Age, Biography and Wiki
Ryan McNamara was born on 1979, is an American artist (born 1979). Discover Ryan McNamara's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 45 years old?
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He is a member of famous artist with the age 45 years old group.
Ryan McNamara Height, Weight & Measurements
At 45 years old, Ryan McNamara height not available right now. We will update Ryan McNamara's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Ryan McNamara Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Ryan McNamara worth at the age of 45 years old? Ryan McNamara’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from . We have estimated Ryan McNamara's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Ryan McNamara Social Network
Timeline
Ryan Ponder McNamara (born 1979) is an American artist known for fusing dance, theater, and history into situation-specific, collaborative performances.
McNamara has held performances and exhibitions at Art Basel, The High Line, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, The Whitney Museum, MoMA P.S.1, and The Kitchen amongst other places.
McNamara was born and raised in Arizona.
He studied photography at Arizona State University and graduated with a MFA at Hunter College in New York City.
McNamara typically works in with sculpture, drawing, video, and performance.
The artist has described his work as "under-your-bed" art and, more recently, image-heavy collaborative performances nicknamed "readymade choreography."
Writer and critic Alex Fialho notes that the artist often uses "the stage as a medium in itself."
McNamara participated in the 2nd Athens Biennale in 2009 with a video work titled, "I Thought It Was You."
The work featured two screens portraying the artist enacting a spontaneous dance alongside a Herbie Hancock recording.
In 2010, the artist performed one of his most ambitious projects to date: “Make Ryan a Dancer.” Over the length of five months and under public scrutiny and surveillance, the artist took to the task of learning ballet, contact improvisation, and exotic dancing, amongst other dance styles, at MoMA PS1.
McNamara's solo show at Elizabeth Dee gallery in 2012, "Still," transformed the gallery space into a chaotic trompe l'oeil photography studio.
The studio included backdrops and props, found objects, set pieces and costumes, and rolling cameras overseen by the artist and assistants.
The eerie and improvisational images invoked the surrealist impulses of artists Lucas Samaras and Jimmy DeSana.
Later that summer, McNamara and artists K8 Hardy, T.M. Davy, and Paul Sepuya attended BOFFO, a queer arts and performance residency on Fire Island founded by architect Faris Saad Al-Shathir.
In 2013, McNamara was named the winner of Performa 2013’s Malcolm McLaren Award.
Titled, "MEEM: A Story Ballet About the Internet," the thirty-one dancers and performance ensemble re-enacted various internet clips featuring George Balanchine, “West Side Story,” Janet Jackson, K-pop, and more.
Curated by Piper Marshall, McNamara's 2015 show, "Gently Used," repurposed costumes from previous performances and gallery lighting into campy and ambitious sculptural and time-based works.
Later that same year, McNamara collaborated with musician Dev Hynes for a one night-only performance, "Dimensions," that fused dance, soul, and opera into a kaleidoscopic meditation at the Perez Art Museum.
In 2016, McNamara's re-purposed MoMA PS1 back into a choreographed school.
The piece, titled "Ryan McNamara Presents: Back to School," rooms and viewing spaces were emptied out and turned into classrooms; performers acted as teachers, administrators, goths, preps, jocks, and cheerleaders.
For part of the Works & Process series at the Guggenheim Museum in 2017, McNamara collaborated with John Zorn to re-stage a commedia dell'arte that included just under a dozen dancers, a jazz trio, an a cappella quartet, and the nooks and crannies of the museum space itself.
Roberta Smith of the New York Times writes of McNamara's performances as an, "increasingly impressive transition from performance art to choreography."
The following year, McNamara performed an updated iteration of his ME3M performance, "ME3M 4 Boston," at the ICA Boston.
That same year, he performed "Battleground" at the Guggenheim Museum.
"Battleground" was one of McNamara's most ambitious projects to date.
For the piece, McNamara collaborated with nine contemporary dancers, including Reid Bartelme, Jason Collins, Dylan Crossman, Fana Fraser, John Hoobyar, Kyli Kleven, Sigrid Lauren, Mickey Mahar, and Brandon Washington.
The dancers partook in a cosplay-battle-ballet choreographed for the idiosyncratic architecture of the theater at the Guggenheim.
Audience members acted as witnesses to the three groups' battle in "The Red Choir Loft," "The Green Balcony," and "The Blue Stage."
In 2018, McNamara showed a collection of goopy sculptures and dolls for an exhibition at ASHES/ASHES called, "I.L.L.I.S. & I.S.L.I.F. (It Looks Like It Sounds & It Sounds Like It Feels)."
For the 2019 BOFFO Performance Festival, McNamara performed A Quote by Frank O’Hara or Something Like That alongside Brandon Washington, Aaron Burr Johnson, Victor Lozano, and Oisín Monaghan.
McNamara also curated a group exhibition at Baby Company gallery, called "Fire" that same year.
McNamara presented a suite of new drawings and a live performance, called "The Consolations," at Company gallery in 2020.
"Before I Forgot Myself," is a 2022 exhibition at OCDChinatown that brings together a collection of artworks and video works from the artist's studio and archives over the past fifteen years.
McNamara has a range of influences including dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham, composer John Zorn, artist Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt, the Internet, New York's club kids, ballet, SAGE, science fiction, and more.
As of June 2020, he is married to David Velasco.