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Alex Monteith

Expression Session

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I like to think of Alex Monteith as a stunt artist. Not the conventional film industry kind, and not the Mike Parr body politic kind either, but nonethe­less, an artist who demonstrates a pointed assess­ment of risk, and a desire to play with the con­ventional rules of physics. Monteith’s works take performance into an expanded field of activity.

She describes her on-site performance at a Taranaki surf beach as ‘a large-scale performance intervention’. Breathlessly announcing the work to me on the phone before the event, Monteith is full of enthusiasm; the art jargon and surf jargon collide. The location is a beach west of New Plym­outh. It is a dramatic black sand beach, peppered by the ‘sugar loaf’ islands, which create an endur­ing surf break.

Monteith interrupted the normal course of a six day surfing festival by customising the Expression Session, what you might think of as the freestyle surfing contest. Her midday intervention was lev­eraged off the presence of the world’s best pro­fessional female surfers who were in the region for The Subaru Pro. The festival was the third in a series of six international contests that comprise the Association of Professional Surfers Dream Tour circuit. Her work, entitled Chartwell Red Ses­sion Expression Session 2011, was an integral part of the Festival during which a series of titles were contested, including the New Zealand Women’s Open and Junior National titles.

Monteith’s point was to challenge the param­eters for performance art—making her work a competitive contest outside of sanctioned institu­tionalised art spaces. Enthusiasts viewed the work from the beach or the carparks, but the documen­tation brings another dimension to her interven­tions. The video footage and stills that Monteith assiduously