Christine Kozlov

Christine Kozlov
Born Christine Kozlov
1945
New York, New York
Died 2005
London, United Kingdom
Nationality American
Education School of Visual Arts, New York City
Known for Conceptual art

Christine Kozlov (1945, New York City – 2005, London) was an American conceptual artist.

Career

She attended the School of Visual Arts in NYC until 1967.

Work

Kozlov was a figure in the New York Conceptual art scene centering around the Lannis Gallery located at 315 E 12th St near 2nd Ave in New York's East Village. She participated in a number of exhibitions in the sixties and early 1970s, subsequently falling away from the art world.[1] Her work has seen a revival since her death in 2005 and been included in a number of exhibitions over the past decade.

Her first pieces responded to questions of sound, memory and information. "Information, No Theory" consisted of a reel-to-reel recorder with an infinite tape loop and a microphone recording ambient noise from the room. It would record and then erase the traces of what was just recorded. It was recently restaged.[2]

She and Joseph Kosuth started the Museum of Normal Art out of the Lannis Gallery. For a short time it featured many of the artists associated with Conceptualism. She was a member of the Art and Language Group from 1971 to 1976.

Exhibitions

References

  1. Alexander Alberro; Blake Stimson (1999). Conceptual Art: A Critical Anthology. MIT Press. pp. 81–. ISBN 978-0-262-51117-9.
  2. http://vimeo.com/80166473

External links

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