James Coleman, Initials, 1994
James Coleman (born in 1941 in Ballaghaderreen, Republic of Ireland) turned away
from painting in the early seventies and devoted himself to the reproductive media
(i.e. film, video and photography) and the theatre. The investigation of the possibilities
of pictorial representation and its interpretation became the central element
of his work. Although James Coleman still works with different artistic media,
photography (which he presents in the form of large-scale slide projections) has
become his favoured medium.
James Coleman has divided up the Main Hall of the Secession into three darkened
rooms for his presentation of slide projections dating from 1987 to 1994. These
rooms will display a series of photographs that are blown up and projected on
the wall and accompanied by the voice of a narrator.
Seeing for Oneself (1987-88) is one of the wittiest of James Coleman's works.
Sequences that display a narrative structure and play in the corridors and halls
of a castle are presented in a semi-animated fade-over technique that is familiar
to cinema advertising. The actual content of the scenario, which is accompanied
by the sound track (and which would seem to have been taken directly from horror
films or some similar genre), is just as multi-layered and difficult to grasp
as the fantastic and grotesque story that we are left to piece together from the
given clues. It is extremely disconcerting to have to slide from one level of
meaning to another. In view of the constant changes of perspective, the familiar
patterns of perception that we rely on to see and understand what is around us
inevitably fail us. Charon was created in 1989 during a visit to the List Visual
Arts Center of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston. The projected
pictures join together to form 14 episodes separated from one another by short
breaks. They are accompanied by the disinterested voice of a narrator and do not
seem to have any recognisable plot. What they all share is their thematic background:
namely, photography. They feature the most varied forms of photography and what
roles these can play in our modern society: as a rather untrustworthy form of
evidence, as fictitious make-believe for advertising, or as a safeguard against
forgetfulness and a way of preserving and moulding our view of history. The borders
between these sometimes highly contradictory standpoints become more and more
blurred in the course of a sequence. This is due not least to the unchanging voice
of the narrator who - in spite of the subtle humour with which viewing habits
and conventions are undermined - continues on imperturbably with his commentary.
Finally, I N I T I A L S (1994) shows a group of people that have all come for
a photographic appointment. The scene is set in rooms that are adjacent to an
operating theatre. Contrary to the plot of the sequences of pictures that show
the protagonists preparing themselves for the camera and forming different groupings,
the voice of the narrator diverts more and more from the actual subject of the
pictures and begins to go its own way. Postures and looks are of decisive importance
in this work. The individual sequences of pictures are oriented towards prototypes
from different popular artistic genres such as television series and thrashy novels
and at the same time towards other manifestations of art ranging from 17th century
Dutch group portraiture to 20th century Irish literature.
When they are presented in darkened rooms, James Coleman's works refuse to allow
themselves to be seen from just one point of view. The viewer is challenged to
move through the rooms and to find his own favoured viewing place. The continually
shifting perspectives and changing forms with which Coleman addresses his public
involuntarily involve the viewer in the audio-visual presentations and allow him
to take part in the process of de- and reconstruction of perception.
PUBLICATION
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JAMES COLEMAN
70 Seiten, 9 Farbabbildungen, 5 s/w-Abbildungen
Text: Rosalind Krauss
Secession und Yves Gevaert, Brüssel 1997, ISBN:2-930128-06-2
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Erhältlich im
Shop
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James Coleman, born in Ballaghaderreen (Republik Irland) in 1941, lives and works
in Dublin. Selected exhibitions: Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (1983); The Renaissace
Society, Chicago (1985); Institute of Contemporary Art, London (1986); Musée
d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris; Stedlijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven
(1989); Marian Goodman Gallery, New York (1991); documenta IX, Kassel (1992),
Dia Art Center for the Arts, New York (1994); Centre Pompidou, Paris (1996);
Selected Bibliography: "James Coleman", Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven 1990 (texts
by Jan Debbaut und Frank Lubbers); Schwarz, Dieter: "James Coleman - Charon",
in: Parkett 25, 1990; "James Coleman", Musée d'Art Contemporain, Lyon 1991
(text by Lynne Cooke); "James Coleman - Projected Images 1972-1994", Dia Center
for the Arts, New York, 1995 (texts by Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, Lynne Cooke und
Jean Fisher); "James Coleman", Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (texts by Jean Fisher,
Raymond Bellour, Benjamin H.D. Buchloh).
We would like to thank:
BUNDESMINISTERIUM FÜR WISSENSCHAFT, FORSCHUNG UND KUNST
WIEN KULTUR
ALTSTADT VIENNA
SCHOELLERBANK
QUELLE
CULTURAL RELATIONS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, REPUBLIC OF IRELAND
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at