Tom Johnson/Adrienne Kennedy – Life Clings Closest Where Most Hated

The Body

Tom Johnson/Adrienne Kennedy – Life Clings Closest Where Most Hated

Performance - Tom Johnson/Adrienne Kennedy

Tom Johnson, visual study for Loves Clings Closest Where Most Hated, 2019, using page 1 of Adrienne Kennedy’s Frankenstein notebook and a photograph of ice build-up on a US Coast Guard cutter from the Northern Greenland Patrol during World War II

This event is part of the series New Work in the Arts & Humanities: The Body.

Life Clings Closest Where Most Hated
A performance by Tom Johnson based on Adrienne Kennedy’s notes on Frankenstein.

The American Academy in Rome is proud to present the international debut of this collaboration between the celebrated playwright Adrienne Kennedy and the Turin-based American artist Tom Johnson. Inspired by Kennedy’s reading of Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein—a landmark in the development of modern notions about the body, difference, and social alienation—Johnson has created an installation and performance expressly for the exhibition The Academic Body, which opens on May 22.

Kennedy, who was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame in 2018, has explored issues of race, kinship, and violence in American society in plays such as Funny House of a Negro, A Movie Star Has to Star in Black and White, and The Alexander Plays. Kennedy draws on mythical, historical, and imaginary figures to delve into the African American experience. As Hilton Als has written in the New Yorker, Kennedy’s women of color “stand on the precipice of disaster, madness or loss.” Funnyhouse of a Negro, which Kennedy completed while living in Rome in 1961, after traveling through Europe and West Africa, premiered in New York and won an Obie Award in 1964. Her distinctive voice was immediately recognized as one of the boldest and most incisive in American theater.

Johnson, whose work encompasses drawing, sculpture, video, and live performance, has explored many of the themes central to Kennedy’s plays. The artist states: “I am interested in analyzing some social taboos, not because I am so brave and strong but because I feel oppressed by them and can imagine that there is a better way to feel. My strategy is very simple. I analyze certain phenomena (racism, the male “gaze,” the psychology of wealth) because I find them in myself.”

Acknowledgments

The event is made possible by the Roy Lichtenstein Artist in Residence Fund, the Robert Mapplethorpe Photographer in Residence Fund, and the Terra Foundation for American Art.

Date & time
Tuesday, May 14, 2019
6:00 PM
Location
AAR Cryptoporticus
McKim, Mead & White Building
Via Angelo Masina, 5
Rome, Italy