Good bye Millie Niss,

Posted by Myron Turner  on December 1, 2009 6:24 pm

I'm sad to be the one to report this but I didn't find anything else 
about it on Rhizome. Millie Niss, a member of and contributor to 
Rhizome, died of H1N1 a few days ago. She was the editor of Sporkworld 
and participated in collaborations with a number of other Rhizomers. She 
was 36.

Hi Myron and all,

I heard about this earlier today and feel a deep sadness regarding her 
death. I met her a couple of times and collaborated on a net art project 
with her and others a while back. Millie had been ill for a while, and I 
only knew her whilst she was not well, it is a big shame.

Selection of some of her work that I value:

Oulipoems - a series of six interactive poetry works - 
http://collection.eliterature.org/1/works/niss__oulipoems.html excellent 
electronic poems by Millie Niss with Martha Deed. Web-works by Millie 
Niss can be seen here http://www.sporkworld.org/webpub.html

"That his humor didn't save him (and that his real death was so similar 
to the one in this poem) is an argument against the value of art in 
fighting suicide, but the idea is to stay alive as long as one can and 
to create as much art as one can - about other things as well as 
despair. Moreover, human despair is a constant element in life and 
should be reflected in art, and these damaged artists who have fought it 
or given into it themselves are our best chance at reflecting that 
aspect of life in art." Suicide, Art, and Humor. Millie Niss
http://www.somedancersandmusicians.com/essays/millie.html

Sheep Apnea - Martha Deed and Millie Niss with Graphics by Muriel Frega.
http://www.arteonline.arq.br/blog/mixes/niss_deed/

A Hecatomb in Cheektowaga - Video created by Millie Niss and Martha 
Deed, in the style of a public service announcement or political ad, 
featuring recent (Summer 2005) events in the town of Cheektowaga, New 
York, USA.
http://tinyurl.com/yen6727

Millie's work for me, has always reached beyond the surface of things. 
Somehow in her work, she has managed to communicate an essence of her 
character and her varied intentions very successfully. There is a unique 
sense of humour in much of her work, even when dealing with dark themes. 
A surreal edge, is informed by her view on humanity and all of its, 
seemingly perpetual absurdities. Mixed with a playful and open spirit, 
and a twist of simplicity. Millie's work may have fooled those lost and 
caught up in the consumer'ish, lust for one liner prose or sudo-designer 
art. Her work was more for those who were not bound by such distracting 
trends, it was and still is open for all. Often beguiling one with a 
presence of childishness, then as you live with it longer and feel its 
grace and power as it touches inside, a contextual knowing unfolds - 
levelling it all out with a wisdom that dares not to fall for show or 
spectacle to justify its true, authentic voice.

Good bye Millie...

marc

_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to