Martine Syms - SHE MAD S1:E4
- THIS EVENT HAS EXPIRED
- Tickets
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Free - Drop-in - no ticket required
- Dates and times
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11th Jun - 25th Jul 2021
Check venue opening times
- Age
- All ages
This event is now finished
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Martine Syms explores pervasive archetypes and depictions of black experience in American television and media, combining conceptualism, humour and social commentary to explore the sign of blackness in the public imagination. Drawing from early cinema, television, the internet, social media, and ambient footage produced by phones and surveillance, Syms addresses the ways in which representations of black identity and gender have been shaped throughout the history of moving image.
Viewers are invited to move through an immersive installation rendered in Syms’ signature purple – a reference to both to Alice Walker’s 1982 novel The Colour Purple and the special effects backdrops used in film and video. An exposed wall scaffold zig zags across the gallery creating multiple vantage points through which to encounter Syms’ ongoing episodic project SHE MAD (2015-present). A series of mirrored panels are cut to resemble ‘cookie’ filters - a device used to create lighting effects in film and theatre.
Weaving together autobiography, comedy, and critique, SHE MAD follows the character of Martine — an overachieving, stoner graphic designer who lives in Hollywood and aspires to be an important artist. The first episode in the sitcom format Laughing Gas (2016) was inspired by Edwin Porter’s 1907 silent comedic short of the same title. One of the first screen performances by a black female actress, Bertha Regustus, Laughing Gas follows her character as she laughs uncontrollably after receiving nitrous oxide at the dentist’s office. Syms reimagines Porter’s film today, performing the role of “Martine” in a sequence of improvised vignettes shot in multiple formats.
Shown on two monitors, S1:E1 A Pilot for a Show About Nowhere (2015) explores the formation of black subjectivities through American television. Appropriating footage from a range of sources such as The Bernie Mac Show and The Oprah Winfrey Show, the work explores how black sitcoms hold the potential to break down preconceptions, yet often erase the struggles and realities of the people they represent. Syms continues these themes in a newly commissioned episode S1:E4 (2020) presented on a large LED mesh screen. S1:E4 begins with a micro-aggression at a client’s party, triggering a flashback to the summer of 2000, when Martine was a camper at T-Zone, a week-long empowerment programme for teenage girls founded by a supermodel and business mogul.
A portrait screen features Syms’ Intro to Threat Modeling (2017). Narrated through email exchanges, screen grabs, and an avatar, rather than mapping a network’s vulnerabilities, the work reveals the artist’s own weak spots and internal negative thoughts, what she calls her “shame space”. Syms’ personified threat model explores themes of privacy, visibility and vulnerability in our increasingly technological world, charting “the way in which black identity is constantly being shaped through the experience of surveillance, and how technology mediates perceptions of race.”
Co-curated and co-commissioned by Glasgow International and Tramway
Supported by Bridget Donahue Gallery, New York, Sadie Coles HQ, London and The Henry Moore Foundation
Accessibility guides
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Large Print and Braille programme material available upon request.
Some performances may also be BSL interpreted, audio described or have further assistance available. Access information for individual events is included in their event listing.
Accessible toilets
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Assistance dogs
Assistance dogs are welcome. We can provide a bowl of water for an assistance dog. The assistance dog toilet area is located to the rear of the building.
Assistance dogs are allowed in the auditorium.
Wheelchair access
There is level access to all Tramway spaces and the cafe, with lift access to the upper spaces.
There are designated spaces for wheelchair users in the theatre.
Baby changing
Baby changing facilities are available on the ground floor
Baby feeding
Breastfeeding is welcome at Tramway
Cafe or restaurant
Full table service is not available. Food or drinks can be ordered at the counter and will be brought to the table.
No tables are permanently fixed.
No chairs are permanently fixed.
Menus are hand held only, but are clearly presented in contrasting colours. Menus are not available in Braille.
Parking
On street only
Photography and video recording
At times, Glasgow Life will be on the premises to film and take photos.
The public are only permitted to record and take photos where explicit permission has been granted in advance.
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Location Map
Tramway is a post-industrial venue with a range of unique and versatile spaces, popular with private and corporate clients looking for a venue ‘with a difference’. Tramway is an ideal space for performances, exhibitions, private viewings, seminars, meetings and smaller scale functions.
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