"As an artist you have to remember that you are always working. And you’re not just working when you are in the studio actually making something. You are working when you’re sleeping, dreaming, reading, looking at other peoples art, having conversations, and tripping over a rock. It’s all a part of your practice. To be able to embrace every element of your life as being a part of your practice takes the pressure off of going to the studio and the blank page. Just think of your studio as another tool."


Bio courtesy of Alyssa's website
Alyssa Taylor Wendt (http://alyssataylorwendt.com/projects/) is a multidisciplinary artist, filmmaker and curator that works in Austin, Texas and Detroit, Michigan. Her recent projects reference themes of ritual, animism, monuments, mysticism, the primordial, architecture, gender and mortality using video, sculpture, staged photographs, sound and performance. The work tends to provoke questions in the viewer with dark and evocative aesthetics and multiple layers of perceived truth. She earned her BA from NYU and her MFA from Bard College. Transplanted from New York City, she has shown in numerous national and international exhibitions and performed at The Museum of Art and Design in New York, envoy gallery, The Fusebox Festival and Deitch Projects and completed residencies in Iceland and Norway. She is currently finishing her opus multi-channel video work HAINT and just curated an epic exhibition about death and transformation with over 60 artists at DEMO Gallery in Austin. She enjoys darkness, gospel blues and bad jokes.


The following text courtesy of the Visual Arts Center website
Alyssa Taylor Wendt: HAINT (https://sites.utexas.edu/utvac/alyssa-taylor-wendt-haint/)
January 25 – February 22, 2019
HAINT is an immersive, three-channel video installation by Austin-based artist and curator Alyssa Taylor Wendt. Filmed over the course of three years in Croatia, Detroit, and Texas, the individual channels unfold in counterpoint with one another to create a haunting meditation on the ways we process history, both as individuals and as a culture. The piece draws on motifs from Wendt’s personal cosmology and explores the associative powers of perception, cycles of history and ruination, and the spiritual energy that objects, the landscape, and architectural spaces carry with them. Using Eastern European songs, voiceover, opera, black metal drones, and ambient sound, HAINT combines images of post-war architecture, monuments, and ruins to create a poetic investigation of war, memory, and storytelling. In addition to the video, the exhibition includes sculptural elements and a collection of staged production photographs that intersect with the video’s multifaceted narrative.
This exhibition is organized by MacKenzie Stevens, Director, Visual Arts Center, with Clare Donnelly, Gallery Manager, Visual Arts Center and Robin K. Williams, Ph.D. candidate in Art History at The University of Texas at Austin.
Visual Arts Center
The University of Texas at Austin Art Building
2300 Trinity St (directly north of DKR – Texas Memorial Stadium)
512-471–3713
Hours
Tuesday – Friday 10am – 5pm
Saturday Noon – 5pm
Sunday / Monday Closed
HAINT Viewing and Q&A with Alyssa Taylor Wendt
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
12 PM
Visual Arts Center
Artist Talk: Alyssa Taylor Wendt
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
4 PM
Art Building, Rm. 1.120
HAINT Viewing and Q&A with Alyssa Taylor Wendt
Tuesday, February 19, 2019
5:30 PM
Visual Arts Center


Some of the subjects we discuss:
Intro
Project based
Bard college MFA
Starting with photography
Nayland Blake
Using all her skills
Artistic origins/childhood
Getting into music
The punk scene
New York/NYU
San Francisco
Acting in movies
Back to NYC
Studying acting
Dilettante?
ICP photo program
Thesis project
Highlights
Move to TX
Austin career
Current practice
Vulnerability
Listening/animism
Communication
Art fairs/zeigeist
Collaboration
Filmmaking
Utilizing skills
Everything
Too polite/pleasing
Embracing darkness
Personality vs work
Haint details
Drone metal
Singing & Music
Inter-editing
Narrative film
Fathers stories
Ruins/cycles
VAC event details
Film/photography
Thanks!


This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Intro music generously provided by Stan Killian (http://stankillian.com/main/)
Support this podcast. (http://www.austinarttalk.com/supportpodcast)

"As an artist you have to remember that you are always working. And you’re not just working when you are in the studio actually making something. You are working when you’re sleeping, dreaming, reading, looking at other peoples art, having conversations, and tripping over a rock. It’s all a part of your practice. To be able to embrace every element of your life as being a part of your practice takes the pressure off of going to the studio and the blank page. Just think of your studio as another tool."


Bio courtesy of Alyssa's website

Alyssa Taylor Wendt is a multidisciplinary artist, filmmaker and curator that works in Austin, Texas and Detroit, Michigan. Her recent projects reference themes of ritual, animism, monuments, mysticism, the primordial, architecture, gender and mortality using video, sculpture, staged photographs, sound and performance. The work tends to provoke questions in the viewer with dark and evocative aesthetics and multiple layers of perceived truth. She earned her BA from NYU and her MFA from Bard College. Transplanted from New York City, she has shown in numerous national and international exhibitions and performed at The Museum of Art and Design in New York, envoy gallery, The Fusebox Festival and Deitch Projects and completed residencies in Iceland and Norway. She is currently finishing her opus multi-channel video work HAINT and just curated an epic exhibition about death and transformation with over 60 artists at DEMO Gallery in Austin. She enjoys darkness, gospel blues and bad jokes.


The following text courtesy of the Visual Arts Center website

Alyssa Taylor Wendt: HAINT

January 25 – February 22, 2019

HAINT is an immersive, three-channel video installation by Austin-based artist and curator Alyssa Taylor Wendt. Filmed over the course of three years in Croatia, Detroit, and Texas, the individual channels unfold in counterpoint with one another to create a haunting meditation on the ways we process history, both as individuals and as a culture. The piece draws on motifs from Wendt’s personal cosmology and explores the associative powers of perception, cycles of history and ruination, and the spiritual energy that objects, the landscape, and architectural spaces carry with them. Using Eastern European songs, voiceover, opera, black metal drones, and ambient sound, HAINT combines images of post-war architecture, monuments, and ruins to create a poetic investigation of war, memory, and storytelling. In addition to the video, the exhibition includes sculptural elements and a collection of staged production photographs that intersect with the video’s multifaceted narrative.

This exhibition is organized by MacKenzie Stevens, Director, Visual Arts Center, with Clare Donnelly, Gallery Manager, Visual Arts Center and Robin K. Williams, Ph.D. candidate in Art History at The University of Texas at Austin.

Visual Arts Center

The University of Texas at Austin Art Building

2300 Trinity St (directly north of DKR – Texas Memorial Stadium)

512-471–3713

Hours

Tuesday – Friday 10am – 5pm

Saturday Noon – 5pm

Sunday / Monday Closed

HAINT Viewing and Q&A with Alyssa Taylor Wendt

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

12 PM

Visual Arts Center

Artist Talk: Alyssa Taylor Wendt

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

4 PM

Art Building, Rm. 1.120

HAINT Viewing and Q&A with Alyssa Taylor Wendt

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

5:30 PM

Visual Arts Center




Some of the subjects we discuss:

Intro

Project based

Bard college MFA

Starting with photography

Nayland Blake

Using all her skills

Artistic origins/childhood

Getting into music

The punk scene

New York/NYU

San Francisco

Acting in movies

Back to NYC

Studying acting

Dilettante?

ICP photo program

Thesis project

Highlights

Move to TX

Austin career

Current practice

Vulnerability

Listening/animism

Communication

Art fairs/zeigeist

Collaboration

Filmmaking

Utilizing skills

Everything

Too polite/pleasing

Embracing darkness

Personality vs work

Haint details

Drone metal

Singing & Music

Inter-editing

Narrative film

Fathers stories

Ruins/cycles

VAC event details

Film/photography

Thanks!




This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Intro music generously provided by Stan Killian

Support this podcast.

Links:

Alyssa Taylor Wendt - websiteAlyssa Taylor Wendt: HAINT – Visual Arts Center — Alyssa Taylor WendtAlyssa Taylor Wendt (@missatw) • InstagramICOSAAlyssa Taylor Wendt - Where They CreateBeyond the Bio: Alyssa Taylor Wendt - Art Alliance Austin