|   Recommended: Educational Media Reviews Online   What is a living sculpture? Can time be represented? What  should be the lifespan of a work of art? Who can say do not touch the  works? Can stealing an idea be justified?
 The Live Art  documentary collection attempts to answer these questions by focusing on  works referred to as « ephemeral ». These presentations and  performances exist only for the duration of an exhibition then  disappear, to be -perhaps- recreated in another location. From New York  to Istanbul, from the Sao Paulo Biennial to the Palais de Tokyo in  Paris, this documentary series makes us question the place of art in our  lives and the significance of the staging, the venue and the role of  the visitor for an exhibition.
 
 Titles include:
 
 14 Rooms (Art Basel)
 What  is a living sculpture? A statue which gets down off its pedestal in the  evening to go home, and then comes back the next morning, becoming once  again a work of art. With Marina Abramovic, Xu Zhen, Laura Lima, Jordan  Wolfson and others.
 
 Joan Jonas (Venice Biennale)
 How  can we tell stories that outlive all artistic movements? Joan Jonas, a  New York artist, represented the United States at the 2015 Venice  Biennale. It was the official, if somewhat tardy, recognition of a  pioneering figure in ephemeral, performance and multimedia art forms.  For the Biennale, Joan Jonas designed “They Come To Us Without A Word”,  an artwork of multi-layered projections, of sound, objects and  light-play based around themes which have always been close to her  heart: childhood, nature, the body and movement.
 
 Philippe Parreno (Armory New-York)
 Can  time be represented? Philippe Parreno is an artist but also a maker of  films which become sculptures, a director of computers, a conductor of  an invisible orchestra and a choreographer of sound and light. Through  his works, he brings the invisible into being, by making visible what  eludes us…
 
 Adrian Villar Rojas (Istanbul)
 Adrian  Villar Rojas has performed a special creative ritual since he began his  career. He travels around the world and makes site-specific giant  sculptures usually of a temporary nature. They deteriorate, decompose,  rot, exist. For the Istanbul Biennale in 2016, he created a pack of  fabulous animals that he installed in the sea.
 
 Take Me, I’m yours (Monnaie de Paris)
 Who  says you can’t touch the exhibits? In 1995, the first “Take Me (I’m  Yours)” exhibition took place in London and has since become a legend.  And 20 years later, here is the sequel, in Paris. Visitors to the  exhibition are invited to touch, take, eat or even drink the works of  art instead of just looking at them passively.
 
 Tino Sehgal (Palais de Tokyo)
 There  is no evidence nor reproduction of these works, as Sehgal has never  allowed his actions to be photographed or filmed. His works only  materialize during an exhibition and continue to exist only in visitors’  memories. At least up until now…
 
 Sao Paolo Biennale
 What  if a large modern art exhibition was not an exclusive event for a  specialized audience but a popular festival for a million visitors? The  Sao Paolo Biennale is unique by virtue of its location, its monumental  size, its audience, its educational concept and its significance for  artists.
 
 Simon Denny & Chinese Artists (Hong Kong)
 Using  the graphic design of modern technologies and advertising, Simon Denny  deals with the most up-to-date topics: hacking, products for organizing  and shanzhai (copying). Together with Chinese artists, he presents his  latest works in Hong Kong, the city where Edward Snowden went into  hiding.
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