Play Gallery (old location)
Berlin
Hannoverschestr. 1
+49 03023455753 FAX +49 0302345 5754
WEB
Nuno Cera
dal 21/10/2005 al 19/12/2005
+49.(0)30.2345 5753 FAX +49.(0)30.2345 5754
WEB
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21/10/2005

Nuno Cera

Play Gallery (old location), Berlin

The Prora Complex and other works. Artist's films deal with the theme of memory and the sustainability of the experienced and the perceived. Prora is a film about a giant holiday camp designed by the Nazi leisure organisation, a thoroughly uncanny, terrifyingly huge, unending arc, stretching along the coastline, still standing today, as planned, as a solitary concrete monolith.


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The Prora Complex and other works

Prora:
It was intended to be the masterpiece of Third Reich tourism: Bad Prora, a giant holiday camp to accommodate 20,000 people, designed by the Nazi leisure organisation, Strength through Joy (Kraft durch Freude or KdF). Adolf Hitler himself was behind the plan. He envisaged a colossal seaside retreat for the German workers, but in 1939, the outbreak of the Second World War brought construction to a standstill. Today, much of this monstrous complex lies in ruins in the dunes of Prora. It is one of the most imposing architectural relics of the Nazi period, alongside the Nuremburg Party Congress Grounds and Castle Vogelsang.

In his artwork, Nuno Cera engages with processes of socio-political transformation, social hardship and cultural refractions. In his film, “Prora”, he paints a portrait of a chillingly unearthly structure, using a succession of travelling shots. He succeeds in revealing the most intriguing spatial and architectural elements of this legacy of the Nazi era, while still managing to retain a sense of great detachment. There is no admiration in Cera’s fascination; he is neither a Romantic nor a Sentimentalist. For the first time, Cera’s work contains narrative moments, which convey the feeling of being seized by a fascination for the structure’s otherworldly character. To balance the overriding documentary nature of the piece, he introduces music and gradually thickening clouds of smoke, which drift through the space in the final scene. To be moved is also to be troubled, and this feeling of unease should not be left unarticulated. The fog which swirls through the dark gloom of the long corridors and rooms carries on it Paul Celan’s words of loss and mourning in his Death Fugue.

Nuno Cera’s films deal with the theme of memory and the sustainability of the experienced and the perceived. With an oneiric quality, his films show the viewer how images continually re-play in the visual memory, how their perceived documentary style combines with a viewpoint that is subjective and open to interpretation. Prora is a film about a historical place, a thoroughly uncanny, terrifyingly huge, unending arc, stretching along the coastline, still standing today, as planned, as a solitary concrete monolith.

The film expresses the artist’s subjective viewpoint. The protagonist is the space as Cera finds it: damaged, decaying or gutted. This space becomes imprinted on the viewer’s mind and leaves its mark on the memory of the artist.

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Nuno Cera
Born in 1972 in Beja, Portugal. Lives and works in Berlin und Lisbon. Solo exhibitions (selection): 2004 Pure Light Sala do Risco, Lisboa; Dark Forces AH – Galeria de Arte Contemporânea António Henriques, Viseu (cat.); 2003 Nuno Cera & Marianne Stoll Galerie & Projekte Mathias Kampl, Berlin; Being Anywhere Galeria Pedro Cera, Lisboa; DK, Kunstpunkt Berlin, Berlin; Berlin - a super-8 movie I-20 Gallery, New York; 2002 Access Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin; Two intimate investigations Kunstpunkt Berlin, Berlin.

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Private view: Friday, 21 October 2005, 7 pm

Play - gallery for still and motion pictures
Hannoversche, 1 - Berlin
Opening Times: Wednesday – Saturday, 2 – 7 pm

IN ARCHIVIO [23]
Screening
dal 19/1/2007 al 19/1/2007

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