Video Review Shootoff
By Michael Dare
7/86

With
the help of Ken Yas, whom I met through David Jove, and Robert Roll, a
fixture on New Wave Theatre whom I introduced to David, I managed
to borrow a camera and make a ten-minute home video called Contemporary
Extemporary, which won first place in Video Review Magazine's contest
for the best home video ever, the prize being a state of the art RCA home
entertainment system (that turned out to be a prototype of a new system
they never released to the public, making repairs impossible, but cool
nevertheless.), plus an all-expenses paid trip to New York City to accept
the award. The judges were Andrew Sarris, Molly Haskell, Jeffrey Lyons,
Neal gabler, David Hajdu, and Glenn Kenney.

The accompanying article by Ron Goldberg read...
Although
the judges agreed on the overall quality of the entries, picking specific
winners took a little doing. However, after several lively rounds of debate
and discussion, a clear victor was chosen for the Grand Prize.
It was Michael
Dare's Contemporary Extemporary, an amusing and insightful poke
at modern-art pretensions. Entered in the Real Life catagory, this tape
takes us to the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), where a
bemused Mr. Dare offers his two cents regarding MOCA's aesthetics. this
tape has it all; technical bravado (one sequence is a handheld shot from
a moving motorcycle), a brisk pace, quips and observations that kept us
laughing and, finally, a theme our judges (and perhaps many of our readers)
could strongly relate to: Just what is art?
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Certainly
Dare should have some idea. A journalist and photographer, he claims to
be the first artist to show his work at MOCA. Unfortunately, his exhibit
was, shall we say, not officially commissioned by the museum: "MOCA had
sent out invitations to the press for its opening, but when I arrived,
the walls were completely bare! Apparently, the first opening was meant
to show off the building itself, but I said, 'This is an art museum.
There should be art on the walls.!'"
Taking a
do-it-yourself approach, Dare snuck his snapshots into the museum and pinned
t hem to whatever wall space he could find. With literally no other work
on display, his photos soon found a number of interested viewers, but when
Dare returned from a quick trip to the rest room, he found that his photos
had all been cleared away. Miffed but undaunted, Dare received another
invitation from MOCA several months later, only this time the opening was
for real. This opening gave Dare the impetus to make the videotape.
"The museum
was allowing cameras inside," Dare explains. "So I called up a few friends,
we pretended to be a film crew, and we made the tape." In the video, Dare
gets his revenge on MOCA by putting up his snapshots yet again, this time
in the MOCA men's room! Not bad for a first effort. Although
Dare has a background with cameras, Contemporary Extemporary is his first
venture into video production.
