Team Gallery: Brice Dellsperger
Refreshing Fassbinder...and others
- 13 Jan 2011 to 12 Feb 2011

Current Exhibition


13 Jan 2011 to 12 Feb 2011
Hours : Tuesday - Saturday 10am - 6pm
Team Gallery
83 Grand Street
cross streets Wooster and Greene
New York, NY
10013
New York
North America
p: +1 212 .279. 9219
m:
f: +1 212.279.9220
w: www.teamgallery.com











Brice Dellsperger, Body Double 22 (after Eyes Wide Shut)
still from a single channel video, 2007-2010
12
Web Links


Team Gallery

Artist Links


Cory Arcangel (beige)
Muntean / Rosenblum



Artists in this exhibition: Brice Dellsperger


Brice Dellsperger

Refreshing Fassbinder...and others

13 January 2011 - 12 February 2011
Opening Thursday January 13th 6-8 PM

Team Gallery is pleased to announce our third solo presentation by French video artist Brice Dellsperger. The exhibition, entitled Refreshing Fassbinder...and others, will run from the 13th of January through the 12th of February 2011. Team Gallery is located at 83 Grand Street, cross streets Wooster and Greene, on the ground floor.

For this exhibition Team will present two of Dellsperger's films from his ongoing series Body Double, titled after the iconic post-modern thriller of the same name by Brian De Palma. The exhibition premieres Dellsperger's most recent addition to his twenty-eight-part oeuvre, a rhythmic three-channel sequence after Rainer Werner Fassbinder's 1978 film In a Year with 13 Moons. Also on view is Body Double 22, after Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut (1999), and a series of photographic portraits of characters from the film. The show will continue to examine Dellsperger's longtime fascination with issues of the psychosexual in contemporary cinema.

On screen, the term body double refers to a situation where another person stands in for a credited actor or actress in the same role. In Dellsperger's ongoing project, its literal application is evident with his use of substitutes in place of the source material's original performers. Along with the doubling that occurs here, the two films on view delve further into a studied critique of authenticity, via digital slippages, irregular lip-synching, and obviously cheap or haphazard sets and costumes. Socially prevalent constructs of gender and identity, in part supported by Dellsperger's original sources, become a playground in which to continuously remind the viewer of their instability, with both the technical and contextual make-up of the work.

In the main gallery is Body Double 27, 2010, a three-channel video installation of the same scene repeated, side-by-side, with several different actors playing the same role as varying "types." In Fassbinder's film a man lusts after his co-worker Anton, who says to him "Too bad you are not a woman", to which the man responds by becoming a woman. Dellsperger's film is a repetitive meditation on an arcade scene where in each of the three frames, one of the transvestite characters sidles up to a man, seen from behind. The man is always unresponsive, and subsequently each of the characters retreat to a private space where an array of emotional breakdowns ensue. Dellsperger's looping fragments form an unrelenting examination of the universality of desire and unrequited love, and a parody of clich�s associated with loneliness and drag culture. Yet, despite its tragicomic bent, it achieves an unmistakable humanity.

In the rear gallery is Body Double 22, 2007-10, a non-linear composition restaging select scenes from Stanley Kubrick's thriller Eyes Wide Shut, with Dellsperger's longtime collaborator Jean-Luc Verna, playing every character, both male and female. The film uses digital technology to splice together a multitude of Vernas, creating an uncanny assembly of transvestite clones. Verna's dramatic range is broad, and tinged with a menacing humor. With an expressivity echoing the overly determined melodrama of Kubrick's film, Dellsperger revisits his perennial themes of collapsed notions of gender, destabilized identity, and the infiltration of gay subjectivity into the Hollywood mainstream.

In Dellsperger's work, the cinema is not an old boyfriend's sweater that one wears loosely, taking comfort in its cache of memories. In his work the cinema is an accent, inculcated into a child and dragged forward into adulthood; it is a nervous tick that can't be unlearned; a tell in a card game that gives away the player's hand; a bit of scar tissue that proves an accident. The cinema is not only a language we all speak, it is an unspeakable inheritance that chains us to gestures, modes of speaking and of lovemaking. It teaches us desire, concepts of loyalty and of fair play. It presents us with a limited palette of possible aspirations and tells us what dreams are made of. It is, to put it simply, the parameter for being.

As Dellsperger slips his players into film history he somehow reasserts the reader as writer, wresting control from the dominating media and allowing for more erratic forms of beauty.

Brice Dellsperger has had numerous solo exhibitions at galleries and museums internationally, including Kunstbunker, Nurnberg, Germany; The Akbank Art Center, Istanbul, Turkey; Midway Contemporary Art, St. Paul, Minnesota; and Le Consortium, Dijon, France. He will mount an exhibition along with Jean-Luc Verna, at FRAC Alsace, France, in June of 2011. His work is represented in numerous public collections including that of the Museum of Modern Art here in New York.


Please contact the gallery at 212 279 9219 for information and/or images.








SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS
Click on the map to search the regions



Recent exhibitions highlighted in the weekly Feature Newsletter



KUNST HALLE SANKT GALLEN presents David Renggli - Scaramouche


17 August - 27 October 2013

David Renggli - in some respects a prodigy of the Swiss art scene - has repeatedly aroused the curiosity of the public for more than ten years thanks to a unique mixture of themes and forms, of spectacle, humour and poetry.

Read On...



The Showroom, London presents Ricardo Basbaum: re-projecting (london)


12 July - 17 August 2013

The Showroom is delighted to present re-projecting (london), a major new commission by Brazilian artist Ricardo Basbaum, and the first significant presentation of his internationally renowned artwork in the UK.

Read On...