And Now for Something Completely Different: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 16:50, 26 June 2023

And Now for Something Completely Different is a segment by Art & Language in Zoran Popović's 1977 documentary film Struggle in New York about New York's political avant-garde art scene.
Contents
The segment features three performances and occupies the final 10 minutes of the 56 minute film.
Background
The segment was filmed in October or November 1976 in sculptor John Chamberlain's New York studio on 76 Vestry Street. Chamberlain was the father of drummer Jesse Chamberlain, who often used the space to practice music. The film features members of Art & Language (specifically the New York Provisional Art & Language group) in a semi-improvised performance similar to Nine Gross and Conspicuous Errors from earlier that year. The performance was one of Art & Language New York's final projects before its dissolution in 1977.
The posters around the set advertise Art-Language Vol. 3 No. 4, which was released around the time of filming. Passages from that issue are read during the film.
"And Now for Something Completely Different" is a catchphrase from Monty Python's Flying Circus and was the title of their 1971 film.
Further reading: Robert Bailey's book "Art & Language International: Conceptual Art Between Art Worlds" chapter "Keep All Your Friends"