Mise en scene. The exhibition features photographs produced since 2008, as well as his newest works: in these works, Douglas has closely interwoven music, film, theater, photography, and digital formats, allowing them simultaneously to be associated with various forms of media.
Haus der Kunst is pleased to present the photographs Stan Douglas
has produced since 2008, as well as his newest works, revealing
him at an exceptional moment in his artistic career: In these
works, Douglas has closely interwoven music, film, theater,
photography, and digital formats, allowing them simultaneously to
be associated with various forms of media.
A focal piece in the exhibition is the video-music installation
"Luanda - Kinshasa" (2013), a fictional narrative about the absent
Miles Davis. Douglas also broke new ground with his theatrical
production of "Helen Lawrence" (2014), in which the actors'
performances are filmed in real time and immediately uploaded into
a computer-generated environment (performances will take place in
the Münchner Kammerspiele simultaneously to the exhibition
opening).
The exhibition furthermore unites the newest, primarily large-
scale photographic series: "Crowds and Riots" (2008), "Interiors"
(2009–2010), "Midcentury Studio" (2010–2011), "Malabar People"
(2011), and "Disco Angola "(2012). These photographs depict staged
historical moments, mostly dating from the end of the war until
the mid-1970s: The black market culture of the postwar era and the
transition to other forms of trade; striking dockworkers;
demonstrations calling for freedom of speech; and the conflict
between hippies and the authorities. In the series "Disco Angola",
a synchronous viewing of New York's disco culture and the tense
atmosphere in Angola, Douglas links the two cultures into an
overlapping narrative about postcolonialism. He thus enriches the
recent presentations in Haus der Kunst, which focused on concepts
of the development of modernity by adding the deliberately
fragmentary narrative: "A historical drama is staged in fragments,
encouraging viewers to imagine a more comprehensive situation.
(Stan Douglas)
"Midcentury Studio", 2010-2011
After World War II, former soldiers turned to photography, hoping
to earn a living as photojournalists. A striking example of such a
career was Raymond Munro. According to Douglas, Munro was "a
veteran of the Royal Canadian Air Force who, in 1949, arrived in
Vancouver slightly drunk and with a broken collarbone to apply for
the position of aerial photographer with a local newspaper. Munro
had no photographic training, but he was pretty sure he could fly
a plane with one hand, and he got the job." In the archives of the
photo agency Black Star at Ryerson University, Douglas looked
through numerous images from the years 1945 to 1950. These were
taken by autodidactic photographers using 4 x 5 field cameras with
flashes that were slow to load and cumbersome to reset. The motifs
were street and crime scenes, accidents, animals, moonshine bars,
and famous people - anything with which a photographer could earn
money. For his 29-piece black-and-white series "Midcentury
Studio", Douglas slipped into the role of such a postwar
photographer, who photographed for practical purposes and shot
"technically bad pictures that now and then could be interesting
images". In Douglas's "Camouflage, 1945" (2011), "the lighting
intended to make the subject more visible [but] makes him more
invisible; in "Athlete, 1946" (2011), "the portrait of the athlete
[was] shot at the wrong moment with peripheral action distracting
from the "subject."
Although Douglas meticulously researches historical events and
stages them in a complex manner, these photographs remain free of
any claim to historical truth or interpretation. They reveal
themselves as conjectures and fragments, as spoken narratives told
in the conditional tense. Here, Douglas makes use of a literary
technique: After researching historical facts, the author creates
a fictional protagonist who narrates from the authorial
perspective, telling about how things might have been. A novel
constructed in such a way also gives the impression that knowledge
is piecemeal and reality unstable.
"Disco Angola", 2012
Settled in 1974 and 1975, this series of eight color photographs
combines situations in Angola and New York. During this period,
the struggle for independence and decolonization led to civil war
in Angola. This time Douglas slips into the role of a photographer
who works with little equipment, uses 35mm film, and is ready to
move fast and shoot quickly to increase his chances of getting the
right image. Douglas describes this fictional adventurer: "He has
somehow been able to gain the trust of some rebels who would, in
turn, introduce him to others and teach him the local codes of
conduct, the ignorance of which could be deadly." Enslaved
Africans, who were shipped from Luanda via the Middle Passage in
the eighteenth century brought the African-Brazilian martial art
Capoeira to the New World. With "Disco Angola", Stan Douglas
imagines this martial art has returned to its home country.
"Luanda - Kinshasa", 2013
The European premiere of this film and music installation will
take place in Haus der Kunst. It tells the story of a studio
recording Miles Davis might have made following the release of his
album "On the Corner" in 1972. "Miles Davis wanted to connect with
a younger audience, and naïvely imagined that incorporating
influences of Indian classical music and Karlheinz Stockhausen
into extended funk improvisations would do the trick. However,
Columbia Records decided to market to an older 'jazz' audience and
'On the Corner' was Miles's worst-selling album ever."
Instead of the druggy jams that he made with his touring band
until his retirement in 1975, this imagines that Miles might have
tried to connect with another youth culture that was emerging in
New York at the time – by expanding his interest in world music
through a dialogue with Afrobeat of Cameroonian Manu Dibango. Like
Miles, Dibango synthesized jazz and funk.
Douglas realized the project in a replica of the Columbia 30th
Street Studio, in which Miles Davis recorded all of his studio
albums from 1954 to 1981. Two moveable, time-coded and
synchronized cameras on tracks filmed the waiting, listening,
chatting, and playing musicians and their entourage. As in
"Journey into Fear" (2001), a limited number of camera settings
and plot fragments - here the ensemble performances - serve as the
basis for an almost endless number of possible variations:
Whenever a musician is not in the picture, his or her performance
can be replaced by an alternative recording. Miles Davis himself
is present in his absence - in Douglas's ensemble there is no
trumpeter.
"Helen Lawrence", 2014
The cinematic stage production "Helen Lawrence" takes place in
Vancouver in 1948, recalling aesthetics of film noir. The setting
is "... a treacherous, shape shifting landscape of police and pimps,
soldiers and refugees, damaged goods and ghostly lovers – all
scrambling to find their feet in the shifting sands" (Stan
Douglas). The main character, Helen Lawrence, is mentally unstable
and remains highly ambivalent: Did she kill her husband, or was
the murderer someone else?
"Helen Lawrence" combines theater with film and computer-generated
imagery. The actors are simultaneously camera operators, and their
images are present as oversize projections. "Helen Lawrence"
celebrated its world premiere in March 2014 at the World Premiere
Arts Club Theatre in Vancouver, and will make a guest performance
at the Münchner Kammerspiele.
Tickets for the premiere on Wednesday, June 18, 2014 at 6 pm, and
for additional performances on June 19, 20, 21, 22, 24, 25, and 26
are on sale at the Kammerspiele box office and online at
www.muenchner-kammerspiele.de.
"Circa 1948", 2014
This latest work makes postwar Vancouver available as an app. Stan
Douglas uses this iPhone format for the first time here. Thirty-
one stories take place in the same hotel as does "Helen Lawrence";
14 additional ones take place in a small alley.
Born in Vancouver, Canada, in 1960, Stan Douglas's exhibition
biography includes numerous solo exhibitions, as well as repeated
participation in the documenta and Venice Biennale.
The catalogue is published by Prestel and includes contributions
by David Campany, Diedrich Diederichsen, Seamus Kealy, León
Krempel, and Chantal Pontbriand; in English, French, and German;
€ 49.95; ISBN 978-3-7913-5347-0.
The exhibition Stan Douglas: Mise en scène is a coproduction
between Carré d'Art in Nîmes and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in
Dublin, curated by León Krempel for Haus der Kunst.
We would like to thank our shareholders for their annual support
of the program: Freistaat Bayern, Josef Schörghuber Stiftung,
Gesellschaft der Freunde Haus der Kunst e.V.
Lead Support for Stan Douglas: Mise en scène is provided by
Alexander Tutsek-Stiftung, Munich
Additional Support by David Zwirner, New York/London und Victoria
Miro, London
Contributions by Embassy of Canada and Henning & Brigitte Freybe
Cultural Partner: M94,5
Image: Midcentury Studio, 2010-2011. Series of 28 black-and-white photographs. Digital fiber print mounted on Dibond aluminum. Edition of 5, # 11. Trick or Treat, 1945, 2010 © Stan Douglas, courtesy the artist, David Zwirner, New York/London and Victoria Miro, London
Press office
Dr. Elena Heitsch
Prinzregentenstrasse 1
80538 München
+49 89 21127 115
+49 89 21127 157 Fax
presse@hausderkunst.de
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
6 pm European premiere of "Helen Lawrence", Münchner Kammerspiele, ca. 90min
8.30 pm Press conference, Haus der Kunst
Premiere party, Goldene Bar at Haus der Kunst
Thursday, June 19, 2014
5 pm Opening of the exhibition with artist's talk
7 pm Second performance of "Helen Lawrence", Münchner Kammerspiele
9 pm Audience talk, Münchner Kammerspiele
Haus der Kunst
Prinzregentenstraße 1 80538 Munich
Mon — Sun 10 am — 8 pm, Thu 10 am — 10 pm
Admission 8 € / reduced rate 6 €
under 18 2 € / children under 12 free
Combined ticket
2 exhibitions 12 € / reduced rate 10 €
3 exhibitions 15 € / reduced rate 12 €