When You’re Looking at Me, You’re Looking at Country

Public Art

When You’re Looking at Me, You’re Looking at Country

In When You're Looking at Me You're Looking At Country, Xaviera Simmons provided free photographic portraits to Fulton and Elliott houses residents in Chelsea, NY, in collaboration with More Art and Hudson Guild. Participants shared personal artifacts, creating unique narratives captured by Simmons' large format film camera. This project was a continuation of her practice of outdoors studios blending traditional portraiture and performance art. continuing her practice of outdoor studios and free portraits.
Artist
Xaviera Simmons
When

February 9th to March 27th, 2012.

Where

Exhibited at Hudson Guild Art Galleries, New York, NY.

Xaviera Simmons, When You're Looking at Me You're Looking At Country, Chelsea, NY. 2012.
  • Project description
  • About the artist
Xaviera Simmons, When You're Looking at Me You're Looking At Country, Chelsea, NY. 2012.

In creating When You’re Looking at Me You’re Looking At Country, multi-media artist Xaviera Simmons offered free photographic portraits to community members of the Fulton and Elliott houses, Chelsea, New York in collaboration with More Art and Hudson Guild.

All residents were invited to sit for a portrait, free of charge. Simmons constructed an open-air studio and photographed her subjects with a large format film camera. Participants were asked to bring personal artifacts (e.g. family photographs, special clothing, personal ephemera, etc.) that they wanted to be photographed with. Simmons worked with the sitters to create photographic narratives based on their personal memories, supplemented by these items. The artist developed and printed each image, which were gifted to each participant. This body of work is a continuation of Simmons’ practice of producing outdoor photographic studios and offering hand printed portraits, free of charge. This project was equally traditional photographic portraiture and performance art.

The final photographs were shown in the Hudson Guild Art Galleries on February 9th to March 27th 2012.

Partners and Supporters:

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Xaviera Simmons

Xaviera Simmons’s body of work spans photography, performance, video, sound, sculpture and installation. She defines her studio practice, which is rooted in an ongoing investigation of experience, memory, abstraction, present and future histories-specifically shifting notions surrounding landscape-as cyclical rather than linear. In other words, Simmons is committed equally to the examination of different artistic modes and processes; for example, she may dedicate part of a year to photography, another part to performance, and other parts to installation, video, and sound works-keeping her practice in constant and consistent rotation, shift, and engagement.

Xaviera Simmons received her BFA from Bard College (2004) after spending two years on a walking pilgrimage retracing the Transatlantic slave trade with Buddhist monks. She completed the Whitney Museum’s Independent Study Program in Studio Art (2005) while simultaneously completing a two-year actor-training conservatory with The Maggie Flanigan Studio. She is a visiting lecturer and the inaugural 2019 Solomon Fellow at Harvard University and was awarded The Charles Flint Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters from Bard College in Summer 2020. In 2019, Xaviera Simmons’s work was included in over fifteen museum exhibitions including shows at the ICA Boston, SFMOMA, The Phillips Collection (D.C.), National Museum of Women in the Arts (D.C.), Barnes Foundation, and many others. In 2017, Simmons’s work was included in exhibitions at Harvard University, The Studio Museum in Harlem, The Museum of Contemporary Art (Chicago), and The Institute of Contemporary Art (Winnipeg). In the same year, three of Simmons’s works were acquired by The Museum of Modern Art, New York. In 2015, Simmons was awarded the Foundation for Contemporary Arts (Robert Rauschenberg) Grant. Simmons has exhibited nationally and internationally where major exhibitions and performances include The Studio Museum in Harlem, The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, The Public Art Fund, The Sculpture Center, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Institute of Contemporary Art Boston, and Brooklyn Museum, among many others. Her works are in major museum and private collections including The Museum of Modern Art, The Nasher Museum, Deutsche Bank, The Rubell Family Collection, UBS, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Agnes Gund Art Collection, The Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, The Studio Museum in Harlem, ICA Miami, The High Museum, The de la Cruz Collection, and Perez Art Museum Miami.

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