segunda-feira, 17 de novembro de 2008

The Fruitmarket Gallery presents Close-Up-Stan Brakhage-Mothlight




Mais uma vez, recebemos o release da ARTNOW ,desta feita, a arte de STAN BRAKHAGE (MothLight,film mudo, de 4 minutos-beleza poura, vejam a delicada imagem em verde acima)

Divulga
Clevane Pessoa de Araujo Lopes,
Diret.Regional do InBrasCi


~The Fruitmarket Gallery presents Close-Up




Stan Brakhage, Mothlight, 1963
16mm film, silent, colour, 4 minutes
Courtesy of the Estate of Stan Brakhage and LUX, London
Close-Up, Proximity and defamiliarisation in art, film and photography
The Fruitmarket Gallery
45 Market Street
Edinburgh
EH1 1DF
Scotland
Phone: +44 (0) 131 225 2383
Fax: +44 (0) 131 220 3130
Contact: The Fruitmarket Gallery
info@fruitmarket.co.uk

www.fruitmarket.co.uk

24 October 2008 - 11 January 2009

Open: Mon-Sat 11am–6pm Sun 12noon–5pm

Festive Closure
24 Dec 2008 – 2 Jan 2009 (inclusive)
Normal hours resume 3 Jan 2009



Artists: Laure Albin-Guillot, Aenne Biermann, Karl Blossfeldt, Mel Bochner, Jacques-André Boiffard, Stan Brakhage, Brassaï, Luis Buñuel, Kate Craig, Salvador Dalí, Wim Delvoye, Mona Hatoum, John Hilliard, Mike Kelley, Eli Lotar, Dora Maar, Man Ray, Jean Painlevé, Giuseppe Penone, Albert Renger-Patzsch, Carolee Schneemann, Simon Starling

The latest in The Fruitmarket Gallery's series of group exhibitions curated by eminent scholars, writers and artists, Close-Up explores the defamiliarising effects of bringing a camera lens very close to its subject. Trans-historical and cross-generational, the exhibition brings together selected experiments in close-up film and photography from mid-nineteenth century microscopy; avant-garde film and photography from the 1920s and 1930s; post-war conceptual art; and contemporary art from the 1990s and 2000s.

Salvador Dalí, whose film Un Chien Andalou, made with Luis Buñuel in 1929, includes unnerving close-ups of a death's head hawk moth as well as the most famous sequence of the slitting of a woman's eye that opens the film, characterised the revelatory aspect of close-up photography as 'the registering of an unknown reality'. This exhibition presents a succession of unknown realities, from nineteenth century lantern slides showing hugely magnified micro-organisms, to Simon Starling's double slide work Inventar-Nr. 8573 (Man Ray) 4m–400nm from 2006, a journey right into the silver gelatine surface of a vintage Man Ray photograph.

Other highlights include a series of images by Man Ray, Brassaï, Jacques-André Boiffard, Karl Blossfeldt, and their lesser-known contemporary Aenne Biermann, which show objects from the natural and unnatural worlds as they had never been seen before – flowers morphing into faces; twigs taking on the monumentality of African totems; dust breeding an entire world on the surface of Marcel Duchamp's Large Glass. Man Ray's dust finds a surprisingly beautiful contemporary echo in Mike Kelley's series Untitled (Dust) from 1994, while his experimental film Retour à la Raison (1923), which includes a sequence made by sprinkling tin tacks directly on to the surface of the film, resonates with Stan Brakhage's 1963 film Mothlight, a collage of real moth wings, twigs and blades of grass run through a 16mm projector. Other work in the exhibition focuses on the human body, with Kate Craig, Giuseppe Penone, Wim Delvoye, Mona Hatoum and Carolee Schneemann subj ecting their own and others' bodies to intense scrutiny.

Uncanny, disorientating and unsettling; strangely beautiful and oddly compelling, the close-up renders objects less recognisable while revealing something unexpected about them. This exhibition, selected by two renowned scholars, highlights the closeup's extraordinary visual and conceptual power, its ability to transform photography into, again in the words of Salvador Dalí, 'pure creation of the mind'.~

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