Stuck Together - Marsian De Lellis

MARSIAN DE LELLIS


BIO

Marsian De Lellis is a Los Angeles-based interdisciplinary artist who investigates contemporary forms of animism, death, sexuality, mental illness, and addiction. In their work, they employ artificial figures, cutouts, pop-ups, performing objects, and wearable architecture.

As a young queer person growing up in in the 80’s in the Greater Boston area, De Lellis experienced an intense sense of otherness. They became preoccupied with the nuclear arms race, the search for extraterrestrial life, and the sense of hysteria at the onset of the AIDS epidemic. In the early 90’s, they organized rallies and lobbying efforts in Massachusetts, which led to some of the nation’s first anti-discrimination protections for LGBTQ students in public schools. Their activism was covered by The New York Times, The Boston Globe, and culminated in an appearance on the Oprah Winfrey Show.

In 1994 De Lellis moved to the Midwest to attend the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Photographer Barbara De Genevieve mentored De Lellis, encouraging their study of the body and its excesses, which spanned a range of visual and time-based mediums. De Lellis became fascinated with artist-doll makers who disorient bodies when they were introduced to the work of Greer Lankton through her protege, local nightlife personality, Jojo Baby. They also began curating projects at artist-run spaces like N.A.M.E. and Randolph Street Gallery with the Radical Faeries. 

In the 2000s De Lellis briefly lived in New York City and subsequently moved to Providence where they created installation work at the Dirt Palace, a feminist art space located in a repurposed abandoned library. In Finocchio: The Holiday Classic, they reimagined the idea of the commercial holiday window with a twist on Pinocchio: Instead of a sequential visual narrative centered on a puppet who longs to assimilate into a basic human boy, Finocchio focused on a marionette “trapped” in the body of a non-binary human and hir journey to self-actualization.

De Lellis’ installation, Side Effects was a series of digitally altered portraits of pharmaceuticals (antibiotic, antipsychotic, and antidepressant medications). Of Respirdone #12, Petra Kuppers wrote that “the flash of science, and its miraculous color effects, beams, transpositions, and traversals, glistens on the photo paper” in The Scar Of Visibility: Medical Performances And Contemporary Art. 

De Lellis exhibited puppets, dolls and related ephemera for a solo show at AS220 and became the host of a prolific late night puppet cabaret, that happened to be next door at Perishable.  In 2005 they launched an international website networking the community of artists, performance spaces, and audiences interested in short-form puppetry and object theatre for adults, which they produced for the next decade. 

During a residency at the Atlantic Center for the Arts, De Lellis assisted experimental filmmaker and one of the pioneers of the renaissance of American avant-garde puppet theater, Janie Geiser, with lenticular prototypes. They also broke ground on Growing Up Linda, an ensemble puppetry performance in which the daughter of a famous ice cream mogul must come to terms with her troubled past. Compelled by Geiser’s approach to object performance, De Lellis relocated to Los Angeles for graduate study at California Institute for the Arts. In Los Angeles, they continued developing Growing Up Linda, which was noted for its “fusion of trashy and glam” by Three Weeks during its run at the Edinburgh Fringe.

After school, De Lellis created a series of solo puppet and object-based performance art pieces that champion the stories of unconventional people whose private manias become public fodder for tabloids and reality television. De Lellis’ next major piece was a musical inspired by the life of Jocelyn Wildenstein - the real life “catwoman”. Described by Flavorpill as “demented, touching, and inherently strange”, Bride of Wildenstein, examined the making of a monstrosity when an aging socialite grows fur and claws to recapture the attention of her philandering game hunter husband. Bride of Wildenstein toured throughout the United States before premiering at the Velaslavasay Panorama..

Next De Lellis developed Object of Her Affection, an unconventional love story centered on a woman who, in her search for true love, develops intimate relationships with inanimate objects. The performance followed the emotional journey of protagonist, Andrea Lowe (an object sexual) after she has mysteriously fallen from a building. In her last moments, she reflects on her meaningful relationships starting with her first love, a baby’s blanket. As an adolescent, she loses her virginity to a bad-boy hunting rifle and subsequently becomes infatuated with the Berlin Wall. As Andrea evolves, so do her desires. In adulthood, she forms doomed relationships with monumental structures: a high-profile statue, tragic twin skyscrapers, and a bridge who cheats. Each of these relationships has a profound effect, shaping Andrea’s views on life and love. Finally, she finds solace in Roy, a crumbling tenement who ultimately fails her. In a critical essay for Fabrik, Jackie Apple observed that, “the unconventional lives and obsessions of the characters that populate the artist’s performance works echo De Lellis’ own artfully projected persona and unique perspective.”

In 2016, De Lellis was awarded a C.O.L.A. Fellowship for their installation, (In)/Animate Objects, the second half of a diptych with Object of Her Affection.  For its initial showing at Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, a mountain of decaying rag dolls towered to the ceiling, upon which their maker, the grandmother, presided from the throne of her wingback chair. Years have passed since her granddaughter, Andrea Lowe (the protagonist from Object of Her Affection) fell from the crumbling tenement she was in love with. In sorrow, the grandmother has amassed thousands of dolls that testify to the insatiable need for love at the heart of the obsessional life. 

For (In)/Animate Objects, De Lellis mass-produced over a thousand handmade decaying ragdolls with a pop-up community of collaborators which formed locally in Los Angeles and remotely in Louisville, Brooklyn, Providence and Amsterdam. Their process appropriated aspects of quilting bees. As their hands collectively stitched irregularities, their minds contemplated the idea of identity: a repetition of a repetition for which there is no original. Versions of (In)/Animate Objects have been displayed at Automata and Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions. The dolls you see in Stuck Together: Simone Gad, Marsian De Lellis, & Debra Broz have been selected from the (In)/Animate Objects Collection.

De Lellis has been the recipient of funding from The Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, The Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Center Theatre Group, The Jim Henson Foundation, The Center for Cultural Innovation, The Durfee Foundation, The Anna Sosenko Assist Trust, UNIMA-USA, and has been an artist-in-residence at the Eugene O’Neill Center and the Atlantic Center for the Arts.

Currently, De Lellis is developing an installation-performance hybrid, Model Killer: Giant Crimes & Tiny Cover-Ups as part of a Development + Research Residency through Los Angeles Performance Practice and Automata Performance Gallery. Model Killer is a morbid comedy centered on a disgruntled dollhouse maker turned investigator. Vivian Nutt builds dioramas of unsolved murders, only for it to be revealed that she is, in fact, a serial killer. 


CV

Born, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Lives and works in Los Angeles, California
EDUCATION
2009 MFA, California Institute of the Arts, Los Angeles, CA 
2001 BFA, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, IL

SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2018 (In)/Animate Objects, Automata, Los Angeles, CA
2016 (In)Animate Objects, COLA Exhibition, LAMAG, Los Angeles, CA 
2004 Puppet Trash, AS220, Providence, RI
2003 Finnochio, Dirt Palace, Olneyville, RI
2003 Side Effects, Ocean Coffee Roasters Providence, RI
2001 Strings Attached, Gallery 2, Chicago, IL

GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2019 Stuck Together: Simone Gad, Marsian De Lellis, & Debra Broz, Track 16, Los Angeles, CA
2018 Reunion, LACE, Los Angeles, CA
2017 Automata Benefit Auction, Automata, Los Angeles, CA 
2017 Irrational Exhibitions10, LACE, Los Angeles, CA
2017 COLA20, LAMAG, Los Angeles, CA
2016 Bernie and the Revolution, Fachapatoto, Los Angeles, CA 
2016 Irrational Exhibitions 9, LACE, Los Angeles, CA
2015 Art Bern, Future Studios, Los Angeles, CA
2009 No Strings Attached, Gallery at Avalon Island, Orlando, FL 
2008 Toy Theater Museum, St. Ann’s Warehouse, Brooklyn, NY
2007 Handmade Puppet Dreams, Grand Central Art Center, Santa Ana, CA
2007 Puppets On The Wall, Acorn Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 
2006 Art in Motion, Guilford Art Center, Guilford, CT
2005 Toy Theater Museum, St. Ann’s Warehouse, Brooklyn, NY 
2004 Wham Bam Trans!, Pawtucket, RI
1998 Day of Beauty and Ritual, Randolph Street Gallery, Chicago, IL 

PERFORMANCE ART
2018 The Feeder, Dougherty Arts Center, Austin, TX
2018 Object of Her Affection, Automata, Los Angeles, CA
2018 The Feeder, Dynasty Typewriter, Los Angeles, CA
2017 Model Killer (excerpt), Eugene O’Neill Center, Waterford, CT 
2016 The Feeder, ETC, Beady Little Eyes, Portland, OR
2014 Object of Her Affection, REDCAT, Los Angeles, CA
2011 Growing Up Linda (excerpt), 14Karat Cabaret, Baltimore, MD 
2011 Growing Up Linda (excerpt), Lantern Church, Calgary, AB
2010 Growing Up Linda (excerpt), The Park, Winnipeg, MB
2010 Growing Up Linda (excerpt), Links Hall, Chicago, IL
2010 Bride of Wildenstein, Velaslavasay Panorama, Los Angeles, CA 
2009 Bride of Wildenstein, New Orleans Fringe, New Orleans, LA 
2009 Bride of Wildenstein, Gallery at Avalon Island, Orlando, FL 
2009 Bride of Wildenstein (excerpt), The Tank, New York, NY
2009 Bride of Wildenstein (excerpt), PLOP, Olympia, WA
2009 Bride of Wildenstein (excerpt), Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA, 
2009 Bride of Wildenstein (excerpts), REDCAT, Los Angeles, CA 
2008 Growing Up Linda, Venue 13, Edinburgh, Scotland
2007 Growing Up Linda (excerpt), Space Ark, Pasadena, CA
2006 Rango Tango, Revolving Museum, Lowell, MA

VIDEO ART
2009 Jackson’s Private Zoo, Salvage Vanguard, Austin, TX
2007 Jackson’s Private Zoo, California Institute of the Abnormal Arts,
North Hollywood, CA
2006 Jackson’s Private Zoo, Fledgling Festival, Perishable, Providence, RI
1998 King of Pop’s New Clothes, Gender Trash + Other Cookies, Randolph Street Gallery, Chicago, IL


GRANTS + AWARDS
2018 Emergency Grant, Foundation for Contemporary Arts
2017 Richard E. Sherwood Award Finalist, Center Theatre Group 
2015 COLA Individual Artist Fellowship, LA Dept. of Cultural Affairs 
2015 Project Grant, Jim Henson Foundation
2014 A.R.C. Grant, Center for Cultural Innovation
2014 Seed Grant, Jim Henson Foundation
2014 Funding, Anna Sosenko Assist Trust
2009 A.R.C Grant, Durfee Foundation
2008 Scholarship for Foreign Study, UNIMA-USA

PUBLICATIONS
2015 De Lellis, Marsian. “Why Puppetry?”, HowlRound, Emerson College Blog, Aug 31, 2015.
2012 De Lellis, Marsian. “Uncanny Valley of the Dolls", Puppetry International, Fall/Winter 2012, Issue #32: 19-21.
2005 Vaccaro, Jeanne, editor. “Finnochio: The Holiday Classic”, Women & Performance, NYU Press, Vol. 14: 2, # 28: 89-92.
2002 De Lellis, Marsian. “To Do List”, The Archeology of the Recent Future, Vol 2, Dirt Palace Press, 2012: 12.

PUBLICATIONS + CATALOGS
2017 COLA20 Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, Los Angeles, California: 19, 85, 111-115.
2016 de Fren, Allison. COLA 2016 - City of Los Angeles Individual Artist Fellowships, LA DCA, May 15, 2016: 18-23.
2015 Dennie, Sean. Who’s the Puppet Now?, Calgary Animated Objects Society, Calgary, 2015: 69, 86.
2007 Kuppers, Petra. Scar Of Visibility: Medical Performances & Contemporary Art, University of Minnesota, 2007: 28-31, 32, 34.

RESIDENCIES
2019 D+R Residency, Automata, Los Angeles, CA
2017 Eugene O’Neill Center, Waterford, CT
2005 Atlantic Center for the Arts, New Smyrna Beach, FL

CURATORIAL PROJECTS
2010 Puppets from The Edge, Gallery at Avalon Island, Orlando, FL 
2009 Handmade Puppet Dreams Film Series, Volume 4, Touring 
2006 Puppets from The Edge, 2006, 2007, Mad Cow, Orlando, FL 
2004 Blood from a Turnip (2004-2006) Perishable, Providence, RI 
2006 Puppets at Night, Puppet Showplace, Brookline, MA
2005 The Puppet Slam Network (2005-2016) Online
2003 No Mercy: The Art of Pippin Roe, Tealuxe, Providence, RI 
2002 Strings Attached, Tealuxe, Providence, RI
1998 Day of Beauty + Ritual, Randolph Street Gallery, Chicago, IL 
1996 Speak Easy, N.A.M.E. Gallery, Chicago, Illinois

BIBLIOGRAPHY
2018 Apple, Jacki. “Love Lost and the Enchantment of Objects.” Fabrik. Nov 2, 2018. Web.
2018 Pickett, Jane. “Jane Pickett on Marsian De Lellis." Riting. Oct 4, 2018. Web.
2016 Rebecca Castillo. “Meet Marsian De Lellis.” Los Angeles Times - HS Insider. Jun 29, 2016. Web.
2016 Western, Beverly. “Go Big or Go Home.” Artillery. May 19, 2016. Web.
2015 Frank, Priscilla. “These Artists Are Seriously Feeling The Bern.” HuffPost. Nov 1, 2015. Web.
2014 Morris, Steven Leigh. “The Body Eclectic.” LA Weekly. Los Angeles, Aug 8-14 2014: 38. Print.
2011 Ober, Cara. “What is the Transmodern Festival?”, New Urbanite. Baltimore, MD, Apr 27, 2011. Print.
2010 Cole, Kecia. “Neighborhood Beat.” Brooklyn Independent Television, Jul 1, 2010. Broadcast.
2010 Laden, Tanja M. “Automata and Ibex Puppetry present Bride of Wildenstein; The Musical.” Flavorpill, Jan 25, 2010. Web.
2009 Jeffries, Lynn. “Forty Artists Under Forty.” Puppetry International, Issue #25, Spring 2009: 30. Print.
2009 Ball, Katie. “Art Beat: The Bride of Wildenstein.” 88.9 WUCF, Orlando, Florida, Oct 22, 2009. Broadcast.
2008 Ridley, Louise. “Review: Growing Up Linda.” Three Weeks, Edinburgh, Scotland, Aug 18, 2008. Web.

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