Nicolas Provost, for his 'Plot Point Trilogy' exhibition combines three medium-length video works for the first time and explores the boundaries of and overlaps between fiction and reality. Maria Iorio and Raphael Cuomo present a new constellation of the ensemble Twisted Realism, a project that started in Rome in 2008: the full-length video essay of the same title, collected documents and a newly produced series of photographs which contextualize the project. At a time when Kassel is in the midst of preparations for documenta 13, Argos takes a look back through the prism of television reporting to a key period in the history of this mega event.
NICOLAS PROVOST – Plot Point Trilogy
The refreshing and highly unusual work of Nicolas Provost (1969) builds bridges between the visual arts, cinema and video.
While playing with the jargon and narrative conventions of the Western film tradition, his audiovisual work reflects on the
human condition in general and our mediatised reality in particular.
At Argos, this Brussels artist, who recently made his feature film debut with the much praised work The Invader, will be
combining three medium-length video works for the first time. In the triptych entitled Plot Point Trilogy, Provost once again
explores the boundaries of and overlaps between fiction and reality. He does not use found footage to do this, but – in the
editing, by means of the soundtrack – manipulates everyday events (which he filmed himself) in such a way that they rival the
great moments of classic Hollywood cinema. At the heart of this lies the build-up and release of tension: Provost converts
probably insignificant actions into momentous theatrical actions played out against the imposing background of a great city.
What is more, each of the three episodes is a formal study in its own right: the artist employs techniques taken out of context
to mould ‘reality’ to his will.
In the first part, Plot Point (2007), Times Square in New York is the dramatic backdrop to a thriller with no storyline or defined
narrative, based on Provost’s observation of the activities of the NYPD. He also used a hidden camera for Stardust (2010). In
this second part, Provost fuses the glorious yet ambiguous aura of Las Vegas, the gambling capital, with an exciting crime
story in which a handful of Hollywood stars make an appearance. Provost shot the final part of the Plot Point Trilogy in Tokyo.
This film, Tokyo Giants (working title, 2012), is soon to have its world premiere. He here presents the man in the street as a
film protagonist whose reality lies somewhere between a dream and a nightmare.
In these three aesthetic reinterpretations, Provost, using seemingly insignificant raw material, not only moulds mystical
spaces that compellingly absorb the viewer, but also masterfully shows that the dream-world called ‘cinema’ is simply a
constructed parallel reality comprising clichés, technical rules and dramaturgical conventions. (IS)
---
MARIA IORIO & RAPHAËL CUOMO – TWISTED REALISM
Since 2006, the long-term and collaborative projects of Maria Iorio (1975) and Raphaël Cuomo (1977) have formed two
parallel ensembles of works: Toward a history of the vanishing present researches the economies of visibility in relation to
past and present mobility regimes over the shores of the Mediterranean Sea. The resulting body of works manifests divergent
histories or unfinished negotiations that account for an entangled modernity.
At Argos, Maria Iorio and Raphaël Cuomo present a new constellation of the ensemble Twisted Realism, a project that
started in Rome in 2008 and developed in several phases. The exhibition premieres the final version of the full-length video
essay of the same title, and brings together, in an architectural display, collected documents and a newly produced series of
photographs which contextualize the project.
Twisted Realism examines various ‘aesthetics of reality’ and the intertwined histories of architecture, migration and cinema.
Drawing on several archives in Rome and Bologna, the project focuses on the reconfiguration of the urban space after WWII
and its depiction in Italian cinema in the period of the ‘economic miracle’.
Iorio and Cuomo revisit some shooting locations of Mamma Roma (1962), which was partly filmed in the INA-Casa Tuscolano
neighbourhood in Rome. This large-scale social housing project was realised in 1950-1960 in the framework of a national
plan instigated by the democratic-christian government. In this way, Pasolini’s film becomes the starting point to investigate
both this period, which is marked by a reorganisation of capitalism, increasing consumption and the emergence of television,
and the contemporary Italian context. Twisted Realism evokes the legacies of neorealism through its instance in Italian
architecture and through Anna Magnani's figure, and manifests how the Italian art cinema of the 1960s was commodified in a
process of privatisation of culture and monopolisation of the mediascape, as well as how it was appropriated for writing an
unifying version of the national history.
Iorio and Cuomo invent strategies for (re)appropriating cinema history and propose a convergence of past and present to
question the roles and functions of cinema, its relation to political and economical power and ultimately its ability of
resistance. (AC)
---
BLACK BOX
DOCUMENTA 4-6. ART, MEDIA AND THE ANTINOMIES OF MEGA-ART EVENTS
At a time when Kassel is in the midst of preparations for dOCUMENTA (13), Argos takes a look back through the prism of
television reporting to a key period in the history of this mega event. The documenta time-line runs parallel with that of
television. The ARD company made the first television broadcast in Germany on 1 November 1954. It was on 15 July of
the following year, during the Cold War, that the first documenta was held. The period from 1955 to the present reads like a
story of upscaling for the masses, rooted in the consumer and entertainment culture, media proliferation and advancing
populism. The only partially achieved social and artistic aims of the curators and artists, inherent to working in a format that
has to reconcile all manner of paradoxes and contradictions, were another constant in this period.
If one were to draw up an account of the reception of contemporary art, one could not ignore the documenta-era from 1968 to
1977. Two documentaries by Jef Cornelis (d4 & d5) and a live broadcast by the Hessischer Rundfunk (d6) tell the story of the
strangled ambitions, misunderstandings and the overriding madness of the moment.
The first three documentas, organised by its initiator Arnold Bode, showed a retrospective overview of international art that
was intended to put postwar Germany back on the map. Cornelis’ film Documenta 4 marked the break with what had gone
before. Now it was all ‘art as it happens’. A twenty-four member jury that included Bode came up with a chaotic exhibition. In
1968, the year of revolution, art was in the midst of a breakdown of authority. Cornelis’ Documenta 5 unmasked the work of
the curator Harald Szeemann as a consumer spectacular rather than the laboratory for art and society that had originally
been envisaged. In 1977 Manfred Schneckenburger’s d6 documenta 6 sailed under the flag of ‘art in the media society’.
During a live broadcast by the Hessischer Rundfunk such artists as Nam June Paik and Joseph Beuys found themselves in
hostile territory. As far as the granting of equal rights to art and the media was concerned, and the notion of the oppositional
public sphere, the only thing they could still do was make a pastiche of them.
DAILY SCREENING PROGRAM
11h00
Jef Cornelis - Documenta 4
1968, 53’40", b&w, Dutch, English, French and German spoken, English subtitles.
12h00
Jef Cornelis - Documenta 5
1972, 53’19", colour and b&w, Dutch, English, French and German spoken, English subtitles.
13h00
Peter de Leuw & Hansgeorg Dickmann - documenta 6
1977, 40’26", German spoken, English subtitles.
Peter de Leuw & Hansgeorg Dickmann - documenta 6 - Ad hoc Diskussion nach der Eröffnung der documenta 6
1977, 44’50", German spoken, English subtitles.
14h30
Jef Cornelis - Documenta 4
15h30
Jef Cornelis - Documenta 5
16h30
Peter de Leuw & Hansgeorg Dickmann - documenta 6
Peter de Leuw & Hansgeorg Dickmann - documenta 6 - Ad hoc Diskussion nach der Eröffnung der documenta 6
Image: Nicolas Provost, Tokyo Giants (Working Title), 2012. Courtesy of the Artist
PRESS PREVIEW IN THE PRESENCE OF NICOLAS PROVOST, MARIA IORIO & RAPHAËL CUOMO
Friday 22.04.2012 – 11:00 (or, by appointment, later that day). Please confirm your presence to Ive Stevenheydens via
ive@argosarts.org or 02/ 229.00.03.
Argos, Centre for Art and Media
Werfstraat 13 Rue du Chantier – 1000 Brussels
WED-SUN – 11.00-18.00
Entrance fee: €5/3