Discipline: Interdisciplinary Art – performance

Anthony Barilla

Discipline: Interdisciplinary Art – performance
Region: Houston, TX
MacDowell Fellowships: 2009

Anthony Barilla is a musician, writer, and performance artist based in Houston, Texas. He makes interdisciplinary works, often incorporating his travels in Kosovo, the Caucasus, Africa, and Europe. He has written music for theaters around the U.S. and regularly creates compositions for national radio program "This American Life." He writes and performs with Dutch singer Merel van Dijk, and is engaged in a 20-year-long interdisciplinary collaboration called Whole Wide Water with artist Lindsay Kayser. In 2012, his first monologue—a multi-disciplinary work called APOCALYPSE TOWN—premiered in Houston. The following year he created an atlas and walking tour in collaboration with the residents of a Dutch village. In 2016 he presented a new monologue—DISPUTED TERRITORIES—in a series of small, intimate salons in Houston.

Anthony Barilla's work has been supported by the Swiss Cultural Programme in the Western Balkans, the MAP Fund, the Houston Arts Alliance, and others. In Houston he spent a decade working with Infernal Bridegroom Productions, a theater company widely respected for its challenging ensemble work, where he collaborated with artists like Lisa D'Amour, Suzan-Lori Parks, and Daniel Johnston. During his tenure as IBP's artistic director, the theater won substantial critical praise, including being named "Best Experimental Theater" (Houston Chronicle, 2004) and "Best Original Show, Production, and Performance Space" (Houston Press, 2005). He regularly tours Europe with a rock band that he joined in Kosovo.

Portrait by Alberto Pasquero

Studios

Monday Music

Anthony Barilla worked in the Monday Music studio.

Given to the residency by the Monday Music Club of Orange, NJ, Monday Music Studio is sited next to an enormous boulder deposited by glaciers thousands of years ago. A small dormer once pierced the east slope of the roof, but after damage suffered in the 1938 hurricane, the roof was rebuilt without the dormer. The interior…

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