Thomas Dane

A Certain Tendency in Representation

19 - 25 Sep 2005

A Certain Tendency in Representation

Cineclub at Thomas Dane
Monday 19 – Sunday 25 September 2005
Exhibition curated by Francesco Manacorda


The directors of Thomas Dane are pleased to announce the forthcoming exhibition A Certain Tendency in Representation, a project that will convert the gallery into a fully functioning cinema for one week only. The screening room will be a total installation by Slovenian artist Tobias Putrih (b.1972). Taking the form of a cinema festival, the show will consist of films by young contemporary international and UK-based practitioners sharing a passion for cinema – many of whom will be exhibiting in London for the first time. From linguistic to architectural concerns, the participating artists pay homage to every aspect of cinematic art. Highlights of the programme include special screenings of Paul Sietsema’s visionary film Empire (2002) and John Bock’s surreal Meechfieber (2004), which will be shown on three evenings.

For his first London exhibition, Tobias Putrih has been commissioned to make a life size projection room consisting of a small, 25-seat ‘viewing machine’, inspired by early 20th century cinema theatre design in London and built in collaboration with the architect Luka Melon. Putrih’s investigations into modernist organic architecture, particularly as manifested in the UK through the ‘Odeon Style’, develop his ongoing preoccupation with the history of exhibition display, and combine to propose an experimental alternative to the ‘black box’ as the dominant model for showing time based art. Architectural models and drawings by the artist will also be included in the exhibition. The sculptural installation will serve as a purpose-built container for the screening of the ‘film festival’.

The group exhibition of short films will consist of a four hour long cinema programme, divided into two parts and projected once a day. It aims to point out the interest amongst younger time-based artists for addressing the cinematic apparatus as a way to filter the world presented in front of the camera. This generation seems to be drawn to film and its visual vocabulary for its constrictive aesthetic rigour. Works such as Dorit Margreiter’s 10104 Angelo View Drive (2004) or Isabell Heimerdinger’s Love Film (2004) combine a fascination for the flickering images of 16mm with conceptual precision. Unlike video, film implies the artist’s mastery of cinematic techniques: films such as Clemens von Wedemeyer’s Otjesd (2005) and Christian Jankowski What Remains (2004) seek to unveil the social and cultural implications behind cinematic production and consumption. The second room of the gallery will host a selection of artworks by the same group of practitioners, conceived and installed as a cineclub hall.

The title of the exhibition – referring to the infamous article Une Certaine Tendence du Cinéma Français published by Francois Truffaut in Les Cahiers du Cinéma no. 31, 1954 – alludes to the freshness with which the artists express their sincere fascination for cinema as a representational device and aesthetic tool to mediate reality. The exhibition is not based on a thematic concept, but rather tries to identify and articulate a passion shared by its participants. It addresses both cinema as an architectural space of altered perception and the notion of the imperceptible filtering that takes place while conceiving a cinematic representation.

Participating artists: John Bock, Manon de Boer, Lonnie van Brummelen and Wilhelm De Rooij, Brad Butler and Karen Mirza, Jeanne Faust, Isabell Heimerdinger, Marine Hugonnier, Christian Jankowski, Anna Lucas, Maria Lusitano, Dorit Margreiter, Daria Martin, Elizabeth McAlpine, Rosalind Nashashibi, Simon Popper, Tobias Putrih, Paul Sietsema, Clemens von Wedemeyer
Opening evening: Monday 19 September 2005 from 19.00 to 21.00 followed by special screenings of Paul Sietsema’s Empire and of John Bock’s Meechfieber

Opening hours: Monday 19th to Sunday 25th from 14.30 to 18.30; special screenings from 21.00 to 22.00 on Monday, Wednesday and Friday (see programme)

Entrance: due to limited seating booking is necessary
email cineclub@thomasdane.com; cinema ticket £2 (optional)
profits will be donated to the Cinema Theatre Association

For further press information please contact: Alice Chubb t: 020 7925 2505
e: alice@thomasdane.com or Francesco Manacorda e: cineclub@thomasdane.com

Day Programme 14.30 – 18.30

From 14.30 to 16:10
Clemens von Wedemeyer (D), Otjesd (Leaving), 2005, 16mm film transferred to DVD, 14’
Clemens von Wedemeyer (D), The Making of Otjesd, 2005, Video, 12’
Marine Hugonnier (F/UK), Territory I, II, III, 2004, Territory I (White lies), 5’15”; Territory II (The kissing point), 12’45”; Territory III (Alkdereh House, Ramallah), 5’03”, 16mm films
Rosalind Nashashibi (UK), Midwest, 2002, 16mm film, 11’
Rosalind Nashashibi (UK), Midwest Field, 2002, 16mm film, 3’30”
Isabell Heimerdinger (D), Waiting, Acting Waiting, 2002, two 16mm films, 15’
Isabell Heimerdinger (D), Love Film, 2004, 16mm film, 10’
Daria Martin (USA/UK), Ry in Paris, 1999, 16mm film, 3’
Dorit Margreiter (AU), 10104 Angelo View Drive, 2004, 16mm film, 6’56”

From 16:15 to 18.30
Lonnie van Brummelen and Willem de Rooij (NL), I Frenatori, 1997, 16mm film, 3’
Lonnie van Brummelen (NL), Wegrenfilms (Runaway Films), 1997, Super8 film transferred to 16mm film, 3’
Anna Lucas (UK), Trevety 2, 2002, 16mm film transferred to DVD, 12’
Jeanne Faust (D), Rodeo, 1999, 16mm film transferred to DVD, 9’27”
Maria Lusitano Santos (P), Nostalgia, 2002, Super 8 film and video transferred to DVD, 17’
Brad Butler and Karen Mirza (UK), Meditations on Black, 2005, 16mm B/W film, 12’
Brad Butler and Karen Mirza (UK), The Space Between, 2005, 16mm colour film, 12
Simon Popper (UK), Staring Still, 2002, three 16mm films, 12’
Manon de Boer (NL), Sylvia Kristel – Paris, 2003, Super8 film transferred to DVD, 40’
Christian Jankowski (D), What Remains, 2004, 16mm film, 11’33”

Special evenings on Monday 19, Wednesday 21 and Friday 23 from 21.00 to 22.00
Paul Sietsema (USA), Empire, 2002, 16mm silent film, 24’
John Bock (D), Meechfieber, 2004, 16mm film transferred to DVD, 38’30”
 

Tags: John Bock, Manon de Boer, Lonnie van Brummelen, Jeanne Faust, Isabell Heimerdinger, Marine Hugonnier, Christian Jankowski, Dorit Margreiter, Daria Martin, Elizabeth McAlpine, Rosalind Nashashibi, Simon Popper, Tobias Putrih, Willem de Rooij, Paul Sietsema, Clemens von Wedemeyer