In his work, the Berlin-based American artist Jeremiah Day (born 1974 in Plymouth) re-examines recent political struggles and conflicts, revealing their subjective contexts and traces. To do this, he has developed a narrative and choreographic form in which personal and political realities intermingle, thus offering a thoroughly singular vision of these at times forgotten moments of history.
The distinctive feature of his method lies in a transversal approach. As a student of and regular collaborator with
Simone Forti, one of the pioneers of Post-Modern
Dance, he has turned performance into a now central and structure-providing practice. Since 2014, Jeremiah Day has in effect presented many performances, which contain movement, improvisation, photography and the spoken word, in order to broach universal historical and political subjects, but within an intimate and incarnated context.
Jeremiah Day studied at the University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA). His work and his performances have been presented in many institutions all over the world, such as the Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe (2020) ; the M Museum, Louvain (2019) ; the Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin (2018) ; the Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2018) ; BAK, Utrecht (2017) ; the Museum of Modern Art, in Warsaw (2016) ; CCA, Glasgow (2015) ; the MAXXI, Rome (2015) ; the Liverpool Biennial (2014); Arnolfini, Bristol (2014) ; the Santa Monica Museum of Art (2014) and the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (2014).