Tim Miller & Collaborators
Body Maps
Residency Performance
$15 Regular / $10 YBCA Member/Student/Teacher/Senior
A singular opportunity to experience the collective work of local artists working intensively with Tim Miller during his residency at YBCA. Miller has conducted performance workshops in diverse communities throughout the country, inviting participants to explore the formative experiences that have shaped their identities. Working in the Bay Area during a time when personal and political issues of equality permeate public discourse, Miller is sure to facilitate a gripping performance piece not to be missed. Performance to be followed by a community conversation with the artists.
RELATED EVENTS
Nov 15–21, 2009: Tim
Miller Workshop
$150 Regular / $125 Member
The
goal of this workshop is to share a variety of strategies to create
original performances from the tremendous energies and stories that are
present in our lives. The workshop will address key questions of queer
identity and will culminate in a public Bay Area premiere performance
at YBCA.
Fri–Sat, Nov 20–21, 2009: Tim
Miller:
Lay of the Land • $25 Regular / $20
Member/Student/Teacher/Senior
Tim Miller
Tim Miller is an internationally acclaimed performance artist. Miller's creative work as a performer and writer explores the artistic, spiritual and political topography of his identity as a gay man. Hailed for his humor and passion, Miller has tackled this challenge in such pieces as Postwar (1982), Cost of Living (1983), Democracy in America (1984), Buddy Systems (1985), Some Golden States (1987), Stretch Marks (1989), Sex/Love/Stories (1991), My Queer Body (1992), Naked Breath (1994), Fruit Cocktail (1996), Shirts & Skin (1997), Glory Box (1999), Us (2003) and 1001 Beds (2006). Miller's performances have been presented all over North America, Australia, and Europe in such prestigious venues as Yale Repertory Theatre, the Institute of Contemporary Art (London), the Walker Art Center (Minneapolis), and the Brooklyn Academy of Music. He is the author of the books Shirts & Skin, Body Blows and 1001 Beds, which won the 2007 Lambda Literary Award for best book in Drama–Theatre. His solo theater works have been published in the play collections O Solo Homo and Sharing the Delirium. Miller’s newest book 1001 Beds, an anthology of his performances, essays and journals, was published by University of Wisconsin Press in 2006. Miller has taught performance at UCLA, NYU, the School of Theology at Claremont and at universities all over the US. He is a co-founder of two of the most influential performance spaces in the United States: Performance Space 122 on Manhattan's Lower East Side and Highways Performance Space in Santa Monica, CA.
Miller has received numerous grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1990, Miller was awarded a NEA Solo Performer Fellowship, which was overturned under political pressure from the Bush White House because of the gay themes of Miller's work. Miller and three other artists, the so-called "NEA 4", successfully sued the federal government with the help of the ACLU for violation of their First Amendment rights and won a settlement where the government paid them the amount of the defunded grants and all court costs. Though the Supreme Court of the United States decided in 1998 to overturn part of Miller's case and determined that "standards of decency" are constitutional criterion for federal funding of the arts, Miller vows "to continue fighting for freedom of expression for fierce diverse voices."
Since 1999, Miller has focused his creative and political work on marriage equality and addressing the injustices facing lesbian and gay couples in America. Glory Box and US are funny, sexy, and politically charged explorations of same-sex marriage and the struggle for immigration rights for lesbian and gay bi-national couples. They recount the trials Miller has been forced to undergo in trying to keep his Australian partner in the United States. Says Miller, "I want the pieces to conjure for the audience a site for the placing of memories, hopes, and dreams of gay people's extraordinary potential for love." After a nine-year stint in New York City, in 1987 Miller returned home to Los Angeles, California where he was born and raised. He currently lives there with his partner, Alistair, in Venice Beach.