"Industrial Wall Panels" refers to re-defining the notion of industry. In the past, the word conjured of images of masses of steel, huge electric motors, steam, heat and density; Images represented so clearly, for example, in Chaplin's Modern Times, and Keatons The Electric House.
Industrial Wall Panels
Opening Reception: 1 18 03, 6-8PM
Andrew Neumann is a Boston-based artist who works
with electronic media in a variety of different permutations; sculpture,
electronic music, film and video installation. Born in New York, raised in New
Jersey, he received a B.S. from Emerson College in filmmaking, and taught in
the film department of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts through the 90's.
Last year, he had an exhibit at the DeCordova Museum in Lincoln, Mass, and
will be having a solo show of computer-based video installations at
BostonCyberarts 2003. His music has been performed around the Northeast and
New York City, and is distributed through Sublingual Records.
He was an Artist
in Residence at the iEar Studio at Rensselaer Polytech Institute in 2001, and
has had residences at McDowell Colony, Yaddo, Art Omi, STEIM, and the Ucross
Foundation. His single channel videos have been screened at the World Wide
Video Festival in The Hague, PBS, ArtistSpace and elsewhere. "Industrial Wall
Panels" refers to re-defining the notion of industry . In the past, the word
conjured of images of masses of steel, huge electric motors, steam, heat and
density; Images represented so clearly, for example, in Chaplin's Modern
Times , and Keatons The Electric House .
Now that we have evolved into the
digital age , these Panels may already be viewed as relics of a recently
passed generation. In addition, these works are about exploring the electronic
image in a self representational fashion. No video tape or digital image
buffers are used. Cameras embedded within the pieces defining the process that
is actually occurring. These works serve as exoskeletons; stripping away any
outer shell to explore the beauty of the industrial elements themselves. As
a practitioner of avant-garde film methods and ideologies, another main
interest of Neumann has been about observing/manipulating/dissecting the
cinematic apparatus , the camera and projector. Past works have included
multiple projections, two-sided films , loops, etc.
In the electronic media,
the connection is defined in a different mode; it is (potentially) immediate
and spontaneous. Although the camera and monitor/projector are the basic
mediators of the image, a great deal of electronic manipulation can occur with
ease and immediacy. With the wall panels that incorporate cameras and
monitors, the idea was to allow the apparatus to be evident to the observer,
and allow for any optical (mis)perceptions to be integral to the work itself.
By deconstructing these technologies, and reorganizing them in to new formal
"Panels", Neumann is questioning the value of the objects, disregarding any
protocol, (which is at the heart of any machine-based technological system)
and exploring the relationship between technology and the world it is meant to
serve. In essence, these Panels are meditations on technology and
specifically it's role in shaping how electronic media is
repressed/represented. > > > THE GALLERY bitforms is devoted to exploring the
realms of digital art. For more information contact gallery director Steve
Sacks at 212 366 6939 or email info@bitforms.com 529 west 20th street
bitforms.com 212 366 6939 info@bitforms.com
tues. - sat. > 11-6 PM
In the image: Dual Asynchronous Sine Waves, 2001.
bitforms
529 west 20th
ny ny 10011
212 366 6939