NEW YORK, NY.- Angela Missoni, celebrating her 20th anniversary as
Missonis Creative Director this fall, announced the project in her Surface Conversion series: Blue, Yellow, Red, Purple, a project by poet and filmmaker Jonas Mekas which debuted on Wednesday, October 25th at Missonis NYC boutique, located at 1009 Madison Avenue.
Curated by the duo Francesco Urbano Ragazzi in collaboration with A Palazzo Gallery, the exhibition is a visual poem that Mekas has dedicated to his home, New York City, which welcomed him as a refugee in 1949, and in which he later founded the New American Cinema Group and the Anthology Film Archives in the 60s and 70s.
Mekas redefines the spaces of the Missoni Boutique with a series of cinematographic works and photographs that unite to compose an anthem which is both fragmented and striking.
The show opens with a double-screen video installation visible from the shop windows directly facing the street which run both day and night. Images delicately scroll across the screens in the light of day, becoming more and more vivid as night begins to fall. Its as if the images are living the life of a Moonflower, peaking and blooming most strikingly in the evening hours. The spectator can indulge in the colors of New York through a series of original montages that mark and celebrate the seasonal cycles of the metropolis. Eras and personalities, recognizable to a greater or lesser degree, appear together in a collage of fixed and moving images. Moments, seasons, and time, become the focus along one singular cinematographic horizon.
The projections continue on the 2nd floor where a special version of Walden, Mekas film manifesto, is shown. This cinematic diary, shot on a Bolex throughout the 60s, is projected on two screens, recomposing and splitting the original montage into two streams.
The relationship between cinema and nature, or rather between life and storytelling, becomes the recurring theme that runs through Mekas transformation of the Missoni boutique space. Light boxes showcase close-up images of various flowers, stills taken from films shot by Mekas over his sixty-year career. Each still has been reproduced on a large scale, reversing the ratio between humans and vegetation; they also capture the spontaneous germinations of flora in the middle of the New York metropolis: a concrete symbol of a delicate, albeit miraculous, sense of élan. Through Mekas redefining of the space, the artists dreams become a visual reality.