Five contemporary film and video installations on view at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
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Five contemporary film and video installations on view at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Arthur Jafa, (film still) “Love Is The Message, The Message is Death,” 2016. Video, color and black-and-white, sound. Running time: 7:30 minutes. Courtesy of Arthur Jafa and Gavin Brown’s enterprise, New York/ Rome.



WASHINGTON, DC.- This fall, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden presents “The Message: New Media Works,” a new exhibition of five contemporary film and video installations that resonate with the voices of music, film and pop culture, on view Nov. 18–April 22, 2018. The first exhibition organized by Mark Beasley, the Hirshhorn’s inaugural Robert and Arlene Kogod Secretarial Scholar, Curator of Media and Performance Art, “The Message” marks the Washington debut of leading international video artists Camille Henrot, C.T. Jasper, Joanna Malinowska, Frances Stark, Hito Steyerl and Arthur Jafa, whose seminal Kanye West-backed “Love Is The Message, The Message Is Death” inspired the exhibition’s title.

Each video appropriates a common method of communication in today’s media-saturated world—the sermon, the web lecture, the concert, the music video and the online sex chat room—and uses its familiar format to question and provoke ideas around information overload in the global digital age. Music and language appear as common threads to weave all five works together, as artists use them as tools to rewrite traditional narratives around theology, race and sexuality.

“New media is undisputedly the artistic innovation of the 21st century,” said Hirshhorn Director Melissa Chiu. “We are grateful to have Mark’s vision and expertise as an integral part of our institution, and we look forward to continuing our inquiries and examinations at the forefront of this exciting medium.”

“‘The Message’ brings together a group of artists exploring social and cultural phenomena through the expanding field of video art,” Beasley said. “In an increasingly digital society, we see language, humor and music triumph as timeless and universal. I envision this exhibition as a musical LP, with each work unfolding as an individual track on a record connected by similar themes.”

In making her 2013 work, “Grosse Fatigue,” Henrot mined the Smithsonian archives to uncover stories of the creation of the universe from a variety of religions and indigenous traditions. Images and video clips pop up in browser windows on a computer screen, set to a narrative soundtrack of spoken-word poetry, forming a collective “origin story” for the world. Steyerl’s film essay-cum-performance lecture “How Not to be Seen,” also from 2013, instructs the viewer how one can remain invisible and avoid detection in an age of constant surveillance. Jasper and Malinowska’s “Halka/Haiti” (2015) addresses issues around globalization and colonization, staging a full-length Polish dramatic opera in a rural Haitian village populated by citizens of Polish descent. The expansive 30-foot curved screen and plastic deck chairs that are part of the installation seem to immerse viewers in the village square alongside its original Haitian audience.

In 2016, Jafa worked with West, who provided the soundtrack for “Love Is The Message, The Message Is Death,” a filmic essay of triumph, tragedy and resilience of black life in America. Jafa’s award-winning work as a director and cinematographer—with Stanley Kubrick, Spike Lee, Jay-Z and Beyoncé—is now influencing a new wave of contemporary filmmakers. Lastly, in Stark’s “My Best Thing” (2011), the artist records and computer animates her real-life encounters in online sex chat rooms, an unlikely and humorous basis for creative collaboration in the face of performance anxiety.

“The Message” furthers the Hirshhorn’s efforts to champion artists experimenting in new media, which began in 2005 with the “Black Box” series, a rotating exhibition space dedicated solely to the moving image, and has continued with significant acquisitions by Ed Atkins, Ragnar Kjartansson and Jesper Just, among others. Recently, the 2016 exhibition “Suspended Animation” showcased computer-generated video works that explored how we perceive reality in a digital world.

The exhibition joins the Hirshhorn’s 2017–18 schedule of diverse contemporary artists whose work reflects global conversations that shape history, politics and culture, including Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, Russian artists Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, German artist Markus Lüpertz, Swiss artist Nicolas Party, and American artists Yoko Ono, Theaster Gates and Mark Bradford.










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