Beaconsfield
London
22 Newport Street
020 75826465 FAX 020 75826486
WEB
Greenwich Degree Zero
dal 21/2/2006 al 1/4/2006
Mercoledi'- Domenica 12- 18

Segnalato da

Rachel Fleming-Mulford


approfondimenti

Rod Dickinson
Tom McCarthy



 
calendario eventi  :: 




21/2/2006

Greenwich Degree Zero

Beaconsfield, London

The first collaboration between artist Rod Dickinson and artist/novelist Tom McCarthy. On February 15th, 1894, a French anarchist named Martial Bourdin was killed when the bomb he was carrying detonated. The exhibition interrogates the role of media and technology in the construction of public experience and memory. Using the mechanisms of historical representation, the show is a compelling mixture of fact and fiction.


comunicato stampa

Rod Dickinson and Tom McCarthy

Greenwich Degree Zero, the first collaboration between artist Rod Dickinson and artist/novelist Tom McCarthy, is an exhibition that interrogates the role of media and technology in the construction of public experience and memory. Using the mechanisms of historical representation, Greenwich Degree Zero is a compelling mixture of fact and fiction.

The artists' starting point is a strange event that, while it received large amounts of publicity at the time, is now all but forgotten. On the afternoon of February 15th, 1894, a French anarchist named Martial Bourdin was killed when the bomb he was carrying detonated outside the Royal Observatory in London's Greenwich Park. It was generally assumed that his intention had been to blow up this building, the place from which all time throughout the British Empire and the world was measured, and a prime symbol of science - "the sacrosanct fetish of the day''1.

In Greenwich Degree Zero, Rod Dickinson and Tom McCarthy re-imagine Bourdin's act as a successful attack on the Observatory. They do so by infiltrating and twisting the media of Bourdin's time: creating a film shot on a hand-cranked Victorian cinematic camera depicting the burning Observatory, and reprinting existing 1894 newspaper reports and anarchist literature 'doctored' to fit their version of events. The resulting pseudo-archival installation reports an event that did not quite happen, relocating the genuine public outrage and hysteria about the threat of anarchist terror that prevailed in the 1890s in the ambiguous space of non-event.

Victorian anarchism was linked with the avant-garde in art and literature of the late 19th century and was also a popular mass movement. Bourdin's death brought on a plethora of speculative stories in both the mainstream and underground media. A conspiracy theory developed that a well-timed Œforeign anarchist outrage¹ would propel Lord Salisbury's proposals for tightening the asylum laws through parliament. Rather than try to establish the 'truth', Dickinson and McCarthy use a form of repetition to reach back to degree zero: of time, of mediation and of terror.

Financially assisted by Arts Council England.

Preview: Tuesday 21 February from 6pm

Beaconsfield
22 Newport Street - London
Gallery hours: Wednesday-Sunday 12-6pm

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