European premiere of Soy mi madre, the latest film by Phil Collins. Here the artist expands on these themes by using the format of the telenovela. Commissioned in 2008 by the Aspen Art Museum as part of the Jane and Marc Nathanson Dintiguished Artist in Residency Program, in this work Collins focuses on the Latino and immigrant populations of Colorado, a sizable percentage of which hail from northwestern Mexico.
Victoria Miro Gallery hosts the
European premiere of soy mi madre,
the latest film by Phil Collins, in his
second solo exhibition with the gallery.
Eliciting the complex and ambiguous relationship between the camera and its subject, Phil Collins’ work examines
individual and collective systems of representation. Collins’ multifaceted practice is based on a close engagement
with place and community, and has addressed issues of ethnicity, gender, and political and linguistic identity
through participatory events often organised in regions of social upheaval. In producing these projects, which have
ranged from castings to a dance-a-thon to press conferences, Collins appropriates aspects of the documentary
tradition and fuses them with elements of popular culture to create tender, affectionate, and sometimes
melancholic descriptions of humanity.
In soy mi madre, Collins expands on these themes by using the format of the telenovela. Commissioned in 2008 by
the Aspen Art Museum as part of the Jane and Marc Nathanson Dintiguished Artist in Residency Program, in this
work Collins focuses on the Latino and immigrant populations of Colorado, a sizable percentage of which hail
from northwestern Mexico. In Aspen itself, this community figures mainly as a non-resident low-qualified work
force, dispersed through a ring of satellite towns from which it commutes daily. At the same time alluding to and
refuting the preconceived glamorous image of Aspen, Collins made a work in resonance with the cultural context
of this specific population.
The telenovela is one of the most popular products of Latin America. It is a format that exploits the world market
through the articulation and preservation of cultural difference, and at the same time serves as a powerful tool of
self-representation and the re-signification of the continent’s colonial legacy. Shot in México City on 16mm film,
soy mi madre is structured as a standard telenovela episode. The script, written by hired Hollywood screenwriters
and supervised by the artist, is indirectly inspired by Jean Genet’s The Maids, a violent exploration of the intricate
power dynamic that exists between unequals. Revolving around ideas of role-play and performance, masks and
mirrors, symbols and rituals, The Maids posits social identities as volatile and unbalanced—a notion which soy mi
madre also takes as its point of origin.
Filmed with some of Mexico’s leading television stars, and including the contribution of the acclaimed production
designer Salvador Parra (Volver, Before Night Falls), soy mi madre is a study in the aesthetics and politics of
melodrama. Having grown up on the social-realist tradition of British soap, Collins is drawn to melodrama for, in
his own words, ‘its disruptive potential to address, within a highly predicated framework, some of the pains and
dilemmas of the private sphere.’ With its distinct cinematic qualities and use of professional actors, soy mi madre
appears a significant departure from Collins’ usual methods. Yet his motivation remains the same: our need to
reflect upon the pressing concerns of the current political debate. His film can thus be seen as an oblique
comment on questions of race, class, and social politics in the United States.
Phil Collins: soy mi madre will be published by the Aspen Art Museum later this year.
Including contributions by Carlos Monsiváis, Mexico’s leading cultural analyst, Magali Arriola, writer and curator,
and an in-depth interview with the artist by Aspen Art Museum director Heidi Zuckerman-Jacobson.
soy mi madre was first exhibited at the Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, Colorado in 2008 and earlier this year at Tanya
Bonakdar Gallery, New York. soy mi madre will feature in The Reach of Realism at the Museum of Contemporary
Art, North Miami, 1 December 2009 – 14 February 2010, and will also be presented on local TV network in
Aspen and in Collins’ solo exhibition at DAAD Galerie in Berlin in February 2010.
Background & Biography
Relating to performance-based and conceptual approaches to video and photography, the art of Phil Collins
investigates the nuances of social relations in various locations and global communities. Collins employs elements
of popular culture, and sometimes operates within forms of low-budget television and reportage-style
documentary to address the camera as an instrument of both truth and deception. In recent years he has worked
in places such as Baghdad, Belgrade, Bogotá, Jakarta, and Kosovo, repeatedly underlining the unpredictable
transferences that occur between the producer, the participant, and the viewer.
Born in Runcorn, UK, in 1970, Phil Collins currently lives in Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions include Tramway,
Glasgow (2009), Dallas Museum of Art (2007), Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh (2007), National Gallery of
Canada, Ottawa (2007), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2006), Tate Britain, London (2006-07) and
Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus (2005). Collins has participated in group exhibitions including The Making
of Art, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt (2009), Acting Out: Social Experiments in Video, Institute of Contemporary Art,
Boston (2009), Life on Mars, the 55th Carnegie International, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh (2008), and The
Cinema Effect: Illusion, Reality and Moving Image, Part II: Realisms, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Washington DC, (2008). He was nominated for the 2006 Turner Prize and was one of the recipients of the
DAAD Scholarship in Visual Art for 2008/2009.
Press Contact
Kathy Stephenson Director of Communications
tel 0207 549 0422, kathy@victoria-miro.com
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