----------------documentation of selected collaborations----------------
Rafferty n' Warren-Crow
The Wendy House
2011
performance and installation
cardboard, cheap plastic toys, snack cakes, cheese doodles, bed sheets, paper, 1 fabric valence, off brand cola, 1 pinata,
duct tape, chalk, rope
photo credits: Alfie Turnshek-Goins
In our interactive performance and installation The Wendy House, Tinkerbell is on uppers and Wendy is a drunk. They labor, quite literally, to maintain the deteriorating architecture of a Neverland that Peter Pan created with his powerful imagination. But empires rise only to fall apart. The material infrastructure of power needs constant maintenance, leaving Wendy a kind of worn-out, desperate housewife and Tinkerbell an abused and angry woman-child. Both are stupid. They pine the loss of a man-child they never really had. Like the white cube of the art gallery, Peter Pan gets his presence from absence. The art gallery and the boy who wouldn’t grow up are believed to be blank slates, white skins.
The Wendy House is a home built by junk food, high heels, stuff meant for children, the history of action-based body art, bad pop music and even worse dancing, self help books, and those foolish, dangerous dreams of island utopias. It was originally exhibited at Arizona State University's ArtSpace West in October of 2011.
warrencrow+warrencrow
Heather Warren-Crow and Seth Warren-Crow also have solo careers as a performance artist and sound artist, respectively. Both teach in the Peck School of the Arts at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, where Seth is a sound designer and music instructor in the Dance Department and Heather is a professor of art theory and practice. Heather received a PhD in Performance Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. Seth has an MFA in Electronic Music and Recording Media from Mills College.
Grayface
2010
live performance
projected video, amplified voice, table, bottled water
warren-crow+warren-crow’s Grayface deals with the multiple meanings of Al Jolson’s infamous phrase “You ain’t heard nothin’ yet,” included in his blackface vaudeville act and later featured in the films A Plantation Act (1926) and The Jazz Singer (1927). “You ain’t heard nothin’ yet” references not only Jolson’s charismatic performance persona, but also the power of the sonic-cinematic apparatus, itself. Indeed, the phrase is central to the mythology surrounding The Jazz Singer, often erroneously identified as the first Talkie. Its combination of syllables moves through time with a vigorous energy, animating various histories (of film, of stage performance, of cultural appropriation) and inhabiting various bodies (Al Jolson, the actors who played him in biopics, and the performers of Grayface). “You ain’t heard nothin’ yet” still haunts our cultural imaginations and promises to amaze us with an unattainable, yet already delivered, sonic power.
Grayface premiered in the group show Non-Cochlear Sound at Diapason Gallery of sound art in Brooklyn, NY. The show was curated by Seth Kim-Cohen.
Untitled Virgin
2009
live performance
synthetic hair extensions, fabric flowers, tank top, skirt, microphone,
amplified sound
Phrases such as "virgin forest" make an explicit connection between the possession or violation of landscapes and the sexual development of girls. Untitled Virgin (girls girls girls yeah I dig them) is a live performance that examines the persistent analogy between geographical place and the female body. Combining references to Bambi, the Beach Boys, and the displacement of native peoples, Untitled Virgin explores the “fertile territory” of our cultural imagination.
Untitled Virgin was performed at HungryMan Gallery in Chicago, IL and at the Soundwalk festival of sound art in Long Beach, CA in 2009.