Age, Biography and Wiki

Lars Jan was born on 1978 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Discover Lars Jan's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 45 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 45 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1978
Birthday 1978
Birthplace Cambridge, Massachusetts
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1978. He is a member of famous with the age 45 years old group.

Lars Jan Height, Weight & Measurements

At 45 years old, Lars Jan height not available right now. We will update Lars Jan's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
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Who Is Lars Jan's Wife?

His wife is Mia Barron

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Mia Barron
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Lars Jan Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Lars Jan worth at the age of 45 years old? Lars Jan’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United States. We have estimated Lars Jan's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income

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Timeline

2018

Jan adapted Joan Didion's essay, “The White Album,” into a performance work which was co-commissioned by the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) and Center Theatre Group, as well as the International Festival of Firsts, where it premiered in October 2018. Since then, it has been also been performed at BAM, the Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA, the Wexner Center for the Arts, and The Sydney Festival. Jan received permission from Didion to use her words in his work.

2017

Lars Jan created Slow-Moving Luminaries for Art Basel in Miami Beach in 2017. The project was commissioned by Swiss watchmakers, Audemars Piguet, who called for time-based art that portrayed “tension between tradition and innovation” as well as precision and complexity. Alluding to the hurricanes that frequent the Miami coast and tides affected by celestial movements, as well as Japanese rock gardens and Angkor Wat, the work, Jans says, is both a foreboding commentary about climate change and a space for contemplation. Kathleen Forde, the curator of the Audemars Piguet Art Commission that year, writes that Slow-Moving Luminaries evokes “the passage of time, ephemerality, the blurring between built and wild landscapes, as well as responding to its immediate surroundings while raising universal concerns about our future.”

2016

His Holoscenes 3-channel video installation was included in the group exhibition, “’Till Its Gone,” at the Istanbul Modern in 2016. The work was also adapted as a spherical film in 2019, which premiered at the University of Colorado's Boulder Planetarium, displaying on six-foot diameter screens as part of a Science On a Sphere installation. The film, entitled Holoscenes/Tiny Boxes, displays 6-minutes of footage based on the original live performances along with scientific facts, charts, and graphs. The work was also shown on screens in the Geneva Conference Center during an event in 2018 organized by the UN Refugee agency and International Council of Voluntary Agencies, involving over 300 government officials from 90 countries.

2015

TIMe is a play written and directed by Jan involving two actors and a transforming light sculpture which premiered in 2015 at REDCAT in Los Angeles. The work was also performed in Portland, New York City, Seattle, Boston, San Francisco, Swarthmore, and Krakow.

2014

Holoscenes is a performance and installation that takes place in a 12-ton glass aquarium in public space. Holoscenes first premiered in Toronto's Nuit Blanche festival in 2014, and has since been shown around the world including in Miami, Sarasota, London, Abu Dhabi, Australia's Gold Coast, and New York's Times Square.

2011

Paul Abacus was a fictional character dating from 2011 performed by Jan. According to Jan's press release, Paul Abacus "is an invention, a persona created by real-life performance artist Lars Jan and his production company, Early Morning Opera, whose works have been commissioned by the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center, Symphony Space, REDCAT, and the Whitney Museum of American Art."

2010

In October 2010, ABACUS premiered at the inaugural Filament festival at the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) in Troy, New York. In September 2011, it was announced that "Paul" was invited to give his presentation in the “New Frontier” program at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah to be followed by a series of lectures at REDCAT in Los Angeles in February 2012. In 2014 the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) invited Abacus to share his presentation for the first time on the East Coast of the United States as part of the fall Next Wave Festival.

2009

While growing up in Massachusetts, Jan had little contact with his father, Henryk Ryniewicz, whom he described as “an enigmatic person and a misanthrope.” Ryniewicz passed away in 2009, with Jan learning about his death years later in 2012. He became the subject matter of Jan's The Institute of Memory (TIMe)—his first autobiographical work, influenced in part by Polish director, Tadeusz Kantor. Living mainly as a hermit on the Harvard University campus, Ryniewicz was mostly a mystery figure in Jan's life, with interactions marked by Ryniewicz's paranoia. A trip to Poland and conversations with the locals there, as well as the discovery of the Institute of National Memory in Poland led Jan to ask questions about his father, his role as a Cold War operative, and his descent into dementia and schizophrenia. To further explore the concept of memory and “what remembering looks like and feels like in the world, in terms of the human body,” Jan worked with students in CalArts, conducting exercises using a laser scanning device called a lidar, which creates a 3-dimensional model of a space and the bodies within it. “We created these strange composites which looked like the ash-covered corpses from Mount Vesuvius in Pompeii. Like petrified bodies or ghosts,” says Jan. “They also reminded me of the shadows from the Hiroshima bombings — the light impression of a person, casting a shadow on a wall.” This technology became an integral component of TIMe. Jan used the lidar to scan places where he spent time with his father, compiling the imagery into a video for the performance alongside CAT scans, MRIs, and x-rays that pieces together a narrative of his father's personality and condition. Upon learning more about his father through the work, Jan comments “For a long time, I thought his absence had left nearly no impression, because he wasn't there. I came to learn that voids in fact leave very large impressions.”

2000

Lars Jan was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts to émigré parents: an Afghan mother — Razia Jan — and Polish father. He received a BA from Swarthmore College in 2000, and graduated from CalArts with an MFA in directing and integrated media in 2008. Jan's artistic interest started at age 12, when he began taking infrared black and white photographs. After graduating college, Jan spent a year in Japan studying bunraku puppetry. Jan lived and worked in Philadelphia and New York before moving to California in 2005.

1978

Lars Jan (born 1978) is a Los Angeles-based director and multidisciplinary artist, whose practice spans performance, photography, print media, sculpture, single and multi-channel video works, installations, and writing. His original works have been presented by The Whitney Museum of American Art, Sundance Film Festival, and theaters and festivals around the world. He is a faculty member at California Institute of the Arts’ School of Theater, a TED Senior Fellow, and a New Frontiers Story Lab advisor at the Sundance Institute. Jan is the founder and artistic director of Early Morning Opera, an art lab that creates large-scale works “exploring emerging technologies, live audiences, and unclassifiable experience.” As a visual artist, he is represented by Charlie James Gallery in Los Angeles.

1960

The performance of The White Album largely unfolds within a white sound-proofed room that has one entire wall made of plexiglass panels. Viewers consist of two audience groups: about twenty college-age adults referred to as the “inner audience,” and a generally older group of seated audience members, many of whom lived through the protests and political movements of late 1960s America that Didion describes in her essay. The younger audience become both viewers and participants of the events within the cube, as the seated audience watch everything unfold on stage and observe actor Mia Barron perform Didion's essay verbatim—creating what Jan calls “multiple levels of spectator experience.” At the conclusion of the performance, audience members of both groups are encouraged to discuss what they saw and what these events held for the future in a Quaker-style open forum. Of the production, Jan said “I want to know what can actually be transferred from the past to the present that can be a tool that we use to interrogate the most vital questions that were raised in 1968 and continue today.”