Brock Enright
Ivan Hurzeler
Erik L. Barnes
Sonia Bedikian
Theodore Bouloukos
James Case
Grant Cornett
Richard Dacey
Catherine Delavigne
Maggie Dickinson
Angelique Everett
Mark Gibson
Brandon Hoy
Matt Jones
Daniel Joseph
Chris Kent
Maurina Lioce
Jody Lee Lipes
Bryant MacMillan
Philip Manley
Albert Minero
Carolyn Morrison
Dee Nowitzky
Josh Nowitzky
Jessica O'Grady-Marsh
Marko Orso
Paulo Padilha
Chris Parachini
Dominique Porter
Thommy Prin
Mark Sarosi
Tim Soete
Ross Steeves
Jennifer Zakrzewski
A project by Brock Enright and Ivan Hurzeler based on a documented 5-day group encounter they created in August 2005. All of the participants will be invited to reunite for the installation of the exhibition, which will include sculpture, video and photographs. Both the exhibition and the movie blur the distinction between fiction and reality.
A collaborative project by Brock Enright and Ivan Hurzeler
Artists: Brock Enright, Ivan Hurzeler, Erik L. Barnes, Sonia Bedikian, Theodore Bouloukos, James Case, Grant Cornett, Richard Dacey, Catherine Delavigne, Maggie Dickinson, Angelique Everett, Mark Gibson, Brandon Hoy, Matt Jones, Daniel Joseph, Chris Kent, Maurina Lioce, Jody Lee Lipes, Bryant MacMillan, Philip Manley, Albert Minero, Carolyn Morrison, Dee Nowitzky, Josh Nowitzky, Jessica O'Grady-Marsh, Marko Orso, Paulo Padilha, Chris Parachini, Dominique Porter, Thommy Prin, Mark Sarosi, Tim Soete, Ross Steeves & Jennifer Zakrzewski
Cynthia Broan Gallery is delighted to announce "Forest", a collaborative project by Brock Enright and Ivan Hurzeler based on a documented five-day group encounter they created in August 2005. All of the "Forest" participants will be invited to reunite for the installation of the exhibition, which will include sculpture, video and photographs, in tandem with the premiere of "Forest", an hour-long movie by Ivan Hurzeler. With the seamless contributions of the participants, both the exhibition and the movie blur the distinction between fiction and reality. Only the participants will know what actually happened in the "Forest", but they do have stories to tell. Brock and Ivan allow the secrets and lies to unfold through compiled detritus and documentation, and in the
poignant cinematic narrative of the film.
In "Forest", we follow a young woman who rises from underwater and crosses a great distance to find other people like her, dressed in athletic uniform and camping in a great "Forest". Each day is progressively more chaotic, until a crisis occurs and the
athletes must leave.
Ivan and Brock spent months arriving at a concept largely derived from Brock’s lexicon of psychological interventionism. Many of Brock’s veteran players were up for the experience, and Ivan’s shooting script helped establish the environment and the situations that would eventually comprise a tiny, self contained world in moving pictures.
"Forest" is Ivan Hurzeler’s second movie to premier at the gallery, and his most ambitious project to date. His movies screened at international film festivals in France and Germany in 2004. He received his BFA from Rhode Island School of Design in 1995. He lives and works in New York and Los Angeles.
Brock Enright, a New York artist, received his MFA at Columbia University in 2001. He has exhibited widely in museums, galleries, theaters and on the internet. His work was recently included in Expander at London’s Royal Academy, and Greater New York at PS1. He had his first solo exhibition, Raising Dead Mothers, at Vilma Gold, London in 2005, and his adaptation of Freidrich Schiller’s 1781 play The Robbers is currently playing at the German National Theater in Weimar, Germany.
Film credits: Dedication to Sonia Bedikian, who made the production of this movie possible and died in January 2006.
Cynthia Broan Gallery presents "Forest"; Produced by Anders Hedberg; Executive Producers: Cynthia Broan & Sonia Bedikian; Directed by Ivan Hurzeler in collaboration with Brock Enright; Score by Philip Manley; Story by Catherine Delavigne; Director of Photography: Grant Cornett; Additional Camera: Jody Lee Lipes; Edited by Erik Barnes.
Screenings every hour, on the hour. 10 am-5 pm Tues/Wed/Fri and 10 am-8pm Thurs/Sat.
(running time: 60 minutes, contains some graphic material) Seating is limited.
Opening reception: Thursday, February 23, 6-9 pm
Cynthia Broan Gallery
546 W 29th Street - New York