Jill Magid
13 Nov - 31 Dec 2005
Jill Magid
Libration Point
Guestcurator: Jelle Bouwhuis
13 november – 31 december 2005
Opening: 12 november at 5 p.m.
The work of Jill Magid (1973) was one of the most remarkable contributions at last year’s Liverpool Biennial. For this project she essentially took control over the city’s ubiquitous surveillance camera system. Almost incessantly she had herself filmed by it, resulting in a rich variety of video footage that alternates between objective registration and filmic fiction. Magid directed an institute that we usually associate with distanced formality, and by doing so, succeeded to undermine its presumed visual superiority.
For Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam, invited by guest curator Jelle Bouwhuis, Magid has made a body of new works. As in the Liverpool project these works refer to the disciplining systems in current society, thanks to the help of forensic artists, among others. Magid exploited the fictional possibilities of their forensic services, resulting in works that evoke questions of presence, memory, and subjectivity rather than success-rate or functionality. They all point to a woman whose identity and physical appearance remain impalpable, in spite of the attention that is directed towards her. Weaving a narrative pattern, the artist acts as a director, positioning the viewer as a witness to events that have transpired.
This is especially the case with Camera One Wester Park, a short film with an accompanying voice-over, shot in Amsterdam’s Westerpark. Both the images and the voice describe a dramatic scene of adultery, loosely based on Antonioni’s experimental film L’avventura of 1960. A score of forensic composite drawings entitled Composite are presented, as well as a three dimensional portrait, the ecstatic Head, manufactured by a forensic expert after a written description and secondary physical evidence.
The exhibition also features Gambier Night, a video created from previously unused footage of the Liverpool project. The video transforms a series of banal images produced by public observation cameras into a suspenseful cinematic event. The exhibition is completed with Auto Portrait Pending, a work consisting of a ring setting and a series of contracts, the first of which is signed between the artist and a company that produces diamonds from of the ashes of human remains. This ‘portrait’ raises questions about representation, about western society and its relation to death and artifacts, and what it means for an artist to become an art object, intended for display, within the art institution or private art collection.
© Jill Magid
Head, 2005 (forensic reconstruction, in progress, by Maja d'Hollosy)
Libration Point
Guestcurator: Jelle Bouwhuis
13 november – 31 december 2005
Opening: 12 november at 5 p.m.
The work of Jill Magid (1973) was one of the most remarkable contributions at last year’s Liverpool Biennial. For this project she essentially took control over the city’s ubiquitous surveillance camera system. Almost incessantly she had herself filmed by it, resulting in a rich variety of video footage that alternates between objective registration and filmic fiction. Magid directed an institute that we usually associate with distanced formality, and by doing so, succeeded to undermine its presumed visual superiority.
For Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam, invited by guest curator Jelle Bouwhuis, Magid has made a body of new works. As in the Liverpool project these works refer to the disciplining systems in current society, thanks to the help of forensic artists, among others. Magid exploited the fictional possibilities of their forensic services, resulting in works that evoke questions of presence, memory, and subjectivity rather than success-rate or functionality. They all point to a woman whose identity and physical appearance remain impalpable, in spite of the attention that is directed towards her. Weaving a narrative pattern, the artist acts as a director, positioning the viewer as a witness to events that have transpired.
This is especially the case with Camera One Wester Park, a short film with an accompanying voice-over, shot in Amsterdam’s Westerpark. Both the images and the voice describe a dramatic scene of adultery, loosely based on Antonioni’s experimental film L’avventura of 1960. A score of forensic composite drawings entitled Composite are presented, as well as a three dimensional portrait, the ecstatic Head, manufactured by a forensic expert after a written description and secondary physical evidence.
The exhibition also features Gambier Night, a video created from previously unused footage of the Liverpool project. The video transforms a series of banal images produced by public observation cameras into a suspenseful cinematic event. The exhibition is completed with Auto Portrait Pending, a work consisting of a ring setting and a series of contracts, the first of which is signed between the artist and a company that produces diamonds from of the ashes of human remains. This ‘portrait’ raises questions about representation, about western society and its relation to death and artifacts, and what it means for an artist to become an art object, intended for display, within the art institution or private art collection.
© Jill Magid
Head, 2005 (forensic reconstruction, in progress, by Maja d'Hollosy)