Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona MACBA
Barcelona
plaza dels Angels, 1
+34 93 4120810 FAX +34 93 4124602
WEB
Tacita Dean
dal 26/1/2001 al 25/3/2001
0934120810 FAX 0934124602
WEB
Segnalato da

Macba



 
calendario eventi  :: 




26/1/2001

Tacita Dean

Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona MACBA, Barcelona

This exhibition presents a selection of nine filmic works shot in 16 mm., two sound pieces (one of which, Jukebox 2, is a new production), as well as drawings and photographs of several projects carried out by one of the most relevant artists of her generation, nominated for the prestigious British award, the Turner Prize.


comunicato stampa

This exhibition presents a selection of nine filmic works shot in 16 mm., two sound pieces (one of which, Jukebox 2, is a new production), as well as drawings and photographs of several projects carried out by one of the most relevant artists of her generation, nominated for the prestigious British award, the Turner Prize. The work of Tacita Dean (Canterbury, 1965) mainly consists of 16 mm films and soundworks in which process, transformation, coincidences, fact and fiction play an important role. Her work involves forgotten stories and constructions that were built in a visionary way but which never successfully functioned in society, which abandoned them to their fate.

Having started her artistic career as a painter, Dean discovered the possibilities of the projected images of 16 mm film in the early 90s. By then many artists had adopted a handier, cheaper and more informal medium: video. However, the 16 mm process allowed her to work more physically. Film technically consists of two components, image and sound, which are recorded independently on a small piece of celluloid. Scenes can only be shot in 2.5 to 10 minute sequences, which means editing afterwards. The constant ritual 'cutting, pasting, rewinding, watching; cutting, pasting, rewinding, and so on' that makes up the process of editing a film serves to make time look seamless. When the result is run through the projector, between the lamp and sound bulb, we see and hear an amplified version of what has been put together on this tiny strip of film.

Dean’s method of working is a very open one. She permits the element of chance to enter the process of research, filming, recording and editing, opening up a channel for her work to flow through rather than directing it from a strict, rigid concept. Coincidences thus have an important status as the concept that forms the basis of the work.

In the presentation of her works, the physical presence of the projector, with its peculiar sound and features, imports a sculptural element that she very much encourages. There is a tension between the machine and what it does 'blowing up a series of tiny images into a flawless moving image with sound' which adds to the magic of the work. Disappearance at Sea (Cinemascope) takes this tension to extremes. Dean filmed a lighthouse at nightfall, when it becomes functional. In the last shot the screen is dark, except for a moving spot of light touching the rocks and waves. With Jukebox 2 (2000), we can ‘travel’ through time and space by choosing one of the eight destinations and a particular time (between midnight and midday) on the machine.

Curator: Roland Groenenboom

Exhibition produced by the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA)

Museum hours:
Daily: 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Closed on Tuesday
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunday and holidays, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

MACBA - Plaza dels Angels 1 - Barcelona - Tel. (34) 934 120 810 Fax (34) 934 124 602

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