James Cohan announces the death of Bill Viola
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James Cohan announces the death of Bill Viola
Bill Viola, Five Angels, 2001. Installation view photo: Mike Bruce, courtesy Anthony d'Offay, London.



NEW YORK, NY.- James Cohan shared news of the death of Bill Viola, one of the world’s leading video artists. He passed away peacefully at home on July 12, at the age of 73. The cause was Alzheimer’s Disease. Viola is survived by his wife and longtime creative collaborator, Kira Perov, Director of Bill Viola Studio, sons Blake and Andrei Viola and daughter-in-law Aileen Milliman.

Viola was a pioneer in the fields of new media, video, and installation art. For over 50 years his visionary environments, defined by immersive video and soundscapes, focused on the fundamental human experiences of birth, death, the unfolding of consciousness. By slowing down the images, Viola shifted viewers’ sense of perception and awareness to reveal the inner world.

Coming of age alongside the development of video, Viola experimented with the new technologies to explore the furthest reaches of the expressive possibilities of this new medium. He said, “I gradually realized that the act of perception was in fact a viable form of knowledge in and of itself, and not merely a kind of phenomenon. This meant that when I held the video camera and microphone, I was holding a philosophical system, not just some image and sound gathering tool." Viola’s discoveries assured that video was to become a vital form of contemporary art. His work has been influential to subsequent generations of artists and viewers. To have been in the presence of one of Viola’s installations was to be forever changed.

Born in 1951 in Queens, New York, Viola at age 9 was the captain of the TV squad at PS 20. He received a BFA in Experimental Studios from Syracuse University in 1973 where encounters with teacher and mentor Jack Nelson; fellow student David Ross, who would become the first video-art curator; artists Peter Campus and Nam June Paik –all whom helped opened his eyes to new possibilities in art making. The composer David Tudor was a large influence, particularly the experience of performing in Tudor’s seminal Rainforest IV project. After graduation, Viola moved to Florence, Italy, where he worked at art/tapes/22, an early video art studio where he encountered Jannis Kounellis, Mario Merz, Vito Acconci and Joan Jonas. 1975 marked Viola’s first exhibition of a major installation work in Europe— Il Vapore at Zona, Florence, Italy. From 1976 to 1980, Viola worked at New York’s WNET Thirteen Television Laboratory as artist-in-residence. In 1976, at the Syracuse University student union, Viola creates He Weeps for You, an installation with a live camera magnifying an image within a drop of water, which was presented at Documenta 6 in 1977 and in 1979 at MoMA, New York. During this time, he began his travels to remote locations, visiting the Solomon Islands and Indonesia to record traditional performances.

In 1977, Viola was invited to Melbourne, Australia by cultural arts director Kira Perov. The following year, Perov joined him in New York. They married and began a lifelong collaboration. Over the years, the pair traveled the globe experiencing the winter prairie landscape in Saskatchewan, Canada; the Sahara Desert in Tunisia; and rituals in Tibetan Buddhist Monasteries in the Himalayas all the while recording images that would feature in artworks throughout his career. During 1980/1 in Japan on a fellowship from Sony, the couple spent a year and a half studying Zen Buddhism and advanced video editing techniques. In 1981, Viola and Perov settled in Long Beach, CA, where their two sons Blake and Andrei Viola were born.

With an equal mastery of emergent technology and brilliant understanding of philosophical, mystical, spiritual and art historical traditions, Viola moved from one career milestone to the next. In 1985, Viola was invited to participate in the Whitney Biennial by curator John Hanhardt, cementing one of the key relationships of his career–Hanhardt, an early supporter of Viola’s work, had previously curated an exhibition of the artist’s videotapes in 1982. Hanhardt commissioned Theater of Memory, which was the first time-based, media work to be installed alongside paintings and sculpture at a biennial. During the very productive year of 1992, Viola produced 9 installations for an international list of institutions creating a series of works focusing on the themes of sleep, death, birth, and mortality.

Bill Viola’s work has reached a global audience through five decades of exhibitions. Viola represented the U.S. at the 46th Venice Biennale in 1995, premiering an ensemble of five new installation works titled Buried Secrets. In the last room of the US pavilion, one of Viola's most iconic works The Greeting was installed. Based on Mannerist painter Jacopo da Pontormo’s painting Visitation, this work opened the door to new expressive territory and pointed the direction to the narrative works to come. In 1997 the Whitney Museum of American Art organized Bill Viola: A 25-Year Survey, curated by David A. Ross and Peter Sellars, with Kira Perov was an exhibition of 16 installation works that traveled for 2 years to 6 museums in the US and Europe including LACMA, SFMOMA, Art Institute of Chicago and the Stedelijk Museum.

Viola never stopped pushing the technical limits of his practice. In 2002 his first work in high-definition video, Going Forth By Day, was commissioned by the Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin and Guggenheim Museum, New York. This five-part “fresco” represents the cycle of life, from birth to death with moments of joy and sorrow. This largest scale to-date installation provides viewers with a visual guide to themes of human existence: individuality, society, death, rebirth. The work was completed, almost presciently, just before the traumatic events in the United States on September 11th, 2001.

In 1998, Viola was invited as scholar-in-residence at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, where the theme for that year was Representing the Passions. There, he made a study of devotional paintings depicting extreme emotional states in Medieval and Renaissance art; a theme that he develops, in the coming years, into the Passions series and an exhibition of the same title in 2003 at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles that traveled to the National Gallery, London, the Fondación “La Caixa” in Madrid and the National Gallery of Australia. Always moving toward self-knowledge, Viola sought deeper understandings of himself and by extension the human condition. Through his study of the history of art, he came to realize that art can express true compassion and he strove to make work that embodied the concept of transformation.

Viola’s work was the subject of a prodigious number of exhibitions around the world that were notable for their record-breaking crowds and for the long hours individual visitors spent. In 2007, he presented Ocean without a Shore at the 52nd Venice Biennale. It was seen by over 60,000 viewers over the course of the show. In 2006, his exhibition Hatsu-Yume (First Dream) at Tokyo’s Mori Art Museum attracted over 340,000 visitors. In 2008 Bill Viola: Visioni interiori was the largest exhibition of Viola’s work in Italy (16 video installations), curated by Perov at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome. In 2017 Guggenheim Bilbao Museum presented a “retrospective” of works ranging from 1976 to 2014, the largest show to date, with the greatest attendance at 710,995 visitors. Recently, even during Covid restrictions, large solo exhibitions coordinated by Perov continued with Bill Viola, Encounter at the Busan Museum of Art, South Korea, and in 2021, Bill Viola: The Journey of the Soul, Pushkin Museum of Art, Moscow.

Viola’s experience of early of avant-garde music led to collaborations with the Ensemble Modern in Frankfurt in 1994, with the industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails in 2000, and in 2004, and with director Peter Sellars and conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen on a new production of Richard Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde. The opera has toured internationally after premiers by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Opéra National de Paris, Bastille, and the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York.

Viola’s popularity stretched beyond the art world as his work found itself in unexpected places. Viola was invited to do a commission for the 2004 Olympics in Greece for which he produced The Raft. In 2012 Viola and Perov went to El Mirage Dry Lake, Mojave Desert, California, to record Crossroads, an 82-foot wide installation for the Hamad International Airport, Doha, Qatar. 2014 and 2016 mark the installations of two video commissions Martyrs (Earth, Air, Fire, Water) and Mary at St. Paul’s Cathedral, London the first permanent installations of video art in a Church of England cathedral. Always interested in experimentation, Viola created a video game, completed in 2018, with Tracy Fullerton at USC Game Innovation Lab. The Night Journey game tells the story of an individual’s journey toward enlightenment.

Throughout his career, Viola was drawn to the work of the great masters; no one more so than Michelangelo. In 2010, Viola’s Emergence was installed alongside Michelangelo’s David in Florence. In 2017 Observance was installed as part of The Electronic Renaissance exhibition in Florence at the Duomo Museum alongside Michelangelo’s Pieta. In 2019 the Royal Academy mounted the exhibition Bill Viola/Michelangelo: Life, Death, Rebirth in which 14 drawings by Michelangelo from the Royal Art Collection were shown together with 12 of Viola’s video installations.

Viola received numerous awards, including the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (1989), the Skowhegan Medal (1993), XXI Catalonia International Prize (2009), and the Praemium Imperiale from the Japan Art Association (2011).










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