Jack Goldstein, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1975, Installation View,
Secession 2003
Chantal Akerman, Judith Barry, Thomas Bayrle, Noël Burch, Shirley Clarke,
Ingemo Engström, Harun Farocki, Morgan Fisher, Penelope Georgiou, Jack Goldstein,
Angela Hareiter, Derek Jarman, Isaac Julien, Rainer Kirberg, Malcolm LeGrice,
Mark Lewis, Babette Mangolte, Mark Nash, Nagisa Oshima, Ulrike Ottinger, Karl
Sierek, Jean-Marie Straub/Danièle Huillet, Elisabeth Subrin, Michael Snow,
Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas, Oscar Zarate
curated by Constanze Ruhm
Installation View, Hauptraum, Secession 2003
The exhibition
Fate of Alien Modes charts a terrain emerging at
the intersection of artistic and cinematic models and discourses. It foregrounds
different forms of representation generated by each respective practice, to render
visible the mechanisms operating within. The cinematic apparatus is understood
as an economy unfolding into a spatiality of different modes of production, thus
allowing for a changed perspective on art. The shift from being "on cinema"
to drawing on an economy illuminates and recollects the structures, forces, and
subjects at work in the relations between society, cinema, and culture. These
subjects are developed along the lines corresponding to the framework of art institutions
by reflecting on contemporary artistic and curatorial practices.
Installation View, Hauptraum, Secession 2003
Fate of Alien Modes spatializes the cinematic field to reveal it as a set
of running scripts. Instead of conflating art and cinema within the conventions
of projection spaces and mini cinemas only, the exhibition focuses on dynamic
scripting processes to oppose the notion of finished and self-contained artworks.
Thus it highlights different modes of production versus the concept of the Secession
as a mere exhibition hall and repository for art works. The institutional container
is rendered as tenuous construction and "spatial narrative." It represents
a diegetic world translated via works and commissions, and in this way attempts
to realize and release the economies of cinema through a three-dimensional interplay
of projections, soundscapes, scripts, and indexical archives.
Isaac Julien, Lost Boundaries, 2003, Installation View, Secession
2003
The exhibition's coordinates compose a space containing script-based formats,
temporary (set) architecture, films and videos, sound pieces, and open, performative
processes including the actual shooting of a scene for a film, as a method of
unfolding the "Alien Modes" as a collage of diverse labors and practices
comprised and synthesized in the cinematic apparatus.
Installation View, Hauptraum, Secession 2003
The contributions were devised through a curatorial framework that looks awry
at the flat projection of cinema as merely a screen enlarging life. They put into
effect the complex economy of a spatiality unfolding through and within distinct
modes of production. They deal with ever-different subjects, as well as subjects
addressed: the viewers. A number of contributions were generated in dialogues
between curator and invited artists/producers, to select and reframe existing
works specifically for this context, or to develop commissions and new pieces
oriented along suggested plot points.
Installation View, Hauptraum, Secession 2003
Fate of Alien Modes reflects on the differences between cinemas and art
institutions by suggesting a process of constant discovery. It links a set of
fields and methods to register the unique distinctions of production formats pertaining
to cinematic and art practices, and draws on the well-established dialogue between
modernist as well as avant-garde cinema and art, thus avoiding the re-institutionalization
of cinema as an instrument of power within the art context. The project attempts
to unravel the history of the interrelations between modernism and cinema, which
inside of art spaces often remain safely interred within a "cinema nostalgia."
A different perspective on the subjects of cinema's history in the art context
is revealed, thus highlighting contemporary discourses on the play and conflict
of the forces at work between spectator, projection, and screen.
Mark Nash, The Moment of Screen, 2003, Installation View,
Secession 2003
Besides film and video installations,
Fate of Alien Modes embraces
script-based formats, temporary set architecture, sound pieces and performative
processes, including the actual shooting of a film. Thus it unfolds the "alien
modes" of the title.
Fate of Alien Modes combines a variety of formats
and media (drawings, installations, video works, architecture, interactive sound
pieces, performances, films and indexical materials) with specifically commissioned
contributions. All works included in the exhibition are either related to aspects
of "screen" (as architecture) and "script" (as dynamic text),
or record and investigate the visual, acoustic and narrative spaces emerging in
between.
For many of the internationally renowned artists and contributors it is a first-time
presentation in a Vienna institutional context.
Oscar Zarate, Poster, 1972, Installation View, Secession 2003
The works range from investigations of the role of recollected female voices from
Eastern European media archives in the interactive sound installation
Ruta
Remake by Lithuanian artists Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas (Documenta11 participants),
through an analysis of the gender politics contained in the voices of modernist
(Hollywood) cinema by investigating issues of the voice and the primacy of the
visual by Judith Barry (
Voice Off, 1998), to a collection of film theory
magazines from the 20s to the 80s. This compilation is understood to provide an
indexical platform and includes - among others - a series of issues of the German
journal
Filmkritik selected by filmmaker and writer Harun Farocki (contributor
from 1974-1984) and a section on the British publication
Screen. The author
Mark Nash (
Screen editor from 1978-81, co-curator of Documenta11), has
compiled the section on Screen, which includes original issues, film clips and
a selection of seminal historic texts with a focus on the 70s.
Angela Hareiter, bulb, Installation View, Secession 2003
Vienna-based set designer and architect Angela Hareiter was commissioned to develop
a space situated between film set and installation piece, which focuses on issues
of film lighting and special effects. Hareiter also designs the stage for the
shooting of Greek/Austrian artist and filmmaker Penelope Georgiou's new film,
which will take place before a public audience on June 5th. Thomas Bayrle's installation
Superstars (1993) joins mainstream cinema, art and early forms of New Media,
while also creating an ironic link from the 60s to the 90s.
Thomas Bayrle, Superstars, 1993, Installation View, Secession
2003
Jack Goldstein's work is on first-time view in Vienna, including the 16mm film
MGM (1975) alongside a presentation of his record productions, among these
the 6-part series
Planets (1984) and another suite of nine 7-inch singles
from 1976. Unexpected, it is also the first presentation of Goldstein's work after
his sudden passing away in March of this year. From the artist and filmmaker Morgan
Fisher the exhibition presents the early 16mm film
Production Stills (1970),
the autobiographical found-footage 16mm film
Standard Gauge (1984), as
well as a series of drawings entitled
Photogenic Drawings (2002). Screenwriter
and director Rainer Kirberg develops a commissioned contribution for Fate of Alien
Modes: an incomplete film", which translates the narrative of Gustav Klimt's
Beethoven frieze into the language of contemporary film genres. The work is divided
into three parts, each representing one stage of a cinematographic production:
screenplay, storyboard and actual film.
Nomeda & Gediminas Urbonas, Ruta Remake, 2002, Installation
View, Secession 2003
In his work
Two Impossible Films, the artist Mark Lewis takes as his subject
the history of films never realized: Sergei Eistenstein's plan to adapt
Das
Kapital by Karl Marx for the screen, and Samuel Goldwyn's idea to have Sigmund
Freud write a screenplay for a psychoanalytic love story.
Judith Barry, Voice off, 1998, Installation View, Secession
2003
British artist, writer and filmmaker Isaac Julien (Documenta11 participant) creates
a new work specifically for the exhibition.
Lost Boundaries (2003) is based
on super-8 film footage from Julien's personal archive, which he had recorded
during the shooting of
The Passion of Remembrance in the summer of 1986.
This film was the first film ever made by the British Sankofa Film Collective,
of which Julien was a founding member. His most recent documentary
BaadAsssss
Cinema (2002) on the genre of Blaxploitation cinema (including interviews
with Pam Grier, Isaac Hayes, Melvin Van Peebles and others) will be premiering
as part of the exhibition at the Vienna Film Museum on June 1st, where Isaac Julien
will be present.
Rainer Kirberg, 3, 2003, Installation View, Secession 2003
The exhibition further includes original scripts and materials ranging from director
Ulrike Ottinger's film script for
Freak Orlando (1981) to film theorist
Karl Sierek's re-working and analysis of the 1925 script
On a Filmic Representation
of Freud's Psychoanalysis in the Framework of a Feature-length Film (Zu einer
filmischen Darstellung der Freudschen Psychoanalyse im Rahmen eines abendfüllenden
Spielfilms) by Vienna-based psychoanalyst Siegfried Bernfeld.
Additionally,
Fate of Alien Modes will provide a wide range of publications
and other reference materials inside the exhibition space as well as in the bookstore.
Rainer Kirberg, 3, 2003, Installation View, Secession 2003
A cinema space is embedded among the range of projects in the main exhibition
hall. It is required as a method to explore historic foundations in methodical
and indexical terms, to unfold the cinematic apparatus within, as each film deals
with one specific aspect of cinema production. Scheduled daily programs include
the classic
Hotel Monterey (1972) by Chantal Akerman, Harun Farocki's early
film
Erzählen (1975, Co-Director: Ingemo Engström), Elizabeth
Subrin's fictional documentary
Shulie (1997), Babette Mangolte's seminal
work
The Camera: Je or La Caméra: I (1977), Isaac Julien's
Looking
for Langston (1989), and director and writer Noël Burch's
Portrait
of Shirley Clarke (1996, Co-Director: André S. Labarthe), as well as
a selection of films by Mark Nash, among these Michael Snow's
Rameau's Nephew
by Diderot (1974),
Blackbird Descending by Malcolm LeGrice (1977),
and
History Lessons by Straub/Huillet (1972). This selection is based on
a program compiled by
Screen magazine for the NFT (National Film Theatre)
in London in 1978.
Jack Goldstein, A Suite of Nine, 1976, (Detail, The Dying
Wind)
In a co-operation with the Vienna Film Museum -
www.filmmuseum.at
- films by Noël Burch and Thom Andersen (May 10th) and by Derek Jarman and
Nagisa Oshima (May 11th) will be screened. On June 1st , the Film Museum shows
films by Ulrike Ottinger, Morgan Fisher, Shirley Clarke and Isaac Julien. Noël
Burch and Isaac Julien will both be present for an audience discussion moderated
by Constanze Ruhm.
Ulrike Ottinger, Freak Orlando, 1981, Filmstill
EXHIBITION DISCUSSION
Saturday, May 10, 2003,
7 p.m.
with Constanze Ruhm (curator of the exhibition) and the artists Nomeda & Gediminas
Urbonas
Shirley Clarke, The Cool World, 1963, Filmstill
SHOOTING OF A FILM
Thursday, June 5, 2003
of Greek/Austrian artist and filmmaker Penelope Georgiou's new film, which will
take place before a public audience
Babette Mangolte, The Camera: Je or La Caméra: I, 1977,
Filmstill
PUBLICATION
 |
FATE OF
ALIEN MODES
128 pages, 38 colored illustrations, 54 b/w photos
authors: Judith Barry, Thomas Bayrle, Noel Burch, Ingemo Engström, Harun
Farocki, Morgan Fisher, Anne Friedberg, Penelope Georgiou, Matthias Herrmann,
Isaac Julien, Rainer Kirberg, Otto Kränzler, Mark Lewis, Babette Mangolte,
Mark Nash, Ulrike Ottinger, Constanze Ruhm, Karl Sierek, Michael Snow, Elisabeth
Subrin, Nomeda und Gediminas Urbonas, Karsten Visarius
Secession 2003, ISBN 3-901926-54-2
___________________
available
in the shop |
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