As part of the exhibition LYNN HERSHMAN LEESON: ARE OUR EYES TARGETS? at the Julia Stoschek Foundation Düsseldorf, this screening explores how alter egos in video art are used to challenge identity, authorship, and media representation. The screening will be accompanied by a conversation between Tabea Marschall, Collection Assistant JSF, and artist Mara Mckevitt (in English).
At its core are Lynn Hershman Leeson’s Roberta Breitmore (1973–78) and Mara Mckevitt’s Val (2019–23), two works that blur the boundaries between reality and performance. Hershman Leeson’s Roberta Breitmore was a meticulously constructed persona that embodied the complexities of identity and surveillance long before the digital age. Mckevitt’s Val, emerging from today’s media landscape, critically examines the commodification of the artist figure and the performativity of authorship.
The screening expands these themes through works such as Andrea Fraser’s Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk (1989), which employs the persona of an overenthusiastic museum docent to critique institutional authority; Martine Syms’s She Mad (2015), which interrogates Black identity in mass media through a fictionalized version of the artist; and Luzie Meyer’s Incognito Ergo Non Sum (2020), a poetic reflection on identity as a layered performance shaped by social structures.
By placing these works in dialogue, the screening highlights the alter ego as both a mode of self-invention and a critical tool for subverting systems of power, authorship, and visibility.
The following works will be presented:
Mara Mckevitt, Val, 2019-23, video, 15’, color, sound.
Andrea Fraser, Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk, 1989. Live Performance at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia. Video documentation 29′51″, color, sound.
Martine Syms, A Pilot For A Show About Nowhere, 2015, video 25′, color, sound.
Luzie Meyer, INCOGNITO ERGO NON SUM, 2020, video 14′33″, color, sound.