Eva Bensasson's Revenants is a collection of works involving digitally manipulated photographs, and a large wall-mounted lightbox. T1+2 Artspace is pleased to host Nominal_Politics, a selection of recent works by Manuel Saiz.
Eva Bensasson
Revenants
Eva Bensasson's Revenants is a collection of works involving digitally
manipulated photographs, and a large wall-mounted lightbox. Bensasson takes as
her source material photographs of gatherings (small or large) of people at a
variety of familiar, and sometimes unfamiliar, locations: concerts, festivals,
political demonstrations, queues at the cafe, airports, hospitals, railway
stations or restaurants - and works on these images digitally or by other means.
Removing the figures from a specific scene or, more exactly, highlighting them
by filling in their forms with a solid but emphatically flat blackness,
Bensasson encourages the viewer to consider issues of selfhood and identity,
anonymity and collectivity, the self and the other, presence and absence.
Keeping in this vivid form the starkly delineated gestures and "edges" of the
body, Revenants proposes that we contemplate how the individual relates to the
broader mass, fitting into the crowd or standing apart from it as archetype
or unacknowleged participant in a particular historical moment or event.
These works involving the removal of the idiosyncratic traits of individual
characters are accompanied by others in which the details of the site at which
such people were photographed are themselves erased. Removing the
contextualising elements of any given scene throws the individuals involved into
a state of studied disarray. Left in a state of disconnection, floating among
others similarly disengaged from the now absent scene, these erstwhile
purposeful subjects convey to the viewer something comical but also disturbing:
their own potential absence, erasure, "de-individualisation" at an unspecified
future time.
__________
Manuel Saiz
Nominal_Politics
T1+2 Artspace is pleased to host Nominal_Politics, a selection of recent works
by Manuel Saiz. Saiz works in a variety of media, employing performance, video
and installation, using these means to address issues involving the nature of
politics, and in particular how "the political" is today constituted, managed
and presented.
Countdown by Fallback utilises 28 incandescent lamps presented so as to echo the
shape of a 4-digit electronic display board, accompanied by 28 switches arranged
in the same formation. These may be activated by a participant in the gallery
space. The piece also includes a monitor displaying a countdown from 9999 -
0000, with the actual numbers generated by the participant being shown as they
are produced.
Retronym is a handmade device involving a black paper ribbon held between 2
rollers. A handle allows the ribbon to be turned in an endless loop. On the
ribbon are, painted in a manner mimicking that of electronic displays, the
words: " IS IT POLITICAL AN UNCOMMON USE OF TECHNOLOGY?."
Grief Management is made up of a soundproof but transparent vitrine in which has
been placed a monitor containing a small extract from the Ingmar Bergman film
Fanny and Alexander. The vitrine may be opened by the viewer, allowing the film
loop's soundtrack to be heard at high volume. The section from Bergman involves
a woman wailing loudly as she contemplates her husband's coffin.
All Resistance is Useless is a video documenting a single person demonstrating
on a deserted street. A precarious mechanical structure made from trolleys and
pushchairs carries placards bearing the words "WE ARE THE PEOPLE", whilst
portable cassette players audibly reproduce the same sentence.
Manuel Saiz is also currently showing at the East End Academy exhibition at the
Whitechapel Gallery.
Image: Manuel Saiz
Private View: Wed 16 June 2004, 7 - 9pm.
Exhibition Dates:.17 June - 16 July 2004. Gallery hours: 11am - 6pm, Wed - Sun
t1+2artspace
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