David Claerbout
22 May – 1 August 2009, Hauser & Wirth London, Piccadilly
Since the mid 1990s, David Claerbout has made extraordinary video installations, often combining moving and still images to unsettle the delineation between past and present. Impacting subtle philosophical reflections, his works are strikingly sensual, using every constitutive element available — pixel constellations, image sequences, speed, speech, music and ambient sound, installation environment and the technologies used to convey these — to elicit new modes of perceptual absorption. Three new projection pieces will be on display at Hauser & Wirth London. Although very different on first appearance, they each have a common concern with sound; for all the painterly and statuesque qualities that Claerbout invests in these moving images, he describes the works as ‘audio pieces, embedded in video.’
Riverside (2009), installed in the main gallery, consists of a two-channel video installation with stereo audio headphones. One projection depicts the story of a woman, the other that of a man. Set in a valley with a small river below, both characters unconsciously move towards each other, engulfed in their individual stories. They remain separated both geographically and in time, like the projection screens on which they make their journeys. He is moving from East to West, while she starts from the opposite direction. At one point they both cross a river at the same location, where a dead tree trunk traverses it. Precisely at the point where the landscape would geographically join the two characters, the viewer realises with certainty that the man and the woman are in the same valley, in the same place, but at different moments in time. There is no reconciliation but for the sound of the river, which brings the viewer to the subtle protagonist of the work. During the 25 minutes journey, each film has a ‘broken’ audio-channel. Her film lacks the right channel, while his lacks the left. As they both sit on the tree trunk, the sound of the river unfolds like an open space in our brain. Riverside translates the lack of narrative resolution into an audio phenomenon: that of aural completion through stereophony, after an impaired journey.
Downstairs in the vault room, Sunrise (2009), an 18 minute video installation, thrusts the viewer into near-total darkness, requiring their eyes to acclimatise to the film which depicts a nocturnal scene inside a villa. A maid is seen setting up breakfast, the deliberate movements of this archetypal figure elegantly conforming to the severe geometries and exact proportions of the house. Through its exaggerated sense of composition the architecture presents itself as a sleeping monument to a past Utopia, or perhaps a prison for life. Yet rather than witnessing its stirring to life, the camera follows the girl as she finishes her shift and cycles off into the surrounding countryside. The darkness gives way to sudden and brilliant sunlight, momentarily blinding the viewer again as Rachmaninov’s Vocalise is heard. The balance of the film turns in these final minutes from mute perfection to a flood of emotion. Although filmed as a classical end sequence, it feels like a beginning.
In The American Room (1st movement) (2009), a single-channel video installation shot and shown in the gallery’s eponymous upstairs space, music creates a spatial dialogue between spectator and listener. The perspective is that of a slow camera which travels around the audience of an intimate concert, allowing an almost stereoscopic vision, as though the viewer were actually there. Subtle interventions put into question the individual authority of photographic stillness, filmed motion and spatial distance: the listeners have been scanned using stills, not a video camera, creating an immobility that contrasts with the rhythm and continuity advocated by the music. A three-dimensional — virtual — space allows for infinite camera movement. However this has been purposely constrained to mimic a conventional camera’s path. This relationship between movement and stillness is translated very literally into the breathing in and holding of breath. The moments in which we hear the singer are also those in which she is off-screen — moments as long as a breath can hold.
David Claerbout was born in 1969 in Kortrijk, Belgium, and lives and works in Antwerp. He studied at the National Hoger Instituut voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp, from 1992 to 1995, and benefited from the DAAD, Berlin, between 2002 and 2003. A major solo exhibition of his work ‘The Shape of Time’ opened at the Pompidou Center, Paris (2007), and toured to MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge MA (2008), Kunstmuseum, St Gallen (2008), Morris and Helen Belkin art Gallery, University of British Columbia, Vancouver (2008), and De Pont, Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg (2009). Other solo shows include ‘Background Time — Gezeiten’ at Akademie der Künste, Berlin (2005); Dundee Contemporary Arts Centre (2005); and Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (2005).
GALLERY HOURS Tuesday to Saturday 10am – 6pm
FORTHCOMING EXHIBITIONS ZÜRICH:
PAUL MCCARTHY - Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Limmatstrasse 270, 7 June – 25 July 2009
JOAN MITCHELL - Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Limmatstrasse 270, 7 June – 25 July 2009
PIPILOTTI RIST - Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Limmatstrasse 270, 29 August – 17 October 2009
FORTHCOMING EXHIBITIONS LONDON:
MARTIN EDER - Hauser & Wirth London, 15 Old Bond Street, 10 – 16 September 2009
SUBODH GUPTA - Hauser & Wirth London, 196a Piccadilly, 10 – 16 September 2009
Exhibitions — David Claerbout — Hauser & Wirth