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	<title>Hugh Ryan &#187; City Magazine</title>
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		<title>Rob Roth Profile</title>
		<link>http://hughryan.org/rob-roth-profile</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Jun 2009 20:21:05 +0000</pubDate>
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Published in City Magazine, April 2008. 
“The rock goddess is the modern Goddess,” says visual artist Rob Roth, and he’s worked with enough to know – from Debbie Harry of Blondie to Theo Kogan of The Lunachicks/Theo &#38; The Skyskrapers. Roth’s intricate performances almost always incorporate female or gender-bending heroines, live music and the limitless [...]]]></description>
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<p><em>Published in <a href="http://www.city-magazine.com/">City Magazine</a>, April 2008. </em></p>
<p>“The rock goddess is <em>the</em> modern Goddess,” says visual artist Rob Roth, and he’s worked with enough to know – from Debbie Harry of <em>Blondie</em> to Theo Kogan of <em>The Lunachicks/Theo &amp; The Skyskrapers</em>. Roth’s intricate performances almost always incorporate female or gender-bending heroines, live music and the limitless human possibility for transformation. In Screen Test, his ever-evolving rock show, an actress undergoes repeated cosmetic procedures by her director/plastic surgeon. Each new self is projected on her in high definition. For the 2006 Whitney Biennial, Roth created a 40-minute video morphing together found headshots of anonymous actors, accompanied by a live band.</p>
<p>Roth comes out of the mid-1990s downtown New York club scene that also spawned The Scissor Sisters and others. He co-produced the long-running cyber-fetish party <em>Click + Drag</em>. “It wasn’t about who you were, it was about what you did. The hooker down the street was more of a star than Naomi Campbell.”</p>
<p>Currently, Roth is directing Michael Cavadias in his show <em>Claywoman</em>, about a 500-million-year-old enigma “who can cure anyone of their deepest pain.” Ostensibly, the show is Claywoman’s first appearance on Earth in 30 years. In a post-modern Christopher Guest-ian twist, it involves a mockumentary entitled “The Mystery of Claywoman.” This video, also a Roth creation, features Alan Cumming and Amy Poehler (among others), discussing the existence, history and symbolism of Claywoman. Is she a superhero for a post-9/11 world, or a collective hallucination?</p>
<p>Look for <em>Claywoman</em> in New York City’s Deitch Gallery in June. <em>Click + Drag</em> may also make a one-time comeback, Roth hints, if the right space can be found this summer.</div>
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