Tony Cokes
In
a series of videotapes and installations produced since the mid-1980s,
Tony Cokes engages in cogent investigations of identity and opposition.
His
works question how race influences the construction of subjectivities
(personal, cultural and historical), and how race, gender and class
are perceived through what he terms the "representational regimes
of image
and sound," as perpetuated by Hollywood, the media and popular
culture.
Cokes'
analytical strategy is one of reframing and repositioning. His critiques
are informed by contemporary cultural studies, poststructuralist
theory, and popular texts; he quotes from sources ranging from Louis
Althusser, Malcolm X and Catherine Clement to Public Enemy and William
Burroughs. His works are often assemblages of archival footage, images
from Hollywood films, text commentary, voiceover, and popular music.
For
the past several years Cokes has also been creating installations and
tapes as part of the collective X-PRZ. Founded in 1991, X-PRZ is a
biracial "art band" of four artists -- Cokes, Doug Anderson,
Kenseth Armstead, and Mark Pierson -- working in installation, photography,
painting, sculpture, and video. Cokes states: "We tend to manipulate
cultural readings, desires and effects rather than attempt to address
the social in documentary or
realist styles.... The work relies on vernacular material (found images,
texts) which are contextualized to provoke questioning, instabilities....
We see our work as a willful misreading and perverse misapplication
of the histories of various cultural practices, from critical theory
to pop music."
Tony
Cokes was born in 1956. He received a B.A. from Goddard College. Vermont,
participated in the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program, and gained
an M.F.A. from Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond. He has received
grants and fellowships from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Guggenheim
Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State
Council for the Arts, and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Cokes'
video and multimedia installation works have been included in exhibitions
at
The Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim
Museum Soho, and The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York; the
Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, and in Documenta X, Kassel, Germany.
Cokes currently teaches at Brown University. He lives in Providence,
Rhode Island.
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Title: Manifesto
A
Show: Poetics of Bandwidth
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