Interviewed by: Suzan Sherman and Daniel Wentworth
Shot and edited by: Slouch Productions/Melissa Friedling

The Artist’s Life: Kate Gilmore

Before pressing record and shooting herself in close-up, video artist Kate Gilmore sets up a particular challenge for herself—be it busting out of sheetrock enclosures, climbing out of pits of dirt, or balancing herself on a tall stack of chairs precariously held together with rope—which she knows, even before the film starts rolling, that she may or may not be able to accomplish. With minimal edits, Gilmore’s formally considered videos feel incredibly intimate, but can also be painful to watch, as the camera unflinchingly documents all of her repeated falls and setbacks. Appearing strong but not invincible, she often dons pumps, pencil skirts, and other incongruously “feminine” attire as she throws herself into these strenuous challenges, suggesting an underlying feminist message about the 21st-century female experience.

Gilmore insists that she is not a masochist—when NYFA Current met with her, she called the characterization the biggest misconception about her work—nor is she an endurance artist following in the footsteps of Marina Abramovic. The exercises she creates for her videos are short-lived, and she maintains that her goals are realistic, though difficult. Soon after welcoming us into her studio, the unassuming and down-to-earth Gilmore admitted that she does not know where her work is going next, though her scale and range are surely expanding. Last summer, as part of the Public Art Fund’s In the Public Realm program, she orchestrated a live performance-sculpture in Bryant Park, Walk the Walk, her first piece to employ performers other than herself.

Kate Gilmore was born in Washington D.C. in 1975 and lives and works in New York. Her work has been exhibited at the 2010 Whitney Biennial; the Brooklyn MuseumThe KitchenIndianapolis Museum of Art; Bryant Park (Public Art Fund); Locust Projects;White Columns; Contemporary Art Center, CincinnatiArtpaceThe J. Paul Getty MuseumThe Rose Art Museum; and PS1/MoMA Contemporary Art Center. Gilmore has been the recipient of several international awards and honors, such as the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Award for Artistic Excellence, the Franklin Furnace Fund for Performance, The LMCC Workspace ResidencyNew York Foundation for The Arts Fellowship, and The Marie Walsh Sharpe Space Residency. Her work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art; the Brooklyn Museum; Whitney Museum of American Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.

Amy Aronoff
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