Cally Spooner Special Performance and Talk-Back with Helga Christoffersen

Join us for an evening with artist Cally Spooner, featuring a new special performance conceived for this event, followed by a talk-back with Spooner and Helga Christoffersen, Assistant Curator.

This live event is part of the New Museum’s presentation of “On False Tears and Outsourcing,” an iteration of Spooner’s long-term project of the same name, which was initiated at Vleeshal Markt, Middelburg, the Netherlands, in 2015. A starting point for the project is Gustave Flaubert’s 1856 novel Madame Bovary, in which Emma Bovary’s lover signs his farewell letter to her with a false tear, a drop of water. Spooner takes this passage and builds on its fiction to examine expanded definitions of outsourcing today. Considering the production of affect, the contradictions faced by hired bodies, and the dynamics of using or being used as a human resource, “On False Tears and Outsourcing” stages situations in which a heightened demand for communication drives the delegation of personal investment to ready-made languages, gestures, and protocols.











When: Wed., May. 25, 2016 at 7:00 pm
Where: New Museum
235 Bowery
212-219-1222
Price: $15
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Join us for an evening with artist Cally Spooner, featuring a new special performance conceived for this event, followed by a talk-back with Spooner and Helga Christoffersen, Assistant Curator.

This live event is part of the New Museum’s presentation of “On False Tears and Outsourcing,” an iteration of Spooner’s long-term project of the same name, which was initiated at Vleeshal Markt, Middelburg, the Netherlands, in 2015. A starting point for the project is Gustave Flaubert’s 1856 novel Madame Bovary, in which Emma Bovary’s lover signs his farewell letter to her with a false tear, a drop of water. Spooner takes this passage and builds on its fiction to examine expanded definitions of outsourcing today. Considering the production of affect, the contradictions faced by hired bodies, and the dynamics of using or being used as a human resource, “On False Tears and Outsourcing” stages situations in which a heightened demand for communication drives the delegation of personal investment to ready-made languages, gestures, and protocols.

Buy tickets/get more info now