Attention, Cinephiles and Lynn-philes Alike:
Microcinema International has announced its catalog of releases for 2010, which will offer not one, not two, but THREE ways to get your paws on a piece of Lynn’s cinematic oeuvre!
Microcinema International has announced its catalog of releases for 2010, which will offer not one, not two, but THREE ways to get your paws on a piece of Lynn’s cinematic oeuvre!
Did we take the title of this post from one of Lynn’s past works? No Ma’am. This is the title of a new exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum: “Reflections on the Electric Mirror: New Feminist Video”.
And we stumbled upon Orange Photography stumbling upon Lynn. Actually Orange is the new green. Anyway the image above is a crop of a nice pic of Lynn’s recent show at Gallery Paul Anglim.
An exhibition of electronic, digital, and web-based art titled Tech Tools of the Trade: Contemporary New Media Art has just opened at the de Saisset Museum at the University of Santa Clara.
The exhibition examines our cultural fascination with technology (including our continued faith in its benefits), our myriad uses of the internet, as well as the potentially troubling applications of technology in simulation and surveillance.
The exhibit will be open from April 17 to June 28, 2009. Why do we tell you this? Because for you Bay Area people this is a chance to see Lynn’s work in real life. Yay!
The gallery that represents Lynn, bitforms, has just sent out a press release regarding the Guggenheim Fellowship that Lynn was just awarded. We can’t yet read the release on the bitforms site, but it is available on Artipedia.
See also nice mentions of the award at the Henry Art Gallery’s Blog and Sf 360.
So according to the headline over at Chicken and Egg (see image above), Lynn has been awarded one of these fellows from the Guggenheim. But the story doesn’t say which one she picked. Or perhaps they are all clones of one person. This would make sense as they all seem to be aping each other after all. Anyway thanks to Chicken and Egg for picking up on this story. You really are great peeps! (Get it? ;-)
“I’d rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy” once said poet and critic Dorothy Parker.

We are shouting and screaming and jumping up and down on our desks (well, metaphorically speaking anyway). Over on the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation web site, president Edward Hirsch announced today that in its eighty-fifth annual competition for the United States and Canada the Foundation has awarded Lynn Hershman Leesen a fellowship for 2009.
The release defines the qualifications for a fellowship: “Guggenheim Fellows are appointed on the basis of stellar achievement and exceptional promise for continued accomplishment.” The purpose of the Foundation is to “add to the educational, literary, artistic, and scientific power of this country, and also to provide for the cause of better international understanding.”
Lynn was very pleased with the result, saying “yes, the miracle is – it is true.”
Performing Presence: from the live to the simulated was an international and interdisciplinary forum for the exploration of how exchanges of practices, concepts and methodologies between art, performance and new media practitioners, between academic disciplines and between live, mediated and simulated performance may deepen an understanding of the performance of presence. This was an international conference held at the Centre for Intermedia, University of Exeter, UK, 26-29 March 2009. Lynn Hershman Leeson contributed to the keynote event through a Second Life apparition.
Key questions for the conference included:
Now aren’t you glad that it was Lynn that had to answer these questions and not you?
Will you be in upstate New York at the beginning of April? If so, try and stop by and see Lynn. She will be participating in the Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large Campus Visits and Events at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY with a campus visit from April 5 to 10, 2009. On Tuesday, April 7, 7:15 pm at the Schwartz Performing Arts Center there will be an informal film screening of The Formerly Secret History of the Feminist Art – rough cuts from Lynn’s latest project; run time: 80 minutes. On Wednesday, April 8 at the Johnson Museum of Art, 2L Lecture Room, 4:30 pm, there will be a film screening of Strange Culture, run time: 75 minutes.