The Wooster Group

November 7, 2019 - February 16, 2020

When an emancipation occurs, lots of things are liberated, some good, some bad.1
Ron Vawter

I love that two-dimensional TV world. It’s not ambiguous, like film; I can feel the surface.2
Elizabeth LeCompte

Underneath each picture there is always another picture.3
Douglas Crimp

Carriage trade is pleased to present an exhibition with The Wooster Group, featuring archival material, props, and performance documentation emphasizing the group’s significant contribution to both performative and visual culture over the last four and a half decades.

The Wooster Group has maintained a home at The Performing Garage at 33 Wooster Street since the mid-1970’s, originating within a downtown experimental art scene of cross-disciplinary activity and hybrid forms. Led and directed by Elizabeth LeCompte, who draws on diverse sources including traditional plays, B-movies, stand-up comedy, and autobiographical material, The Wooster Group’s work eludes categorization and obvious description. As part of a core of founding members* including Spalding Gray (1941-2004), Jim Clayburgh, Ron Vawter (1948-1994), Willem Dafoe, Kate Valk, and Peyton Smith, LeCompte’s singular vision remains central to the group’s identity.

To experience a Wooster Group piece is to experience a kind of assault on the present, a sense of being overwhelmed with simultaneity, of overlapping media images and live action, of disorientation. A relentless build-up through a series of fractured narratives suddenly pauses as an "MC" intervenes (Ron Vawter channeling Lenny Bruce in Frank Dell’s The Temptation of St. Antony, Kate Valk’s narrator role in Brace Up!), anchoring time in a surreal televisual world where the person behind the screen speaks to us; a reassuring presence from the mediascape beyond.

Prodded by buzzers and bells reminiscent of TV game shows, the action just as quickly shifts again, with the audience not so much following along as awash in a visual and aural field of sustained intensity. Whether propelled by the B-movie Olga’s House of Shame in House/Lights (1998), or shadowed by the 1964 film version of Richard Burton’s Hamlet as they navigate a series of physically challenging stage directions requiring a disciplined attentiveness, the performers seem possessed. Wedded to media imagery that dictates their actions, the notion of presence, of real time, loses its grip. Video screens mix replicas of onstage action with "borrowed" footage. Overlapping and conflicting source materials often engage brutal contradictions. Mixing violence and optimism, crassness and beauty, the institutional voice versus the autobiographical, and the live and the mediated, the audience is never off the hook. Instead, the intensity of the impressions linger, the lack of resolution filters back convincingly into everyday life.

This first exhibition devoted exclusively to The Wooster Group will focus on fifteen shows that collectively represent a cross section of their work (with four full performances screening each day) emphasizing their important role in addressing questions of representation, identity, and agency which parallel developments in visual art. As much image-makers as performers, their interests straddle a line that encompasses both. Through the presentation of archival material, performance videos, and objects which reveal the enormous depth and complexity of their projects, this exhibition is meant as both a concise overview and celebration of The Wooster Group, an evolving collective of independent-minded artists whose work continues to challenge the cultural status quo in America and abroad.

Full length video documentation of the following four Wooster Group productions will be shown between 12-6 pm during the run of the exhibition (times are approximate):

Rumstick Road (1977), 12:15-1:35 pm
Brace Up! (1991, 2003), 1:40 -3:30 pm
House/Lights (1998, 2005), 3:35-4:55 pm
THE B-SIDE: "Negro Folklore from Texas State Prisons,"
A Record Album Interpretation
(2017), Directed by Kate Valk,5:00-5:55 pm

*
Current Company
Irfan Brkovic, Zbigniew Bzymek, Enver Chakartash, Matthew Dipple, Mike Farry, Ari Fliakos, Clay Hapaz, Cynthia Hedstrom, Gareth Hobbs, Elizabeth LeCompte, Bona Lee, Michaela Murphy, Erin Mullin, Pamela Reichen, Scott Shepherd, Eric Sluyter, Kate Valk

Current Associates
Bill Ballou, Eric Berryman, Jacob Bigelow, Dennis Dermody, Jim Fletcher, Mia Fliakos, Linus Ignatius, Bruce Jackson, Aviva Jaye, Ken Kobland, Ying Liu, Andrew Maillet, Frances McDormand, Jasper McGruder, Greg Mehrten, Philip Moore, Matthias Neckermann, Suzzy Roche, Kaneza Schaal, Ryan Seelig, David Sexton, Casey Spooner, Lucy Taylor, Maura Tierney, Jennifer Tipton, Danusia Trevino, Ariana Smart Truman, Wladimiro Woyno, Robert Wuss, Omar Zubair

Carriage trade wishes to thank Lawrence B. Benenson and The PARC FoundatIon for their generous support of this project. We would also like to thank The Wooster Group for their great work which inspired this exhibition, archivist Clay Hapaz and producer Cynthia Hedstrom for their commitment to its realization, and gallery assistants Mengfan Bai, Hsiang Hsi, Mika Lee, Laura Li, and Laura Moreno for their help in its production.

Notes:
1. Savran, D., Breaking the Rules, The Wooster Group, (1986) , p.78
2. Elizabeth LeCompte takes on Shakespeare, The New Yorker, October 8, 2007
3. Crimp, D., Pictures, October, Vol. 8 (Spring, 1979), pp. 75-88

Photo credit: The Wooster Group, Frank Dell’s The Temptation of St. Antony, (Ron Vawter, Peyton Smith), 1988, Photo: © Louise Oligny

The Wooster Group catalog

Press

Installation View (entrance)
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View (Detail)
Vitrine, The Hairy Ape, 1996; Brace Up!, 1991/2003, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
Blinds from Frank Dell’s The Temptation of St. Anthony (left),1988; Selected Video Clips from 1975 to 2017 (middle), To You, The Birdie! (Phèdre), 2002; Tree Lamp (right), House/Lights,1988/2005, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
Wall Cases of Selected Props from Performances, 1975-2019, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View (Detail of Case #1)
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
Screenings of four full Wooster Group productions: Rumstick Road (1977), Brace Up! (1991/2003), House/Lights (1998/2005), THE B-SIDE: "Negro Folklore from Texas State Prisons," A Record Album Interpretation (2017, directed by Kate Valk), photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
Selected Video Dailies and Flaubert Dreams of Travel But the Illness of His Mother Prevents It (1986, with Ken Kobland), photo: Nicholas Knight

Installation View
The Wooster Group, carriage trade, photo: Nicholas Knight