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Putting the Balls Away

Tara Mateik

2008 00:23:00 United StatesEnglishColorStereo4:3Video

Description

Putting the Balls Away is a reenactment of the historic September 21, 1973, tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs, created for broadcast on the 35th anniversary of the original event. The Battle of the Sexes was the most-watched live sporting event at that time, and pitted chauvinist against feminist, when women tennis players demanded equal pay to that of their male counterparts. Both players are performed by Mateik, whose work wages strategic operations to overthrow institutions of compulsory gender. After each game the competitors "switch sides". Excerpts from the sports commentators, Howard Cosell and Rosie Casals, exemplify the spirit of the match.

HC: There's the velocity that Billie Jean can put on the ball and walking back she's walking more like a male than a female.

RC: I just wonder whether Bobby would look better in a tennis dress... better than shorts maybe.

HC: Billie Jean of course won the first set, to the absolute delight of all the women in the arena. They actually stood and gave her an ovation and I suspect many in their living rooms did the same thing.

About Tara Mateik

Tara Mateik is an Artist, curator, and activist living in New York City. Entering both political and biological cells as an ersatz scientist, his work critically explores the gendered signifiers and codes of these fantastic mythologies through performance, video, and intervention.

As the founder of the Society for Biological Insurgents, or SBI (pronounced /spi/), an embryonic cell organization that seeks to overthrow institutions of compulsory gender, Mateik released mutinous biological agents in his work. Mateik’s radical passion is partly inspired by his celebrated work with Paper Tiger Television, a well-established non-profit video collective. As Coordinating Director at PTTV Mateik advocated for alternative media production and distribution initiatives that worked to demystify and democratize media. His video works include Toilet Training: Law and Order in the Bathroom (with the Sylvia Rivera Law Projects), Operation Invert and P.Y.T.

Mateik’s writing and work has been published in FELIX: A Journal of Media Arts and Culture, LTTR, a new queer feminist art journal and GRIP: A BOOK OF MANIFESTOS. He has curated video programs for the Mix Experimental Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, the London Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, and the Center for Gay and Lesbian Studies at CUNY. Mateik is an MFA candidate at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute’s Intergrated Electronic Arts program