A Family Finds Entertainment

2004 video artwork

  • 2004 (2004)
Running time
41 minutesLanguageEnglish

A Family Finds Entertainment is a 2004 video artwork by Ryan Trecartin, known for launching his career as a filmmaker. The video, shot in a frenetic, self-conscious style, features a disturbed boy who locks himself in his bathroom during a wild party while his friends have disassociated conversations.

Description

Trecartin in 2009

A Family Finds Entertainment features Skippy (Ryan Trecartin), a disturbed boy in garish makeup who has locked himself in his family's bathroom during a wild party. He rhapsodizes existentially and cuts himself with a knife. Elsewhere in the house, his friends and family implore him to come out, among other disassociated conversations mostly about Skippy but interspersed with mood swings and disorienting visual effects. He leaves the bathroom and borrows money from his lewd parents. Upon exiting the house, a documentarian wants to make a film about Skippy, who is quickly and fatally hit by a car. Inside the house, Shin (also played by Trecartin) receives a cell phone call about Skippy's death and histrionically attempts to compose herself and impart the news to her friends. Upon doing so, a band's music lifts Skippy's spirit from his body. The group goes outside to light fireworks but runs indoors before the police arrive.[1]

The video's frenzied, stagey, exaggerated, self-conscious style and acting is reminiscent of YouTubers (individuals performing asides to a camera, "hyperactive and narcissistic"), though the video predates the service. The video focuses less on its story than as a fast-paced blur of events: "somewhat incomprehensible, strangely mesmerizing, and overstimulating to the point of exhaustion".[2] Its script borrows from television reality show and talk show language, its actors wear homemade costumes.[3]

Production and promotion

The video was Trecartin's art school thesis project at Rhode Island School of Design. His collaborators, including Lizzie Fitch, also attended the school and continued to live and work with him after their 2004 graduation. The group moved to New Orleans and worked in a restaurant while searching Friendster for an audience. They sent DVDs to those who responded positively to their cold emails. In a form of early-Internet social networking, Cleveland art school students shared the video with visiting artist Sue de Beer, who passed it to a curator who connected Trecartin with Elizabeth Dee, Trecartin's eventual art dealer. A Family Finds Entertainment was included in the 2006 Whitney Biennial.[2] The single-channel video[3] runs 41 minutes.[1]

Reception and legacy

The video established Trecartin's career.[4][2] Dennis Cooper wrote that Trecartin achieved a simultaneous balance of sophistication and maniacal focus, based on expert editing and talent for avant-garde, complex narratives. These traits, wrote Cooper, help the film evade the usual art film deconstructive analysis. The work was exciting for its freshness.[1] "A Family Finds Entertainment" has a close connection with the Internet, both as a source of inspiration and the medium used to share it.[2] Trecartin uploaded the video to YouTube two years after its creation, making him an early artist to use social media as a primary form of dissemination.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c Cooper, Dennis (January 2006). "Dennis Cooper on Ryan Trecartin". Artforum International. Vol. 44, no. 5. pp. 188–189.
  2. ^ a b c d Lubow, Arthur (November 1, 2010). "Ryan's Web". W Magazine. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c doi:10.1086/672021 p. 72
  4. ^ Kennedy, Randy (January 28, 2009). "The Video Artist Ryan Trecartin's Nonlinear Reality". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.

Further reading

  • Bodin, Claudia (November 2011). "Die Hölle der guten Laune" [The road to high spirits]. Art – Das Kunstmagazin (11): 58–62. ISSN 0173-2781 – via ProQuest.
  • Lehrer-Graiwer, Sarah (June 3, 2013). "In the Studio: Ryan Trecartin". Art in America. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  • May, Whitney (March 2008). "Culture Collector". NYArts. pp. 30–31. Archived from the original on March 18, 2014. Retrieved January 18, 2014 – via ProQuest.
  • Kane, Carolyn L. (2019). "Trecartin's Accidental Color Aesthetic". High-Tech Trash: Glitch, Noise, and Aesthetic Failure. Univ of California Press. pp. 80–. ISBN 978-0-520-34014-5.
  • Kholeif, Omar (2018). "Hello World, Goodbye World, and Hello Again! Looking at Art after the Internet". In Eva Respini (ed.). Art in the Age of the Internet: 1989 to Today. Institute of Contemporary Art. pp. 102–. ISBN 978-0-300-22825-0.
  • Smith, Roberta (April 14, 2016). "What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week: Lizzie Fitch/Ryan Trecartin". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  • Tomkins, Calvin (March 17, 2014). "Experimental People". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X.
  • Wiley, Chris (October 1, 2011). "We Have a Situation". Frieze. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  • Zulueta, Ricardo E. (2018). "A Family Finds Entertainment: The 'Coming Out' Melodrama Remix". Queer Art Camp Superstar: Decoding the Cinematic Cyberworld of Ryan Trecartin. SUNY Press. pp. 23–. ISBN 978-1-4384-6895-2.
  • https://www.artnews.com/art-in-america/features/past-and-future-camera-lizzie-fitch-and-ryan-trecartins-new-movies-59975/
  • https://frieze.com/article/frieze-editors-debate-artist-decade
  • https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/24/arts/design/ryan-trecartins-any-ever-at-moma-ps1-review.html
  • Video on YouTube