MCA Screen: Leslie Hewitt in collaboration with Bradford Young
17 May - 31 Aug 2014
Leslie Hewitt in collaboration with cinematographer Bradford Young
Untitled (Structures), 2012
Dual channel video installation
00:16:47:00 loop
35 mm film transferred to HD video
Produced by Karin Chien, and commissioned by the Menil Collection, Houston, with the support of Jerean and Holland Chaney, in collaboration with the Des Moines Art Center and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Additional funding provided by Joseph Chung, Marilyn and Larry Fields, and Elliot and Kimberly Perry
Material support provided by Kodak, Panavision, Harbor Picture Company. Courtesy the artists and Lucien Terras Inc., New York
Untitled (Structures), 2012
Dual channel video installation
00:16:47:00 loop
35 mm film transferred to HD video
Produced by Karin Chien, and commissioned by the Menil Collection, Houston, with the support of Jerean and Holland Chaney, in collaboration with the Des Moines Art Center and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Additional funding provided by Joseph Chung, Marilyn and Larry Fields, and Elliot and Kimberly Perry
Material support provided by Kodak, Panavision, Harbor Picture Company. Courtesy the artists and Lucien Terras Inc., New York
MCA SCREEN: LESLIE HEWITT IN COLLABORATION WITH BRADFORD YOUNG
17 May – 31 August 2014
The two-channel video installation Untitled (Structures) by Leslie Hewitt (American, b. 1977) and Bradford Young (American, b. 1977) is comprised of a series of silent vignettes, filmed at sites connected to the Civil Rights movement and the struggle for racial equality in the United States. Inspired by an archive of Civil Rights-era photographs at the Menil Collection in Houston, Hewitt and Young visited locations in Memphis, Arkansas, as well as here in Chicago, where these iconic photographs were taken. Many of the buildings and urban landscapes seem unremarkable today, the signs of their past significance at risk of being forgotten. Hewitt and Young look at these sites closely but present them without nostalgia. As Hewitt explains, “We were like urban archaeologists, finding traces of history in the density of contemporary life.” From this point of departure, the film meditates on the resonance of history in the present day as the defining events of the past grow more distant.
Hewitt, a New York-based artist, is concerned with how photographs convey time, create meaning, and shape understandings of history. Bradford, a cinematographer, has been described by The New York Times as “one of a cadre of emerging black filmmakers . . . making visually compelling cinema addressing the outliers at the edges of black culture in America.” Untitled (Structures) marks a point of convergence between film and photography—the media in which the two artists often work. The film hovers at the border between still and moving images, mimicking the stillness and silence of photographs as the camera fixes steadily on different spaces. Within each frame, however, are hints of motion: lights flicker in an empty room or a young man or woman blinks as he or she stands still.
Untitled (Structures) was commissioned by the Menil Collection with support from the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Des Moines Art Center. This presentation is organized by Naomi Beckwith, Marilyn and Larry Fields Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.
17 May – 31 August 2014
The two-channel video installation Untitled (Structures) by Leslie Hewitt (American, b. 1977) and Bradford Young (American, b. 1977) is comprised of a series of silent vignettes, filmed at sites connected to the Civil Rights movement and the struggle for racial equality in the United States. Inspired by an archive of Civil Rights-era photographs at the Menil Collection in Houston, Hewitt and Young visited locations in Memphis, Arkansas, as well as here in Chicago, where these iconic photographs were taken. Many of the buildings and urban landscapes seem unremarkable today, the signs of their past significance at risk of being forgotten. Hewitt and Young look at these sites closely but present them without nostalgia. As Hewitt explains, “We were like urban archaeologists, finding traces of history in the density of contemporary life.” From this point of departure, the film meditates on the resonance of history in the present day as the defining events of the past grow more distant.
Hewitt, a New York-based artist, is concerned with how photographs convey time, create meaning, and shape understandings of history. Bradford, a cinematographer, has been described by The New York Times as “one of a cadre of emerging black filmmakers . . . making visually compelling cinema addressing the outliers at the edges of black culture in America.” Untitled (Structures) marks a point of convergence between film and photography—the media in which the two artists often work. The film hovers at the border between still and moving images, mimicking the stillness and silence of photographs as the camera fixes steadily on different spaces. Within each frame, however, are hints of motion: lights flicker in an empty room or a young man or woman blinks as he or she stands still.
Untitled (Structures) was commissioned by the Menil Collection with support from the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Des Moines Art Center. This presentation is organized by Naomi Beckwith, Marilyn and Larry Fields Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.