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Sunday, December 22, 2024 |
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CUT/Film as Found Object Featured at MAM |
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Omer Fast, CNN-Concatenated (detail), 2002, DVD, 18 mins.
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MILWAUKEE.-The Milwaukee Art Museum presents CUT/Film as Found Object, on view through September 11, 2005. CUT/Film as Found Object is a fascinating installation consisting of 14 video works by some of today's most influential artists. CUT explores how contemporary artists use excerpts from pre-existing films and television to create new narratives, different emotional content and new musical scores. Artists featured include Christian Marclay, Pierre Huyghe and Douglas Gordon. The exhibition is organized by the Milwaukee Art Museum with the assistance of the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), North Miami.
Time Out Chicago raves about CUT! Read the review by clicking here.
In this intriguing exhibition, artists manipulate the most familiar of media, the moving picture, film and television, restructuring reality to make the familiar unfamiliar and providing the viewer the opportunity to comprehend a new reality. The emphasis is not on the use of found footage itself, but on its manipulation to create a new work.
The 14 works in the exhibition, each housed in an independent theatre or viewing room, explore a wide range of variations and methodologies. Indebted to the appropriation strategies of the '80s and sampling in hip hop and rap music of the '90s, these artists are united by their gestural use of the editing.
The artists in CUT have taken the material of their reality, the movie and the news program, and manipulated it to reveal its power to communicate and shape reality. Whether through looping, repetition, erasure or compression, their active manipulation of their medium recalls the importance that action was given by Richard Serra in 1968, when he published Verb List, a list of actions that a sculptor could use to create sculpture - to roll, to crease, to fold, to cut, etc. CUT explores the actions through which artists create video.
Works in the exhibition include: · Soliloquy Trilogy (2002) by Candice Breitz · Video Quartet (2002) and Telephone (1995) by Christian Marclay · Ellipse (1998) by Pierre Huyghe · 24 Hour Psycho (1993) and Black and White (Babylon) (1996) by Douglas Gordon · Horror Chase (2002) and Learning from Las Vegas (2003) by Jennifer and Kevin McCoy · The Long Count (Rumble in the Jungle) (2001); The Long Count (I Shook up the World) (2001); The Long Count (Thrilla in Manila) (2001); and Live Evil (2002) by Paul Pfeiffer · CNN Concatenated (2002) by Omer Fast · The Blink (2000-2001) by Michael Joaquin Grey.
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