Kurt Kren, tausendjahrekino, 1995
Kurt Kren, who was born 1929 in Vienna, has not only won international reputation
as one of the most important avant-garde film makers, he is also one of the most
important contemporary artists in Austria. From the basic ingredients of pure
cinema movement, material, light and perception Kurt Kren has developed
his films, in which he not only experiments with light and perception but also
with the existing parameters of the equipment and the materialism of the film
roll.
Significant aspects of Kren's methods were already apparent during his first period
at the end of the 'fifties and at the beginning of the 'sixties, which are layered
in various ways: "extreme multiple exposures, single frames, time lapses,
the use of masks and filters, the introduction of negative film material, unfocused
sequences, manipulation of the sound track with the aid of scratches and etching,
right up to a complicated cutting sequence that followed exactly planned diagrams"
(Hans Hurch). This willingness to experiment in the technical sector corresponds
to the motifs of his first films, fragmentary images of surrounding reality, which
Kren assembled as short stories about trees, walls, paths, moving people or faces.
In the middle of the 'sixties, he filmed the "material actions" of Günter
Brus and Otto Mühl, which was not conceived as a documentary, but became
an independent work of art as a result of Kren's rhythmical deployment of takes.
Kren moved to Germany at the beginning of the 'seventies.
Kren's oeuvre was subjected to another transformation in the 'eighties, during
his sojourn in America in which he shot his "bad home movies". People
and things are no longer seen from a fixed stand point, but from the most diverse
camera perspectives. These images, which are tinged with melancholy, reflect the
existential questions of permanence and change, existence and absence, commitment
and freedom.
The Vienna Secession is paying tribute to Kurt Kren's life's work with a comprehensive
exhibition that is not merely limited to his films, but also includes documentary
material (musical scores, photographs, texts, etc.). Kren has chosen his most
recent film "tausendjahrekino" ("Thousand Years Cinema") as
the centre point of the exhibition.
Over a number of weeks, Kren filmed tourists on St.Stefan's Square for this exhibition,
while these in turn were filming and photographing the cathedral. He used material
that has an exposure rate of 2.4 and 8 frames pro second and filmed with extreme
lenses of maximum focal length at a minimum distance. For the sound track Kren
used a short sequence from Peter Lorre's film "Der Verlorene" ("The
Lost One", Germany 1951) in which a drunk recognises a murderer who had been
protected by the Nazis, speaks to him and keeps repeating: "Hey, I know you,
I don't know how, but I know you..."
Kurt Kren is presenting the basic elements out of which his films are made in
the Main Hall. The film is unravelled into photographic units frame by frame and,
the following a deployment plan, run through the space like the images of a film
projector. In this show Kren circumvents the art of moving pictures. He halts
the dynamic flow if images and brings it to a standstill. Instead of cinematic
perception, a natural perception of moving pictures develops.
PUBLICATION
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KURT KREN
24 Seiten, Farb- und 4 s/w-Abbildungen
Vorwort: Werner Würtinger; Text: Peter Tscherkassky
Secession 1996, ISBN 3-900803-79-X
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Erhältlich im
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Kurt Kren is a member of the Vienna Secession. Took part in the Destruction-in-Art
Symposium in London in 1966. First journey to America with film shows in New York
and St. Louis in 1968. Founding member of the Austria Filmmakers Cooperative.
Moved Cologne between 1971-76 and took part in the documenta 6 in 1977. 1978-89
emigrated to America. 1983-89 employed as a guard in Museum of Fine Arts in Houston,
Texas. Numerous film shows and lectures in various city and purchases by international
collections followed. Returned to Austria in 1989.
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Pia Leydolt
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at