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  19 November 2009

Photography, Film & Video 

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Danielle Arnaud, London
Andrehn-Schiptjenko, Stockholm
Arndt & Partner Berlin
Storefront for Art and Architecture, New York
mother's tankstation, Dublin
 
 
Danielle Arnaud, London
 
 
Lynne Marsh, Camera Opera, 2008
 
 
Lynne Marsh
Camera and Calisthenics

6 November - 13 December 2009

Danielle Arnaud is pleased to present Camera and Calisthenics, an exhibition that brings together Lynne Marsh's two latest video installations Stadium 2008 and Camera Opera 2008. In these works Marsh pursues and reconfigures the complex borrowings and cross-fertilizations between artistic modernity and mass culture. Using codified cinematographic techniques, the works draw on the languages of digital animation, sports coverage, television broadcasting and the performance and cinematography of the early twentieth century. In precise choreographies -that oscillate between exercise and dance -the camera, the space and performers compete for the leading role.

The Olympiastadion in Berlin, the infamous site of Leni Riefenstahl's film on the 1936 Olympic Games, is both setting and protagonist in Stadium. Marsh employs techniques favoured by Riefenstahl, including the crane shot, long circular travelling shot and low-angle shot. The resulting footage exhibits the persistent legacy of representations of power and control in photography and cinema all the way up to contemporary imaging from video games to epic films. Faithful to this notion, the film opens with a 3D animation of the architect's model of the stadium's recent renovation and transitions to the site itself with sweeping multiple camera perspectives that produce a feeling of vertigo and banal repetition. Here, a figure in white performs a careful choreography of gestures. In Stadium, Marsh creates an uncanny dialogue between the mechanistic, standardized and absolute uniformity of the architecture and the anonymity of the individual.

Camera Opera is filmed on the set of Das Duell, a German current affairs television program. Marsh reverses the role of the cameras in conventional news broadcasting: they become the subject and the performance of filming becomes the action. Marsh directs five camera operators through a series of choreographed movements around the silent figure of the anchorworman. The operators circle around the studio, focus on the anchorwoman and pan out to expose the set, equipment, lighting, audience seating and each-other. The performance is set to Strauss waltzes that were piped into the studio to guide the camera operators' movements and later edited in sync with the image to form the final two-screen film. What we see is how the space of the studio is organized through and by camera views, and how the set may become a performative space based on a series of codified relations. Engaging the Brechtian techniques of alienation, Marsh turns the cameras on themselves, denying their traditional role of relaying information and exposing their participation in the manipulation of what the viewer is presented with.

Lynne Marsh was born in Canada and has been living and working in London since completing her MA at Goldsmiths' in 1998. She has exhibited internationally, with recent solo shows including Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2007), Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles (2008), and the Musée d'art contemporain de Montreal (2008). Her videos have been screened at the BFI Southbank (2007) and Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema (2009). Marsh's work will be presented as part of Catastrophe, Québec City Biennial in 2010.
A monograph on her recent works produced by the Musée d'art contemporain de Montreal and the Musée régional de Rimouski will accompany the exhibition.
 

Image:
Lynne Marsh
Camera Opera  2008
2 channel video and audio synced DVDs 11' 50"
© Lynne Marsh, Courtesy of Danielle Arnaud


Danielle Arnaud
123 Kennington Road
London SE11 6SF
T/F +44 (0) 207 735 8292
Fri, Sat & Sun 2-6pm (or by appointment)

 
 
 
Andréhn-Schiptjenko, Stockholm
 
 
Katarina Löfström "Crying Skyscrapers", 2009

 
KATARINA LÖFSTRÖM
Dark Matter

November 19 - December 20, 2009

Andréhn-Schiptjenko is delighted to present Katarina Löfström 's second solo show Dark Matter, an installation including objects and a video work at the gallery.

The opening takes place on Thursday November 19th, at 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. and runs through December 20.

In earlier video works such as Tower, An Island, Score and Little Star (shown at Andréhn-Schiptjenko in 2006) Katarina Löfström has reduced and abstracted a flow of images down to its lowest common visual denominator.

The exhibition Dark Matter consists of new work conceived under hypnosis and also relates to other psychic states on the border between, for example, dream and wakefulness. The light work Rosario's Morse code messages "Eyes Open" and "Wide Awake" are classic termination commandos, used to bring the subject out of hypnosis.

Löfström has, in earlier video works, taken an interest in loops and reflections in a non-linear flow of images. In the new video work Crying Skyscrapers she has returned to those themes, now in the shape of a dreamlike animated panning over the facades of building. She takes them into the physical room with sculptures such as Secret Garden, two ornamented mirrors that are hermetically turned towards each other, and the new multiples shown in the exhibition.

Katarina Löfström was born in 1970 and lives and works in Stockholm. She graduated from University College of Arts, Craft & Design in Stockholm in 1997 and has also worked with music and in advertising, with, among others, Jonas Åkerlund. In 2007, Katarina Löfström had a solo show at Uppsala Art Museum. The same year the permanent installation Coloratura, a light work that visualizes and is activated by the sound activities in the building, was inaugurated at the cultural venue Uppsala Konsert och Konferens. For the European Patent Office in Munich she has made the permanent light installation Rosario, of which the gallery will show a smaller version. The last years, she has also been shown at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, where she was on the Iaspis studio grant in 2003, and at Kiasma, Helsinki, Tramway in Glasgow and Kunsthaus Graz.


Image:
Katarina Löfström "Crying Skyscrapers", 2009
© the artist. Courtesy Andréhn-Schiptjenko


Andréhn-Schiptjenko
Hudiksvallsgatan 8
Stockholm
Sweden
+46 (0)8 612 00 75


 
 
 
Arndt & Partner Berlin
 
 
Yannick Demmerle, Sans Titre (Gewitter im Wald), 2004 
 
 
Yannick Demmerle
L'Ours, la mort et les arbres foudroyés

November 21, 2009 - January 31, 2010

Yannick Demmerle has made a name for himself with his entrancing, large-scale photographs of forests, lakes and wild-animal cages. His third solo exhibition with Arndt & Partner includes a selection of photographs from the last seven years and a series of recent pencil drawings. The show is tailored to reveal the experimental diversity of photographic techniques Demmerle uses to present his subjects. At the same time, it traces the remarkably consistent lines along which his oeuvre has developed - from the austere, geometric and symmetric compositions of his early pho-tographs of forests and animal cages to unearthly night shots of woods and surreal negative-colour images of motel rooms, and, finally, to his recent drawings depicting grotesque hybrids of humans and animals and of decomposing and living creatures. While Demmerle's early images subtly hint at his interest in the fantastic, irrational and dark, these aspects increasingly come to the fore in his later work.

Demmerle creates his images using an 8x10-inch large-format camera, which provides the greatest possible sharpness and depth of focus. He thus attains a maximum degree of realism in his early photographs, such as Sans Titre (2002) and Sans Titre (Gewitter im Wald) (2004), both taken in the Schorfheide nature reserve near Berlin. Yet Demmerle is not interested in document-ing reality - nor is he aiming to create a dreamy idyll. As Peter Herbstreuth has remarked, Demmerle doesn't depict nature as untamed and wild, but as domesticated and governed by the principles of geometry and symmetry. "[There is] no distance, vastness, paths, or any signs of cul-ture, and seldom a horizon. Instead, what rules is regularity, symmetry, rhythmic echelons, rows, or golden sections - the harmony of classical image architecture." Thus Demmerle subtly alludes to how our subjugation of nature has shaped the face of the Schorfheide region - a wooded area that was deforested and reforested repeatedly over the centuries and that has only been protected as a nature reserve since 1990.

Demmerle applied the same visual principles to his photographs of predator cages taken in zoos in Berlin and Dresden between 2000 and 2003. The neutral, frontal perspective, the strict composition and the sharp contours intensify the cramped, confined, controlled nature of the spaces to the point that they seem to close in on the viewer, creating an oppressive sense of being trapped - despite, or perhaps precisely because of the fact that the wild animals these dismal cages were built to house are absent.

Similarly, for all their beauty, there is always something unsettling about Demmerle's landscapes - a sense of disquiet that is conveyed not so much by the tress themselves as by the spaces between them. "I spend my time trying to photograph the invisible between the trees, for example fear ... The tree itself does not nterest me." says Demmerle. In Les Nuits Étranges, a se-ries of photographs of nocturnal forests from the year 2004, this sense of unease is even more acute. Eerily illuminated by an invisible light source, individual tree trunks emerge from the black depths like pale, silvery ghosts. The darkness of this menacing forest attains a fantastic, almost "uncanny" quality, alluding to the forest as a metaphor for our repressed subconscious, as it fre-quently appears in fairy tales, for example.

While most of Europe's forests are today no longer menacing in a life-threatening sense, the millenniums-old forests of Tasmania harbour countless deadly hazards and dangers. And yet Demmerle has repeatedly risked life and limb by hiking through the wilds for weeks on end, ac-companied only by his bulky camera equipment. The photographs he creates in the solitude of this remote wilderness reveal nature at its most frightening, much as German landscape painting in the Romantic era did. But while the Romantic painters always included an element of civilisation in their pictures - a ruin, a path, a human being - and depicted their motif from a distance and with a visible horizon, Demmerle closes in on his subjects to the point that no escape is possible. There is no horizon and no living creatures to be seen in these images, which reveal a wilderness that is merciless, alien and menacing in its sheer unbridled force.

In the pencil drawings Demmerle produced in Tasmania in 2009, we encounter the forest creatures and inhabitants that are so conspicuously absent in the photographs. Demmerle's view of the reality of the forest is manifested much more subjectively here. His fantastic, at times monstrous hybrids of humans, animals and insects, of animal cadavers and plants represent Demmerle's attempt to appropriate the never-ending cycle of nature, in which decaying matter gives birth to new life. At the same time, the drawings convey an impression of the artist's desire to break out of the rigid restraints imposed by life in the wilderness and to escape into a realm where he is free to play with manifestations of the surreal and the irrational.

Text: Kristin Rieber

Yannick Demmerle, born in 1969 in Sarreguemines, France, studied at the École Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs, Strasbourg. After having resided in Germany for a few years, he now lives and works in Tasmania.
 

Image:
Yannick Demmerle, Sans Titre (Gewitter im Wald), 2004
Edition 1/3, c-print, diasec on aluminium
180 x 290 cm / 70.87 x 114.17 inch
© the artist. Courtesy Arndt & Partner Berlin


Arndt & Partner Berlin
Invalidenstraße 50-51
D - 10557 Berlin
Germany
+ 49 30 280 81 23

 
Storefront for Art and Architecture, New York
 
 
Marina Ballo Charmet, At Land: Bodyscape & Cityscape 
 

At Land: Bodyscape & Cityscape
Photographs and Video by Marina Ballo Charmet

Nov 19 2009 - Jan 9 2010
Curated by Jean-François Chevrier
 
The work of photographer and artist Marina Ballo Charmet, whose formal training is as a psychoanalyst, is centered on what she describes as "inattentive, unintentional observation, irrational and without direction". This retrospective exhibition, curated by critic and writer Jean-Francois Chevrier, presents a selection of photographic and video works produced since 1995 that investigate a variety of subjects ranging from the ordinary and the mundane in the urban landscape to the human figure. Ballo Charmet's work constitutes less an attempt to provide a pictorial rendition of these subjects than an endeavour to evoke the "unperceived" in our daily experiences. Her photographs of the urban landscape concentrates on shreds of the city: details of sidewalks, the upper levels of buildings that pulse in and out of the margins of our field of view; her exploration of the human figure concentrate on specific areas of the body, such as that between the breast and the mouth (the first field of view a baby becomes familiar with). The images featured in her Parks series ¬- an ongoing project that has taken her to public parks in Milan, London, Berlin, Paris, Rome, Vienna, Madrid, Lisbon, Palermo and New York - are framed from a viewpoint close to the ground, revealing each park as its own universe. Ballo Charmet's work is less an exercise in representation of her chosen subjects - whether they be details of cities, urban landscapes, portions of the human figure or parkscapes - than an investigation of how we perceive them.

Marina Ballo Charmet was born in Milan, where she now lives and works. After graduating with a degree in Philosophy, she specialized in psychology and child psychoanalysis. Since the early 1980s she has worked as a psychotherapist for Milan's local health services department. From the mid-1980s on, she has also dedicated her energy to parallel projects and research involving photography and video.
Ballo Charmet's work has been exhibited in solo exhibitions at: Triennale, Milano, 2008; Centre National de la Photographie, Parigi, 1999; Fondazione Mudima, Milano, 1998; Ar/Ge Kunst, Galleria Museo, Bolzano, 1995; Stadtgalerie, Graz, 1992.

Group exhibitions that have included Ballo Charmet's work include: Post-It Cities, CCCB, Barcelona, 2008; Reality Crossing, Fotofestival Manheim-Ludwigshafen-Heidelberg, Mannheim; Parco 2006-2007, Fotografia Europea, Reggio Emilia, 2007; Trans Emilia, SK Stiftung Kultur, Koln, 2006 and Fotomuseum Winterthur, Winterthur, 2005; Des Territoires, Ecole Nationale Superieure ddes Beaux Arts di Parigi; Venezia - Marghera, CCA Montreal, 1998; Lei. Donne nelle collezioni italiane, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Torino 1997; Venezia-Marghera, XLVII Biennale d'Arte, Venezia, 1997.
 

Image:
Marina Ballo Charmet
At Land: Bodyscape & Cityscape
© the artist, Courtesy of Storefront for Art and Architecture


Storefront for Art and Architecture
97 Kenmare Street
New York, NY 10012
+1 212.431.5795
Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm

 
 
 
 
mother's tankstation, Dublin
 
 
Michael Snow, So Is This, 1982
 
 
Michael Snow - So Is This

12 November - 19 December 2009

As the opening of a year-long programme of predominantly experimental film works and video installations at mother's tankstation, we are honoured to present Michael Snow's canonical 1982 conceptual cinematic work, So Is This.

The strategies Snow employs in this probing, but humour-laden, acknowledged masterpiece are simultaneously simple yet engagingly complex. Ostensibly, 'So Is This' is a forty-three minute long, silent film work, to be viewed from beginning to end, constructed solely from intertitles: Snow laboriously shot text, in the form of single, short "light" words, in negative, on celluloid in temporal sequence (now transferred to DVD). This process allows the viewer to mentally cement the 'narrator's' words together to construct sentences and paragraphs. The effect - akin to controlled, depicted thought - is nothing short of mesmeric, and has been politely described by the long-time film critic of The Village Voice; J. Hoberman, as defamiliarizing "...both film and language, creating a kind of moving concrete poetry while throwing a monkey wrench into theoretical debate...". Although the exploration of film and writing, 'image' and text was an important area of investigation in a number of conceptual works throughout the 70s and 80s, Snow's agenda in 'So Is This' was, perhaps, prompted as much by the censors increasing interest in his work as its art-world chronology. Ultimately, it is the artist's (on-going) and the work's (particularized) concerns with the freedom of opinion and speech that makes this work timeless and eternally relevant.

The strange social process of reading words on moving celluloid frames in a populated theatre is self-evidently distinct from the self-regulated steady, private reading of words on the page and should perhaps carry a health warning; this film may be especially unsatisfying for those who dislike having others read over their shoulders (no audience rage, please). There is rather, an odd satisfaction in the shared experience, which amplifies the humour, the message, and the conspiratorial nature of an intimacy simultaneously imparted. In an ever-noisier world, there is also a compelling disparity between the silence of the work and the insistently dominant and controlling presence of the 'narrator', who carefully draws a distinction, in the third-person party, from the 'author'. Through the façade of narrator the real power of "the author", Snow, concentrates special attention on the small words (as the title indicates), which cradle the meaning of more complex sentences. The word - again as indicated by the title - most emphasized is 'this', which Snow beautifully describes as "the most present tense word there is". The individual words that make up the frames are all set to the same margins. The result being, that small words are more emphasized, by dint of taking up a larger portion of the screen, while the longer ones are reduced in scale and impact (and often speed) to fit the margins. The duration of each word on the screen varies greatly, as does the darkness in the pauses between the words. This rhythmic pacing of words and darkness consciously moves the viewer/reader between humour and infuriation. Unlike other textual forms, where you can scan through sentences and paragraphs to make meaning, 'So Is This' only allows the audience to read at a pace strictly controlled by the filmmaker, whereby Snow underscores that all information is ultimately a carefully controlled construct.

The words of 'So Is This' are typeset in Helvetica font - a standard sans-serif style heavily utilised during the seventies and eighties, and also employed by Kruger and Holzer. However, rather than the adoption of a clean, graphic-studio appearance, Snow focuses in upon the imperfections characteristic to manual typesetting, stressing the humanized presences of the silent disembodied voice/s of the narrator/author. The letterings are sometimes cracked, or slightly fraying at the edges. Similarly, Snow used out-of-date colour film stock to make this 'black and white' film, which the viewer soon realizes is not black and white at all, but a range of dark and light colours. Some words have a flicker effect, and at times the 'white' text bleeds into a yellow tone, while the 'black' background moves toward a dark green. Although minimal in its use of 'imagery', 'So Is This' maintains a particular beauty in the simplicity of shapes and colours - the serendipitously unpredictable nature of out-of-date film - wherein the film-maker becomes almost a formalist painter in light. It also may seem odd to discuss aesthetic agendas of pattern, rhythm and colour in relation to such a theorized conceptual work like 'So is This', but Snow clearly pays indulgent attention to such details, and it is perhaps his masterful deployment of such, to conceptual ends, that adds to the work's insistent longevity.


Image:
Michael Snow
So Is This
DVD, originally 16mm
Silent
43 minutes
1982
© Michael Snow, Courtesy of mother's tankstation


mother's tankstation
41-43 Watling Street
Ushers Island
Dublin 8
Ireland
+353 (0)1 6717654
Daily Screenings Thursday to Saturday at 4pm and 5pm

 
 
 
 
 
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