Deutsche Version
European Society

Into the Unknown

Deimantas Narkevičius, Sarah Pierce, Mariana Silva and

Dmitry Gutov, João Dias, António Cunha Telles

 

March 2 – April 11, 2010

Exhibition opening, Ludlow 38, Tuesday March 2, 6-8pm

 

Artist talk by Sarah Pierce, Goethe-Institut Wyoming Building (5 East 3rd Street, corner Bowery), March 1, 7pm

 

Deimnatas Narkevičius, "Into the Unknown", 2009*
 

Into the Unknown brings together works by artists and filmmakers who reflect upon and make productive use of archival film footage and other material from the past. The works focus on how such stored images are received and interpreted today, not just on the circumstances in which they were once produced. In their hands the archive becomes a journey into unknown territories, but at the same time it is always reconfigured according to today's interests and perspectives.

Paradoxically, the constructed past that these artists excavate from the archive radiates a presence rivaling that of the present moment.

The works presented in the gallery at Ludlow 38 and during screenings at the Goethe-Institut’s Wyoming Building open up new pockets of time that allow us to observe the past, and the communities that lived in it, at our own leisure. At the same time they set up spaces for future agency. The exhibition encompasses topics such as social uprising, official versions of everyday routines, the disappearance of political systems and the individual’s relationship to society and to collective memory.

 

The show borrows its title from Lithuanian artist Deimantas Narkevičius’s latest film Into the Unknown (2009), which depicts everyday life in the German Democratic Republic. When commissioned to produce a new piece from the National Archive's ETV Collection of socialist propaganda films at the British Film Institute, Narkevičius decided to re-edit different clips of existing films and sounds, thus restoring existential weight to these cinematic representations of really existing socialism.

*Image courtesy of the artist. Found footage transferred on HD video and burned on Blu- Raydisc. Into the Unknown was commissioned by the British Film Institute, London, and Hartware MedienKunstVerein, Dortmund; supported by the Henry Moore Foundation and Kunststiftung NRW

 

Also shown in the gallery at Ludlow 38, Mariana Silva’s Archive for the Permanence of Image, Functional Model (2008) takes as a starting point Super 8mm footage from the time of the Carnation Revolution of April 25, 1974, culled from archives in her native Portugal. Silva has reworked the films into an installation that comprises various material presented on moviolas: a demonstration of construction workers besieging Lisbon’s São Bento palace, a Sunday of volunteer work cleaning of public monuments, separatist protests by inhabitants of the Azores islands.

 

On March 1, the evening before the exhibition opens at Ludlow 38, Dublin-based American artist Sarah Pierce will give an artist talk at the Goethe-Institut’s Wyoming Building. The presentation will look at the relation between performer and audience and deals with the artist’s interest in conversations. Since 2003 Pierce has used an umbrella term, The Metropolitan Complex, to describe her practice which uses archives, exhibitions and papers - often opening these structures up to the personal and the incidental.

 

Film screenings at the Wyoming Building continue the exhibition off-site. They include Russian artist Dmitry Gutov’s film Lifshitz Institute (2004) about the Marxist art critic Mikhail Lifshitz and the contradictory reception of his writings in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia as well as in the West throughout the 20th century. Also featured are two Portuguese films, João Dias’s As Operações SAAL (2009) and António Cunha Telles’s Continuar a Viver (1975), portraying the unique efforts of a radical experiment in participatory architecture in Portugal. Please find the dates and details on the screenings at www.ludlow38.org.

 

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Next event:

Screening by Dmitry Gutov, “Lifshitz Institute”, 2004–2005, 45 min

Goethe-Institut Wyoming Building (5 East 3rd Street, corner Bowery), March 18, 7pm

Introduction: Alfredo Jaar, New York

 

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João Dias is a Portuguese film director and the author of As Operações SAAL, which won the MIDAS prize at DocLisboa 2009. He is the author of documentaries and a short fiction film for Dance Company Clara Andermatt and is currently preparing a documentary on tourism in the south of Portugal.

 

Dmitry Gutov’s recent exhibitions include the Third Moscow Biennale of contemporary art, Moscow; documenta 12, Kassel, Germany; Thaw: Russian Art. From Glasnost to the Present, Chelsea Art Museum, New York; La 52 Biennale di Venezia, Venice; Repetition, Canon, Comeback, Deceleration, Stupor, The State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow. He lives and works in Moscow.

 

Deimantas Narkevičius’s solo exhibitions include Brandts Kunsthalle, Odense (2010); BFI Southbank Gallery, British Film Institute, London; Kunsthalle Bern; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (all 2009) and Museo Nacional Centro De Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid (2008). He lives and works in Vilnius.

 

Sarah Pierce is one of six commissioned artists working with the Dutch platform If I Can't Dance I Don't Want To Be Part Of Your Revolution. Recent projects include: It's time man. It feels imminent, ICA, London 2008 (subsequent chapters at de Appel Amsterdam and FOUR Dublin); The question would be the answer to the question Are you happy?, Sala Rekalde, Bilbao 2009; An artwork in the third person, Project, Dublin 2009. In 2005 she represented Ireland at the 51st Venice Biennale.

 

Mariana Silva was one of the winners of BES Revelação prize (Serralves Museum, Porto, 2008) and is currently on a residency at ISCP in Brooklyn, NY. Her article The Escape Route’s Design (with Pedro Neves Marques) was published by e-flux journal in May 2009.

 

António Cunha Telles is a Portuguese film director and producer with a large number of productions since the early 1960’s.

 

Ludlow 38 is sponsored by MINI and Friends of Goethe

 

Ludlow 38 European Kunsthalle Cologne Goethe Institut New York

38 Ludlow Street Between Grand and Hester

New York 10002

USA

 

Tel. +1 212 2228 6848

www.ludlow38.org

info(at)ludlow38.org

 

subway: J/M/Z and F to Essex/ Delancey & F to East Broadway & B/D to Grand Street

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