Upcoming Events
[siccer] at the Kitchen
Using the techniques and technologies associated with photography, cinema, and the stage, Rawls’ [siccer] challenges divisions between the living, the captured, the rehearsed, and the performed. Experimenting with stop-motion animation, the work features a compilation of still images that have been stitched together to produce moving images depicting a cast of Black dancers in various states of movement. These stop-motion videos are then projected onto chroma green frames suspended from the ceiling, reminiscent of the green screens commonly associated with film production. At once caught, distilled, fragmented, and unfinished, gestures glitch in and out of focus across Rawls’ cinematic scaffolding, which both literally and metaphorically speaks to the complex visibility of Blackness in contemporary society.
The project’s title is inspired by the Latin adverb “[sic],” used to indicate incorrect spelling within a quotation, and often employed when Black vernacular speech is cited within a standard English text. Through this titular reference, [siccer] illuminates the ways in which Black performance evades white and Western forms of “correction” and classification, suggesting instead a way of being that is both iterative and endlessly becoming, much like the project itself. Within the work, as language and gestures mutate, so too does meaning, in the process revealing meaning itself as yet another construction—as that which both becomes and comes undone. In an image-saturated world wherein our technologies and identities are inextricably intertwined, [siccer] invites audiences to consider the verbal and physical play that marks how Black performance actively eludes capture and speculates on the potential for collective strategies of narrating the world, uncorrected.
Co-presented by Performance Space New York and L’Alliance New York’s Crossing The Line Festival, the live performances of [siccer] accompany the artist’s exhibition at The Kitchen, a book published by Wendy’s Subway, and an album published by the artist.
Find more information on The Kitchen’s website here!
[siccer] at Performance Space New York
In the dance performance and video installation [siccer], Will Rawls experiments with stop-motion filmmaking techniques, wherein still photographs are strung together to produce a moving image, to consider how Black gestures are relentlessly documented, distorted, and circulated in lens-based media. Throughout [siccer]’s live performance, Holland Andrews, keyon gaskin, jess pretty, Katrina Reid, and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste are suspended in stop-motion film shoot. When the camera’s shutter closes momentarily between photographs, Rawls and collaborators play within the intervals, taking advantage of a gap in surveillance.
The project’s title is driven by the Latin adverb “sic” which indicates incorrect spelling within a quotation and which is often employed to contrast Black vernacular speech with standard English. Rawls turns this conflict on its head in order to illuminate the verbal and physical play of Black performance as something that eludes capture on screen and in language—and that speculates on the potential of strategies for narrating the world, uncorrected.
This presentation represents the long-awaited New York premiere of the work. Co-presented by Performance Space New York and L’Alliance New York, the live performances of [siccer] accompany the artist’s exhibition at The Kitchen, a book published by Wendy’s Subway, and an album published by the artist.
But tickets here!
[siccer] at Performance Space New York
In the dance performance and video installation [siccer], Will Rawls experiments with stop-motion filmmaking techniques, wherein still photographs are strung together to produce a moving image, to consider how Black gestures are relentlessly documented, distorted, and circulated in lens-based media. Throughout [siccer]’s live performance, Holland Andrews, keyon gaskin, jess pretty, Katrina Reid, and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste are suspended in stop-motion film shoot. When the camera’s shutter closes momentarily between photographs, Rawls and collaborators play within the intervals, taking advantage of a gap in surveillance.
The project’s title is driven by the Latin adverb “sic” which indicates incorrect spelling within a quotation and which is often employed to contrast Black vernacular speech with standard English. Rawls turns this conflict on its head in order to illuminate the verbal and physical play of Black performance as something that eludes capture on screen and in language—and that speculates on the potential of strategies for narrating the world, uncorrected.
This presentation represents the long-awaited New York premiere of the work. Co-presented by Performance Space New York and L’Alliance New York, the live performances of [siccer] accompany the artist’s exhibition at The Kitchen, a book published by Wendy’s Subway, and an album published by the artist.
But tickets here!
[siccer] at Performance Space New York
In the dance performance and video installation [siccer], Will Rawls experiments with stop-motion filmmaking techniques, wherein still photographs are strung together to produce a moving image, to consider how Black gestures are relentlessly documented, distorted, and circulated in lens-based media. Throughout [siccer]’s live performance, Holland Andrews, keyon gaskin, jess pretty, Katrina Reid, and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste are suspended in stop-motion film shoot. When the camera’s shutter closes momentarily between photographs, Rawls and collaborators play within the intervals, taking advantage of a gap in surveillance.
The project’s title is driven by the Latin adverb “sic” which indicates incorrect spelling within a quotation and which is often employed to contrast Black vernacular speech with standard English. Rawls turns this conflict on its head in order to illuminate the verbal and physical play of Black performance as something that eludes capture on screen and in language—and that speculates on the potential of strategies for narrating the world, uncorrected.
This presentation represents the long-awaited New York premiere of the work. Co-presented by Performance Space New York and L’Alliance New York, the live performances of [siccer] accompany the artist’s exhibition at The Kitchen, a book published by Wendy’s Subway, and an album published by the artist.
Black Study Days hosted by Whistle Space
Black Study Days is a 3-day symposium at UCLA from April 28th to 30th focusing on various topics in Black Studies hosted by Whistle Space.
[siccer] performances @ REDCAT
REDCAT welcomes back Will Rawls and his newest work, [siccer].
[siccer] installation @ ICA LA
[siccer]’s interdisciplinary exhibition opens spring 2025 in ICA LA’s main galleries.
Will Rawls x Ralph Lemon
Will Rawls responds to Ralph Lemon’s narrative epic, Untitled (The greatest [Black] art history story ever told. unfinished).
A Phrase That Fits
A Phrase That Fits is a durational choreography with interventions and revisions of the lyrics to Tina Turner’s song What’s Love Got To Do With It. Will Rawls‘ performance is activated by Brazilian dancers who perform the lyrics in English based on translations into Portuguese, questions and interpretations.
A Phrase That Fits
A Phrase That Fits is a durational choreography with interventions and revisions of the lyrics to Tina Turner’s song What’s Love Got To Do With It. Will Rawls‘ performance is activated by Brazilian dancers who perform the lyrics in English based on translations into Portuguese, questions and interpretations.
A Phrase That Fits
A Phrase That Fits is a durational choreography with interventions and revisions of the lyrics to Tina Turner’s song What’s Love Got To Do With It. Will Rawls‘ performance is activated by Brazilian dancers who perform the lyrics in English based on translations into Portuguese, questions and interpretations.
A Phrase That Fits
A Phrase That Fits is a durational choreography with interventions and revisions of the lyrics to Tina Turner’s song What’s Love Got To Do With It. Will Rawls‘ performance is activated by Brazilian dancers who perform the lyrics in English based on translations into Portuguese, questions and interpretations.
regular degular
The Movement-Image is an exhibition and performance series curated by Lecturer in Visual Arts Colleen Asper and on view at the Lewis Center at Princeton University. It unspools the motion picture to situate performance in a continuum with film.
The exhibition features video works and installations by artists Amy Beecher, Xavier Cha, Sahra Motalebi, Maho Ogawa, Will Rawls and Leila Weefur.
A Phrase That Fits
A Phrase That Fits is a durational choreography with interventions and revisions of the lyrics to Tina Turner’s song What’s Love Got To Do With It. Will Rawls‘ performance is activated by Brazilian dancers who perform the lyrics in English based on translations into Portuguese, questions and interpretations.
[siccer] at PICA
In the dance performance and video installation [siccer], Will Rawls experiments with stop-motion filmmaking techniques, wherein still photographs are strung together to produce a moving image, to consider how Black gestures are relentlessly documented, distorted, and circulated in lens-based media.
[siccer] at On the Boards
In [siccer], Will Rawls experiments with stop-motion, a filmmaking technique in which still photographs are strung together to produce a moving image.
[siccer] Installation at The Momentary
In the video installation [siccer], Will Rawls experiments with stop-motion filmmaking techniques, wherein still photographs are strung together to produce a moving image, to consider how Black gestures are relentlessly documented, distorted, and circulated in lens-based media.