One Day Sculpture - Javier Téllez: Intermission

22 Mar - 23 Mar 2009

The 2009 Govett-Brewster International Artist in Residence Javier Téllez will present his highly anticipated One Day Sculpture project. Intermission will feature a live lion prowling the stalls of a 1920s movie theatre during a continuous screening of MGM’s infamous opening credits.

The scene is a windswept New Zealand coastal town of Opunake on an autumn Sunday afternoon. Gwelfa Burgess, the ‘oldest working usherette in New Zealand’, leads the audience to experience the thrill of seeing a lion respond to celluloid dreams.

As in previous works such as One Flew over the Void (2005), Téllez creates a ‘living sculpture’ that relies on unorthodox collaborations of participants and the public. Intermission engenders a sense of wonder and the carnivalesque whilst addressing a sense of place and its cinematic history.

The work of Téllez reflects a sustained interest in bringing peripheral communities and ‘invisible’ situations to the fore of contemporary art. It explores institutional structures, disability and mental illness as marginalising conditions, and borderline collective and individual behaviors. His practice has developed mostly within the moving image and installation tradition, although it also contains elements of performance and sculpture. Often research-based and place-specific, Tellez’s projects dwell on the social and political histories of the locations where they develop.


Based in New York since 1993, Téllez has exhibited widely internationally and his work has been included in important exhibitions at major institutions including ICA, Boston; HKW, Berlin; The Power Plant, Toronto; Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum, Rotterdam; P.S.1 MoMA, New York; Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City; as well as biennales such as Whitney Biennale, Kwangju Biennale, Venice Biennale, Yokohama Triennale, Biennale of Sydney and Manifesta.

Intermission has been commissioned by the Govett-Brewster as part of One Day Sculpture, a New Zealand-wide series of temporary public artworks. One Day Sculpture is a Massey University College of Creative Arts, School of Fine Arts, Litmus Research Initiative.

Téllez is the 2009 Govett-Brewster International Artist in Residence, a partnership with Western Institute of Technology at Taranaki supported by Creative New Zealand.