STOCKHOLM.- Following the world premier of Marco Brambilla's Apollo XVIII played across scores of video billboards in Times Square (a collaboration with NASA and Times Square Arts Alliance),
McCabe Fine Art presents a series of related works by the acclaimed video artist.
The multi-channel video installation Apollo XVIII uses never before published images from NASAs own archives and computer animation to imagine a contemporary launch of an actual NASA rocket from the 1960s, which was never sent into space. Vintage clips of Frank Borman (Commander of Apollo 8, the first mission to fly around the moon) are intercut with state-of-the-art digital simulations of a majestic Saturn V rocket. Debuting this work in Times Square on March 3, 2015, Brambilla turned the site of the world-famous New Years Eve countdown into a virtual launch pad. Frenetic, like a stock-ticker gone awry (as opposed to the straightforward ball-drop) Apollo XVIIIs flurry of nonsequential numbers builds up dramatic tension, but does not culminate in climactic release. Conceived as a communal public event, this adrenalin-inducing work compresses the epic idea of manned space exploration into the feverish moments of anticipation just before liftoff.
With his presentation in Stockholm, which marks the artists first solo show in Sweden, Brambilla reiterates images and themes from Apollo XVIII by creating an immersive installation designed specifically for the gallery setting. Displayed on a square liquid crystal screen housed inside a humansized steel column, Transmission - Frank Borman (Apollo VIII) features a rare video transmission of Commander Borman (of the first successful moon mission), accessed by Brambilla at NASA headquarters in Cape Canaveral. The blue-tinged imagery that flickers in and out of focus emphasizes the original material's vintage analog quality. Meanwhile, a circular overhead projection depicts an astounding view from underneath the thrusters of a Saturn V rocket (Ignition (Apollo XIII)). This fiery footage of the ill-fated mission that was aborted before reaching the moon casts a warm glow over the entire gallery space, whose walls Brambilla has adorned with custom lunar crater wallpaper (Reconnaissance (Apollo VIII)). The eerie high contrast black-and-white landscape is based on scouting photographs taken by the crew of Apollo 8, who were charged with finding a viable landing site for a subsequent moon mission. In conjunction with the exhibition at McCabe Fine Art, Brambilla's Countdown (Apollo XVIII) will be screened during the exhibition on the outdoor screen at nearby Stureplan Square.
This is not the first time that Brambilla has turned his attention to space exploration. His three-minute time-lapse video Sea of Tranquility (2006) shows the gradual decay of the American flag planted on the moon's surface in 1969 by the crew of Apollo 11. More recently, Atlantis (OV-104) (2012) is a nostalgic ode to NASA's last manned shuttle. Whereas Sea of Tranquility evokes the erosion of American idealism and Atlantis (OV-104) acts as a somber farewell to man-on-the-moon adventures, Apollo XVIII and the related works on view at McCabe Fine Art are more anticipative. Coinciding with NASA's 100th anniversary, Brambilla's latest works describe the space program's shift from manned missions to surrogate modes of survey and investigation. Mixing fading memories of the golden age of space travel with fresh optimism inspired by the promises of today's technology, the artist leaves the viewer to decide the value of contemporary space exploration.
The countdown has begun.