The Watermill Center is a center for the arts and humanities in Water Mill, New York, founded in 1992 by artist and theater director Robert Wilson.
Overview
The Watermill Center is "a laboratory for performance" founded by Robert Wilson in 1992 on the site of a former Western Union research facility.[1] The Watermill Center is located in Water Mill, New York, and was officially opened to the public in 2006.[2] Its programming currently consists of year-round artist residencies and exhibitions, a public summer lecture series, and a collaborative summer program for young and emerging artists from a variety of disciplines.[3] As a unique center for all the arts working in collaboration, The Watermill Center has been called "the academy of the 21st-Century" by anthropologist Edmund Carpenter, and described by the New York Times as a contemporary " Bayreuth minus the nationalism and the exclusive dedication to the founder's work,"[4] In the manner of The Pina Bausch Foundation in Wuppertal, Germany, The Watermill Center is both a study center for research on Wilson's theater and a workspace for creative development.[5] Wilson himself has described Watermill as "a think tank, a contemplative arcade where all kinds of different things can happen."[6]
The Watermill Center is home to The Robert Wilson Archive, The Watermill Study Library, and The Watermill Collection, with notable works of art from Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, indigenous peoples of the Arctic, pre-modern China, and Shaker furniture, as well as works of modern and contemporary artists and designers like Paul Thek, Robert Mapplethorpe, Christopher Knowles, Donald Judd, Gio Ponti, Josef Hoffmann, and Wilson.[7][8] In 2013, The Louvre Museum in Paris staged "Living Rooms," a major exhibition incorporating works from The Watermill Collection throughout the museum's galleries.[9][10][11][12] The Watermill Center has been the site of exhibitions of artists such as Mike Kelley,[13]Jonathan Meese,[14] and Dieter Meier.[15] In 2015, the Inga Maren Otto Fellowship was established to support international artists-in-residence at the Watermill Center.[16] The Watermill Center is operated by the Byrd Hoffman Water Mill Foundation, a not-for-profit, 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization chartered in 1969 in the State of New York.[17]
History
Robert Wilson first created performance works specific to sites on Eastern Long Island in the late 1960s. In 1962, Wilson founded the Byrd Hoffman School of Byrds, a performance company which collaborated on all of his early works, including Deafman Glance, The Life and Times of Sigmund Freud, The King of Spain, The Life and Times of Joseph Stalin,[18] and KA MOUNTAIN and GUARDenia Terrace. Notable collaborators of the Byrd Hoffman School of Byrds included Gordon Matta Clark, Jack Smith, Sheryl Sutton, and Jerome Robbins.[19][20] During this period, Robbins was creating Watermill, a ballet with music by Teiji Ito, with early rehearsals and workshops taking place outdoors in Water Mill, New York. Wilson was Robbins's assistant at the time.[21] Previously, Wilson had apprenticed under architect Paolo Soleri at the experimental community of Arcosanti in Arizona.[22][23]
When Wilson acquired The Watermill Center facilities in 1992, he began a total renovation of the original structure of the Western Union laboratory on which it was founded. The Watermill Center has received numerous accolades and recognitions for its designed minimalism and theatricality. Following certain precepts of Bauhaus design (Wilson was a student of Sibyl Moholy-Nagy, architectural scholar and spouse to Bauhaus artist László Moholy-Nagy), Watermill's design influences also include the traditional architecture of Indonesia, as well as certain structural ideas Wilson incorporates in his theater productions.[28]
The Watermill Center is situated on a 10-acre campus consisting of gardens, natural environments, and permanent installations of wooden sculptures and megalithic stones from Indonesia.[4]
Programs
Artist Residency Program
The Watermill Center’s Artist Residency Program began in 2006 when the Center officially opened as a year-round facility.The Watermill Center provides artists with time, space, and freedom to work in a communal environment that encourages experimentation. Artist residents share their creative process with the community through open rehearsals, workshops, and artist talks.[29] The Watermill Center hosts over 200 artists every year as part of its interdisciplinary Artist in Residence program. Combining international outreach with support for local practitioners, previous residencies have featured artists from the Shinnecock Indian Nation,[30] British sound artist Oliver Beer[31]
,[32] artist Geoffrey Farmer (Canadian Pavilion commission for the 2017 Venice Biennale),[30][33] American author Ishmael Reed[citation needed] and German artist Jorinde Voigt.[34] Artist residencies culminate with "In Process" events, which are open to the public.
International Summer Program
With over 100 participating artists annually, the International Summer Program is an alternative approach to arts education, defying method-learning and academicism in favor of collaboration and experimentation.[35][36]
Inga Maren Otto Fellowship
The Watermill Center's Fellowship program was established with a gift by philanthropist Inga Maren Otto.
Every summer since 1993, the Watermill Center has hosted an outdoor performance festival showcasing the work of hundreds of young artists and drawing an audience of notable guests from New York and elsewhere. Called "without a doubt, the most creative art event for the Hamptons summer colony,"[42] by the New York Times, the benefit has featured performances by the likes of Rufus Wainwright, and CocoRosie, with installations of artwork by Dieter Meier, Lady Gaga, Jonathan Meese, Daniel Arsham, Pussy Riot, and others.
In 2008 German artist Jonathan Meese was given carte blanche to create "Marlene Dietrich in Dr. No's Ludovico-Clinic (Dr. Baby's Erzland)", an immersive installation within The Watermill Center.[14]
In 2012, The Watermill Center held the first posthumous exhibition for Detroit-born artist Mike Kelley, curated by Harald Falckenberg. The exhibition featured early experimental soundtracks and videos as well as works from Kelley's "Kandor" series.[45] The Exhibition, "Mike Kelley: 1954-2012," was voted "Best show in a non-profit gallery or alternative space" in 2012 by the International Association of Art Critics.[46]
In 2014 The Watermill Center held the first American exhibition of Robert Wilson's Video Portraits of Lady Gaga.[47] The exhibition had debuted in 2013 at the Louvre Museum in Paris.[10][48][11]
Ludwig, Sämi (2017). American Multiculturalism in Context: Views from at Home and Abroad. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 136.
Indiana, Gary (2013). Carol Ross Sculpture: The Watermill Center. New York: Bata Books.
Macián, José Enrique, Sue Jane Stocker, and Jörn Weisbrodt, eds. (2011). The Watermill Center – A Laboratory for Performance: Robert Wilson's Legacy. Stuttgart: DACO-VERLAG.
Otto-Bernstein, Katharina (2006). Absolute Wilson: the biography. New York: Prestel.
Kalb, Jonathan (2003). Play by Play: Theater Essays and Reviews, 1993-2002. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 117–125.