"So... what is a Genius Award?"
Hill started to light up a little when we told him: It includes this QFC sheet cake (with rainbow sprinkles), a $5,000 check with no strings attached, and a huge citywide party to celebrate all the Geniuses, in Visual Art, Film, Theater, Books, and Music. Mark your calendars! The party is Friday, September 16, at the Moore, with Wild Orchid Children and Wheedle's Groove. Yesterday, we announced that DK Pan is this year's Genius in Visual Art. We'll roll out the rest of the winners today.
Hill is coming to the Genius Party—which is amazing given his traveling schedule. If he's not traveling for work, he's traveling to surf. He is a surfing maniac. (He loves Neah Bay.)
He's also a video maniac. His studio looks like a cross between a VHS storage warehouse, a surfboard factory, and a tricked-out recording studio. When we tell him he's won the Film award, he immediately says, "I've never made a film."
Instead, he's been making video art since 1973.
In Seattle, he's probably best known for three works: Tall Ships, a 90-foot dark corridor in which ghostly video figures approach you as you walk; Wall Piece, in which Hill throws himself at a wall repeatedly while reciting a text, this footage accompanied in the gallery by a pain-inducing strobe light (both Tall Ships and Wall Piece are owned by and occasionally shown at the Henry); and Blind Spot, featured in an exhibition about surveillance at 911 Media Arts Center a few years ago.
Hill was born in 1951 in Santa Monica, California, and his disciplined but staunchly anti-authoritarian work captures an entire strain of tension running through American history.
Here's more info on the Genius Awards, and how to donate to the Genius cause. Remember: Friday, September 16. More Genius surprises to come...
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