
PB / Alex Itin Collabo (Pic By JHM)
The Following Pics Were Shot By Linda Yau On April 17th




Review By Christina Cromeyer (Encore NYC)
Zipperhead is a multimedia show about 9/11, the financial meltdown, adultery and brain cancer with live music, narration and moving images on three wall-size screens. Sounds like a recipe for too many ills, but somehow, it works. The music is the best part of the show, with local band Sineparade providing Pink Floyd-esque sounds (circa Dark Side) to an already dark story. Local filmmaker/painter/overall artist Alex Itin narrates the story of Andrew Sarchus, a Wall Street trader who is caught cheating on September 11, 2001 (being in a hotel room with his secretary instead of in his office that morning was a life-saving mistake). He stays together with his wife, Marla, but it’s a downward spiral of overspending, insider trading, religious fanaticism, and, eventually, cancer…
Read The Rest Of The Review Here
Transcript of interview conducted by Christina Cromeyer of Steven Pacia, and published here for the first time :
1. – I know it’s New York and all, but is there a specific reason for having 9/11 as the backdrop?
9/11 represented a new beginning for New York City, that is, in the way we perceived ourselves with regard to our vulnerability etc. It was a fitting time for the lead character Andrew Sarchus to begin his social and physical decline. The decline of the character Andrew Sarchus as a Wall Street Trader is also an allegory for the decline of our economy and the melt down of the banking system.
2. – Maybe I missed something, but I still don’t get the title. Any explanation? As far as I knew it’s a derogatory term for the Vietnamese.
Patients who have had multiple brain surgeries will sometimes refer to themselves as Zipperheads or make the statement ” the surgeon should have installed a zipper” for subsequent operations. It also refers to the ability to unzip the head and look inside to see the functions or dysfunctions of the mind and brain. I was unaware of the negative racial reference until recently.
3. – I can’t imagine how something like this, with video, image, music and written elements, would come together. Could you describe the creative process behind a multimedia show?
It started as a program that I was involved in at the New Museum in Jan 2009 together with the Raqs Media Collective and Arani Bose ( Neurologist and Gallerist). In short, the program was designed to throw out ideas about art and perception and relate it to the functions of the brain. As an art gallerist and Neurologist, I was invited as a participant. The art- interested audience was very enthusiastic. That spawned the idea of the Neuro-didactic section together with the visual art and animation. My love of music and of themes that deal with New York and the existential, added the third component, ie the songs and instrumental accompaniments.
4. – How did Sineparade become involved with Alex Itin?
Itin was a friend of one of the 17 Frost founders and Sineparade members, Javier Hernandez Miyares. Itin was given a solo show at the 17 Frost space. I saw his incredible animated video, Orson Whales and felt that his sensibility was right for the show. He offered to narrate also, and it evolved from there.
5- What inspired the songs? Frankly, I thought these were the best part.
Thank you, the songs were largely inspired by the energy of the city, both positive and negative, as well as my personal and physician- related experiences. Zipperhead, the song was written specifically for the show about Andrew’s funeral on a cold January day. Demon is about addiction and self destructive behavior. Andrew Sarchus was written before Zipperhead was conceived and was inspired by a friend’s “ordinary guy” neighbor on Long Island who was hauled off to jail for one year for insider trading. It is about how easily we all may be corrupted. Blastoff is about how arbitrarily we may have our fortunes changed. Closer now is about finding happiness or salvation in the midst of terrible confusion and pain.