freedom of expression.{{Cite web|last=Thill|first=Vanessa|date=2017-05-22|title=The Trauma of Political Engagement: Lynn Hershman Leeson's Tania Libre|url=https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/the-trauma-of-political-engagement-lynn-hershman-leesons-tania-libre-59734/|access-date=2021-03-26|website=ARTnews.com|language=en-US}}
Retrospectives
A 2007 retrospective at the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester, Autonomous Agents, featured a comprehensive range of the artist's work—from the Roberta Breitmore series (1974–78) to videos from the 1980s and interactive installations that use the Internet and artificial intelligence software. Her influential early ventures into performance and photography are also featured in the current touring exhibition WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution, organized by the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. The Art and Films of Lynn Hershman Leeson: Secret Agents, Private I, was published by The University of California Press in 2005 on the occasion of another retrospective at the Henry Gallery in Seattle.
In 2014 The ZKM Museum of Contemporary Art in Karlsruhe, Germany held "Lynn Hershman Leeson: Civic Radar", a retrospective of work. The ZKM Museum described the retrospective as having "realized the first retrospective which not only ensures an overview of all creative phases in Leeson's oeuvre but also the most recent productions of this innovative artist."{{cite web|url=https://zkm.de/en/event/2014/12/lynn-hershman-leeson-civic-radar|title=Civic Radar|year=2014}} While encompassing a wide body of Hershman's work throughout the years, as an exhibition, "Civic Radar" highlights Hershman's interest in technology, looking closely at artificial intelligence and genetic modification. In 2017, "Lynn Hershman Leeson: Civic Radar," Hershman's retrospective from ZKM was hosted at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, California.{{Cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: Civic Radar, February 10–May 21, 2017 |url=https://www.ybca.org/whats-on/civic-radar |access-date=2018-03-23 |website=www.ybca.org}}
In 2021, the New Museum in New York City hosted the first solo museum exhibition in New York of Hershman Leeson's work, entitled Twisted.{{Cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: Twisted |url=http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/lynn-hershman-leeson-twisted |access-date=2022-11-04 |website=www.newmuseum.org |language=en}} The New Museum described the exhibition as bringing "together a selection of Hershman Leeson’s work in drawing, sculpture, video, and photography, along with interactive and net-based works, focusing on themes of transmutation, identity construction, and the evolution of the cyborg. Filling the New Museum’s Second Floor galleries, this presentation [included] some of the artist’s most important projects, including wax-cast Breathing Machine sculptures (1965–68) and selections from hundreds of early drawings from the 1960s, many of which [were never] exhibited before." The exhibition also included works from the Roberta Breitmore series (1973–78), her video Seduction of a Cyborg (1994) and selections from the series Water Women (1976–present), Phantom Limb (1985–88), Cyborg (1996–2006), Infinity Engine (2014–present), and other works. The exhibition was curated by Margot Norton, Allen and Lola Goldring Curator, and was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with contributions by Karen Archey and Martine Syms, and an interview with Lynn Hershman Leeson conducted by Margot Norton.
Exhibitions
{{BLP sources section|date=February 2021}}
= Solo exhibitions =
- 2001, Media & Identity, Sweeney Art Gallery, University of California, Riverside, Riverside, California
- 2005, Hershmanlandia, Henry Art Gallery, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington{{Cite web |title=Hershmanlandia: The Art and Films of Lynn Hershman Leeson - Henry Art Gallery |url=https://henryart.org/exhibitions/hershmanlandia-the-art-and-films-of-lynn-hershman-leeson |access-date=2024-09-22 |website=henryart.org}}
- 2008, No Body Special, De Young Museum, San Francisco, California[https://deyoung.famsf.org/deyoung/exhibitions/lynn-hershman-leeson-no-body-special "Lynn Hershman Leeson: No Body Special"], de Young Museum, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2008, The Floating Museum (1975–1978): Lynn Hershman Leeson, New Langton Arts, San Francisco, California
- 2012, Me as Roberta, Museum of Contemporary Art in Kraków, Krakow, Poland[https://en.mocak.pl/lynn-hershman-leeson-me-as-roberta "Lynn Hershman Leeson. Me as Robert."], Museum of Contemporary Art in Krakow, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2012, Seducing Time, Retrospective, Kunsthalle Bremen, Bremen, Germany[http://www.kunst-und-kultur.de/index.php?Action=showMuseumExhibition&aId=25820&title=ausstellung-lynn-hershman-leeson-seducing-time "Seducing Time"], Kunsthalle Bremen, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2012, W.A.R. Documentary screening, Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain
- 2012, W.A.R. Documentary screening, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden
- 2013, Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Agent Ruby Files, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMoMa), San Francisco, California{{Cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Agent Ruby Files |url=https://www.e-flux.com/announcements/32880/lynn-hershman-leeson-the-agent-ruby-files/ |access-date=2022-04-14 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}
- 2014, Pop Departures, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington[http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibitions/pop "Pop Departures"], Seattle Art Museum, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2014, Taking a Stand Against War, Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg, Germany
- 2014, Vertigo of Reality, Akademie der Künste, Berlin, Germany[https://www.adk.de/de/akademie/sektionen/bildende-kunst/dokusdw.htm "Vertigo of Reality"], Akademie der Kunste Berlin, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2014, How to Disappear, Aanant & Zoo, Berlin, Germany{{cite web |date=2014-07-29 |title=Immediate Kinship: Laura Albert on Lynn Hershman Leeson |url=http://birds-eye-view.co.uk/2016/08/03/laura-albert-on-lynn-hershman-leeson-and-author-the-jt-leroy-story/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170122153518/http://www.birds-eye-view.co.uk/2016/08/03/laura-albert-on-lynn-hershman-leeson-and-author-the-jt-leroy-story/ |archive-date=January 22, 2017 |website=Birds Eye View}}{{cite web |date=2016-08-03 |title=Interview: Lynn Hershman Leeson |url=http://kubaparis.com/interview-lynn-hershman-leeson/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190214180154/http://kubaparis.com/interview-lynn-hershman-leeson/ |archive-date=2019-02-14 |access-date=2014-10-14 |website=KubaParis}}{{cite web |date=November 2014 |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson, Aanat & Zoo, Berlin |url=http://static.squarespace.com/static/51a6747de4b06440a162a5eb/t/54245b42e4b08dcc3b7ea279/1411668802589/RI%20INT%27l%20Reviews%20Nov%202014_Leeson.pdf |website=ArtNews Review}}{{cite web |date=2014-09-02 |title=Spiel mit dem Feuer von Dr. Inge Pett |url=http://www.art-in-berlin.de/incbmeld.php?id=3328 |website=Art in Berlin |language=de}}{{cite web |last=Ansaldo |first=Carmen |date=2014-07-29 |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson – How to Disappear, Ausstellung Aanant & Zoo |url=http://kubaparis.com/lynn-hershman-leeson-how-to-disappear/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141019215634/http://kubaparis.com/lynn-hershman-leeson-how-to-disappear/ |archive-date=2014-10-19 |access-date=2014-10-14 |website=KubaParis}}{{cite web |last=Parker |first=Guy |year=2014 |title=Tracing the Invisible on the Cutting Edge |url=http://www.artslant.com/ber/articles/show/40261 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150923174238/http://www.artslant.com/ber/articles/show/40261 |archive-date=September 23, 2015 |website=ArtSlant Berlin}}{{cite web |last=Hinrichsen |first=Jens |date=2014-07-31 |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson in Berlin Gegen den Datenstro |url=http://www.monopol-magazin.de/artikel/20108812/-Lynn-Hershman-Leeson-bei-Aanant-Zoo-Berlin-.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140803025450/http://www.monopol-magazin.de/artikel/20108812/-Lynn-Hershman-Leeson-bei-Aanant-Zoo-Berlin-.html |archive-date=2014-08-03 |access-date=2014-10-14 |website=Monopol |language=de}}{{cite web |last=Hinrichsen |first=Jens |date=2014-08-09 |title=Kreuzung mit Computer |url=http://www.tagesspiegel.de/kultur/lynn-hershman-leeson-bei-aanant-und-zoo-kreuzung-mit-computer/10310400.html |website=Der Tagesspiegel |language=de}}{{cite web |last=Berner |first=Irmgard |date=2014-08-12 |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: Über das Verschwinden |url=http://mobil.berliner-zeitung.de/kultur/lynn-hershman-leeson-ueber-das-verschwinden,23785224,28103410.html |website=Berliner Zeitung |language=de}}
- 2014–2015, Civic Radar. Lynn Hershman Leeson - The Retrospective, ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany[https://zkm.de/en/event/2014/12/lynn-hershman-leeson-civic-radar "Lynn Hershman Leeson: Civic Radar"], ZKM Karlsruhe, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2015, Lynn Hershman Leeson: Origins of the Species (Part 2), Modern Art Oxford, Oxford, England, United Kingdom[https://www.modernartoxford.org.uk/event/lynn-hershman-leeson-origins-species-part-2/ "Lynn Hershman Leeson: Origins of the Species (Part 2)"], Modern Art Oxford, Retrieved 19 January 2019.
- 2016, Liquid Identities - Lynn Hershman Leeson, Identities of the 21st Century, Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg, Germany[https://www.lynnhershman.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Lynn_Hershman_Leeson_CV_6_9.pdf] Lynn Hershman Leeson, Retrieved 17 October 2022
- 2016, Cyborgs and Self-Promotion, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio
- 2016, Lynn Hershman Leeson: Body Collage, Armory Gallery, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia
- 2016, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Ruth C. Horton Gallery, Moss Arts Center, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia
- 2017, Lynn Hershman Leeson: Civic Radar, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, California
- 2017–2018, VertiGhost, Legion of Honor museum, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, San Francisco, California{{cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: VertiGhost |url=https://legionofhonor.famsf.org/exhibitions/lynn-hershman-leeson-vertighost |access-date=2019-09-15 |website=Legion of Honor museum|date=30 October 2017 }}
- 2018, Lynn Hershman Leeson: A Manual for Automatons, Bionic Beings and Cyborgs, 1962-1982, Anglim Gilbert Gallery, San Francisco, California[http://anglimgilbertgallery.com/lynn-hershman-leeson-manual/#ms-7095 "Lynn Hershman Leeson: A Manual for Automatons, Bionic Beings and Cyborgs, 1962-1982"] Anglim Gilbert Gallery, Retrieved 7 May 2020.
- 2019, First Person Plural, Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
- 2019, Lorna, Thoma Foundation, Santa Fe, New Mexico
- 2021, Lynn Hershman Leeson: Twisted, New Museum, New York City, New York[https://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/lynn-hershman-leeson-twisted] New Museum, Retrieved 5 March 2021
- 2024, Anti-Aging, Bridget Donahue, New York City, New York{{cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson: Anti-Aging |url=https://www.bridgetdonahue.nyc/exhibitions/lynn-hershman-leeson-anti-aging/ |website=Bridget Donahue |access-date=7 June 2024}}
= Group exhibitions =
- 2013–2014, New Acquisitions in Photography, Museum of Modern Art (MoMa), New York City, New York
- 2013–2014, Dissident Futures, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, California{{Cite web |title=Dissident Futures |url=https://www.e-flux.com/announcements/32064/dissident-futures/ |access-date=2022-04-14 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}
- 2014, Post Speculation, P! gallery, New York City, New York{{Cite news |last=Fateman |first=Johanna |date=2014 |title=New York: "Post-Speculation" |work=Artforum |publisher=Artforum International Magazine |url=https://www.artforum.com/picks/post-speculation-48751}}
- 2014, Women: Seeing and Being Seen, Scott Nichols Gallery, San Francisco, California.{{Cite web |date=2014-09-04 |title=Women: Seeing and Being Seen |url=https://wsimag.com/art/10954-women-seeing-and-being-seen |access-date=2022-04-14 |website=Wall Street International |language=en}}
- 2019–2020, Manual Override, The Shed, New York City, New York{{cite web |title=Manual Override |url=https://www.theshed.org/program/63-manual-override?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIkKuW7Jzq5QIVUIFaBR3l2wMpEAAYASAAEgIxg_D_BwE&sourceNumber=1334 |website=The Shed |access-date=9 June 2024}}
Grants and awards
In 2023, Leeson received honorary awards from Creative Capital The Mill Valley Film Festival, The Contemporary Jewish Museum (San Francisco).
Leeson has been honored with grants from Creative Capital, The National Endowment for the Arts, Nathan Cummings Foundation, Siemens International Media Arts Award, Prix Ars Electronica, and Alfred P Sloan Foundation Prize for Writing and Directing. In 2009 she was the recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship.{{cite web|title=Fellow Profile|url=http://www.gf.org/fellows/16524-lynn-hershman-leeson|publisher=John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation|access-date=19 November 2013}} Also in 2009, she received the SIGGRAPH Distinguished Artist Award.{{cite journal|journal=Leonardo|title=SIGGRAPH Distinguished Artist Award|date=August 2009|volume=42|issue=4|page=296|doi=10.1162/leon.2009.42.4.296}} The Digital Art Museum in Berlin recognized her work with the d.velop digital award (ddaa) for Lifetime Achievement in the field of New Media in 2010.{{cite magazine|last=Sterling|first=Bruce|title=An art prize called [ddaa]|url=https://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2010/07/an-art-prize-called-ddaa/|magazine=Wired|access-date=19 November 2013}} Her work was recently included in Arthur and Marilouise Kroker's Top Ten for the January 2013 issue of Artforum.{{cite web|title=Visual Arts Faculty featured in Artforum's Top Ten List|url=http://visarts.ucsd.edu/news/visual-arts-faculty-featured-artforums-top-ten-list|access-date=19 November 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140407091143/http://visarts.ucsd.edu/news/visual-arts-faculty-featured-artforums-top-ten-list|archive-date=7 April 2014|url-status=dead}}{{cite journal|title=Top Ten|last=Kroker|first=Arthur and Marilouise|journal=Artforum|date=January 2013|url=http://artforum.com/inprint/issue=201301|access-date=19 November 2013}}
In 2014, IFP Pixel Market Prize went to The Infinity Engine starring Tilda Swinton, directed by Leeson in collaboration with producer Lisa Cortes, whose credits include the Academy Award and Sundance Film Festival winning film Precious. The Infinity Engine is an installation, film and online interactive website. The prize comprises a six-month fellowship at the Media Center and an invitation to participate in next year's No Borders programme.{{cite web
| url = http://www.screendaily.com/news/ken-loach-project-wins-top-pttp-prize/5078506.article#
| title = Screen Daily
|date=2014-10-10
|url = http://powertothepixel.com/news/uncategorized/flickering-flame-takes-arte-international-pixel-market-prize-2014
|title = Power to the Pixel
|date = 2014-10-10
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141018221628/http://powertothepixel.com/news/uncategorized/flickering-flame-takes-arte-international-pixel-market-prize-2014
|archive-date = 2014-10-18
}}
Leeson was also featured in the Women's eNews "21 Leaders for the 21st Century" special in 2014 for her role in empowering young female artists to strengthen their artistic voices. Her documentary !W.A.R. raises awareness for the fact that the art world is a male-dominated realm and explores the many influential works of female artists over the decades.{{cite web |last1=Jensen |first1=Rita |title=Women's eNews Announces 21 Leaders for 21st Century 2014|url=http://womensenews.org/story/21-leaders-the-21st-century/140101/womens-enews-announces-21-leaders-21st-century-2014 |website=womensenews.org |date=January 2014 |access-date=2014-02-05}}
In 2004, Stanford University Libraries acquired Hershman Leeson's working archive.{{cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson Papers Finding Aid |url=http://findingaids.stanford.edu/xtf/view?docId=ead/mss/m1452.xml;query=;brand=default |access-date=19 November 2013 |website=Stanford Libraries}} Stanford also acquired a collection of the interviews compiled for Hershman Leeson's 2010 documentary !Women Art Revolution.{{cite web |title=!W.A.R.: Voices of a Movement |url=http://lib.stanford.edu/women-art-revolution |access-date=19 November 2013 |website=Stanford Libraries |publisher=Stanford University}}
In 2018, The Women's Caucus for Art awarded Hershman Leeson with the Lifetime Achievement Award, in Los Angeles.{{Cite web |title=WCA Lifetime Achievement Award |url=http://www.nationalwca.org/awards/currentLTA.php |access-date=2018-03-24 |website=Nationalwca.org}}
Lynn Hershman Leeson has been awarded a special mention from the Jury for her participation in the 59th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia – The Milk of Dreams. The award was presented with the following motivation: “for indexing the cybernetic concerns that run through the exhibitions in an illuminating and powerful way that also includes visionary moments of her early practice that foresaw the influence of technology in our everyday lives.”{{Cite web |title=Lynn Hershman Leeson |url=https://www.lynnhershman.com/ |access-date=2022-11-03 |website=Lynn Hershman Leeson |language=en-US}}
Personal life
Hershman Leeson is based in San Francisco, California.{{Cite book |last=Kholeif |first=Omar |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rmcWEAAAQBAJ |title=Art in the Age of Anxiety |date=2021-01-26 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=978-1-907071-80-5 |pages=332 |language=en}} In 1991, she married George Leeson, adding his last name to her own; some of her earlier work is still presented under the name Lynn Hershman.
Hershman Leeson's daughter, Dawn L. Hershman, is an oncologist who researches breast cancer at Columbia University.{{cite web |last1=Hamlin |first1=Jesse |title=Artist probes appearances in video, drawings, sculpture ... and, yes, robots |url=https://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/Artist-probes-appearances-in-video-drawings-2591506.php |publisher=SFGate |access-date=January 2, 2021 |date=December 3, 2005}} Hershman Leeson has two grandchildren, Noa and Eli.{{cite web |last1=Benyon |first1=Brielle |title=Bringing Creativity to Science: Dawn L. Hershman Is a Giant of Cancer Care |url=https://www.onclive.com/view/bringing-creativity-to-science-dawn-l-hershman-is-a-giant-of-cancer-care |website=OncLive |date=April 2022 |access-date=9 June 2024}}
References
{{reflist}}
Sources
- {{Cite web | author = Anon | year = 2018 | url = https://exhibits.stanford.edu/women-art-revolution/feature/artist-curator-critic-interviews | title = Artist, Curator & Critic Interviews | work = !Women Art Revolution - Spotlight at Stanford | access-date = Aug 23, 2018 | language = en | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180326230847/https://exhibits.stanford.edu/women-art-revolution/feature/artist-curator-critic-interviews | archive-date = March 26, 2018 | url-status=live | df = mdy-all }}
External links
- {{Official website|http://www.lynnhershman.com/}}
- {{IMDb name|0380961}}
- [http://agentruby.sfmoma.org/ Agent Ruby] at SFMoMA
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20131003045751/http://kadist.org/en/people/lynn-hershman-leeson Leeson] at Kadist Art Foundation
- [https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/5742522 Lynn Hershman-Leeson papers] housed at Stanford University Libraries
- [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt7k4039hc/ Guide to the papers of Lynn Hershman-Leeson] published at Online Archive of California
- [https://exhibits.stanford.edu/women-art-revolution Women Art Revolution: Voices of a Movement], exhibit on Lynn Hershman-Leeson's interviews with feminist artists of the 1970s
{{Feminist art movement in the United States}}
{{ACArt}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Leeson, Lynn Hershman}}
Category:Filmmakers from California
Category:Filmmakers from Cleveland
Category:University of California, Davis faculty
Category:American new media artists
Category:American video artists
Category:Artists from the San Francisco Bay Area
Category:American digital artists
Category:American women digital artists
Category:American feminist artists
Category:21st-century American women artists