Alison S.M. Kobayashi Say Something Bunny!

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

Canada: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…
USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…

Exhibition Dates: February 13 March 26, 2016

Performance Dates:

Friday, February 5, 8pm

Saturday, February 6, 8pm

Friday, February 12, 8pm

Saturday, February 13, 2pm

followed by opening reception at 5pm

Performances are free but have very limited seating. Book your ticket here: http://www.eventzilla.net/web/event/alison-sm-kobayashi–say-something-bunny-2138839430

Alison S.M. Kobayashi is an identity contortionist. In her work, Kobayashi performs a variety of characters that are both studiously and playfully rendered. These personas are inspired by Kobayashis extensive collection of lost, discarded and donated objects; ranging from answering machine tapes purchased at a secondhand shop to a love letter left on a sidewalk. Through repeated interaction with the objects deep listening, research, re-enactment and play narratives and imagery begin to manifest and inspire new work. The results are funny, low-fi artifacts of an artist embodying the lives of others.

With Say Something Bunny! Kobayashi presents a new performance and exhibition based on two audio spools hidden inside an obsolete wire recorder purchased at an estate sale. The recordings capture the voices of a New York family spanning 1952 to 1954. The narrative contained in the recording is a puzzle peppered with fragmented and overlapping dialogue, a charming living room drama rich with the eccentricities of family dynamics preformed for the tape recorder. Decoding the document and using it as both soundtrack and inspiration, Kobayashi creates a new installation containing videos, drawings and book works that reimagine the events, characters, and references from the recording.

Over several performances, an intimate audience is privy to a script read through where Kobayashi acts as both director and performer, contextualizing the recording with her research and imagination and tangentially exploring characters personal histories from the Ivy League to the pornographic. In Kobayashis practice, personal histories get farther from fact as we learn to tell a better story. Say Something Bunny! plays with what authentic memory is, preserving narrative details from source material and fictionalizing the rest.

View Event Details

Share with friends
You can publish this article on your website as long as you provide a link back to this page.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*