JR's 'Ghosts of Ellis Island' opens at Galerie Perrotin in Hong Kong

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, July 8, 2024


JR's 'Ghosts of Ellis Island' opens at Galerie Perrotin in Hong Kong
Ellis Island, NY - UNFRAMED. Permanent installation by JR since October 1, 2014.



HONG KONG.- Galerie Perrotin, Hong Kong presents, “Ghosts of Ellis Island. An Unframed Project, Short Preview” an exhibition of works which document French artist JR’s latest Unframed project—a permanent installation which animates, enlivens and offers unprecedented access to New York’s Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital.

Open to the public for the first time since 1954, the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital facilitated the passage of a massive wave of immigration to the United States from 1902 to 1930. All told, over a million patients deemed too ill for immediate naturalization would pass through its walls. Having to screen for and treat a veritable catalogue of diseases from around the world would transform the hospital, the first public health facility in the country, into a test-case for then state-of-the art sterilization and diagnostic procedures. The program proved effective, though following tightened restrictions on immigration in the 1930s, the facility was repurposed to house disabled soldiers and, later, as a detention center for Axis prisoners following the Second World War. In 1954, outmoded and disused, the Hospital was shuttered, abandoned, and, until recently, largely forgotten.

Today, the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital stands much as it was abandoned; but after sixty years of silence and disrepair, local vegetation has begun to reclaim the grounds, introducing grass and vine to what must’ve once been a starkly modern facility. As the former setting for the confluence of illness and recovery, health and death, of prisoners and heroes, aspirations and disappointments, if any place might be said to be haunted, Ellis Island Hospital certainly meets all criteria. And it is from this heavily charged genius loci that JR, in coordination with Save Ellis Island, has undertaken “Unframed - Ghosts of Ellis Island.” As with previous Unframed projects (Grottaglie, Italy (2009), Vevey, Switzerland (2010), Sao Paulo, Brazil (2011), Washington, USA (2012), Marseille, France (2013)), JR does not compose his own photographs, but instead recuts existing photography, excising figures and portraits from their frames to recompose them in unexpected locales and public settings. The overall effect is equal parts stagecraft and public art, recalling the original photographs while redeploying them in such a way as to give them new life on confrontation with their viewers. With “Ghosts of Ellis Island” the manner in which the original subjects of JR’s source material are granted new life is perhaps even more direct: Culled from hospital archives, JR has repopulated the hospital with its former inmates, rendering its “ghosts” present and visible, and, in so doing, de-mystifying the very real sense in which the hospital is haunted with its own redolent history. Here, JR is less the artist as historian than he is artist as exorcist or ghost-seer, reconciling past, present, and viewer in artful communion.

On display in the present Hong Kong exhibition are four images taken from “Unframed – Ghosts of Ellis Island,” which serve to preview the New York project. All four images evince JR’s unique curatorial eye and talent for mise en scène. An organic sense for composition and lighting is matched with a talent for discovering and re-exposing the most immediately emotive of expressions and figures. In one image, through the remains of a multi-paned window, we are greeted by the sunlit faces of seven child patients, their hair wrapped, their expressions muted, their parents nowhere in sight. In another image, a sullen young woman is reinstalled on the wall behind his now rusted sickbed; she looks at us impatiently, even angrily, while an older woman, maybe an aunt or an older sister, sits at the foot of her bed disconsolate. The two of them blend into the crumbling discolored plaster as if exposed by careful excavation rather than having been applied by the artist after the fact. Elsewhere, a clan of dark-featured, prominent-eared immigrants poses stiffly, seriously for their portrait; they sit together, as if on a long bench, waiting by a ruined entrance to the hospital, the door still ajar. But in perhaps the most hopeful, though also potentially the most mournful image on display, the silhouettes of a small family can be seen standing just outside a floor length window; with their backs to us, husband, wife, and child look across New York Harbor at a distant Statue of Liberty. In another setting, a scene of this sort, so loaded with well-worn symbols, might come off as cliché or outright propagandistic; but rather than toning it down, JR has embraced the iconography, making deft use of the greatest advantage of his practice: reality. The Statue of Liberty in JR’s composition just is the Statute of Liberty; the window through which we are looking at her just is the window through which countless immigrants looked out at her too; and the little family before us truly was there, and remains there, still haunting the old hospital as three of the ghosts of Ellis Island.

Beginning his artistic career at the age of 17, JR happened upon a camera on the Paris subway and began pasting portraits in the eastern suburbs of Paris, Montfermeil, Les Bosquets.

Since then, JR creates monumental photographs that he pastes around the world, infiltrating in urban life anonymous portraits, witnesses of the present and the past - “Women are Heroes” in Rio de Janeiro, Jaipur, Nairobi (2008-2010), which gave its title to JR’s movie that was selected at the Festival de Cannes in 2010 ; «The Wrinkles of the City» in Cartagena, Shanghai, Los Angeles, La Havana, Berlin and Istanbul (2008-2015).

JR reveals art by action, displaying his gigantic prints over the suburban buildings of Paris (“28 Millimètres, Portrait of a Generation”, 20042006), on walls in the Middle East (“Face 2 Face”, 2007) or in the United States, in the favela Morro da Providencia in Brazil (“28 Millimètres, Women Are Heroes”, 2008) or on the roofs in Kibera, Kenya (“28 Millimètres : Women are Heroes”, 2009), on the facade of Tate Modern in London...

He received the prestigious TED Prize in 2011 that offered him to make a “wish to change the world”. With the INSIDE OUT Project, JR brings together and prints portraits, as messages of personal identity (www.insideoutproject. net). On this occasion, photobooths printing largescale self-portraits were seen during the summer in various places of the globe, including Paris (Centre Pompidou, Galerie Perrotin), Arles (Rencontres de la Photographie), Tel Aviv or Ramallah, and Hong Kong at Galerie Perrotin in 2012 ; furthermore photobooth trucks travels around the world such as in Japan (2011), Amsterdam, London, at Times Square, NYC, at Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2013), around Shanghai in 2014, etc. Solo shows of JR’s work have been exhibited in galleries and museums worldwide, including The Rath Museum in Geneva, Tokyo’s Watari Museum, The Contemporary Art Museum in Dallas, The Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, the Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden, Germany, Power Station of Arts in Shanghai, and “Au Panthéon”, a monumental installation surrounds the drum of the Pantheon’s dome until the end of its renovation.










Today's News

March 12, 2015

Exhibition takes a look at Miró's relationship to literature and his friendship with writers

Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge visited Turner Contemporary today

The Frick acquires a rare and important sixteenth-century French ceramic ewer

Art historian Daniel H. Weiss named next President of The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Hirshhorn presents two of the most renowned series of light works by Dan Flavin

Major solo exhibition of Bruce Nauman’s artwork opens at Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain

David Chipperfield named as architect to redesign Metropolitan Museum's Modern and Contemporary Art Wing

Sean Scully opens first major exhibition by a western abstract artist to tour in China

Julien's Auctions announces music icons auction event at the Hard Rock Café in New York

Singin' in the Rain, and how Paris fell in love with United States musicals

Landmark Ferrari 275S/340 America Barchetta leads early highlights for RM Sotheby's Monterey Auction

Art Basel and the ICC premier a new large-scale video installation by Cao Fei in Hong Kong

Charles Guerin leaves The Hyde Collection to head the Biggs Museum of American Art

Norbert Delman's first solo show at Maria Stenfors opens in London

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale receives major Julian Schnabel painting from Olatz Schnabel

Swiss artist Roman Signer installs a kayak that moves through Barbican Centre's The Curve

Alex Prager's debut exhibition in Hong Kong opens at Lehmann Maupin

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum presents 'Jean-Michel Othoniel: Secret Flower Sculptures'

London's National Gallery bans selfie sticks

Death, mourning, & medicine at Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery

JR's 'Ghosts of Ellis Island' opens at Galerie Perrotin in Hong Kong

Longest portrait in National Portrait Gallery goes on displaay for first time

Soundscape New York installation opens at the Museum of the City of New York




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful