Miami, Florida – Miami Art Central
presents Irreducible: Contemporary Short Form Video, an international
survey featuring video work by artists from over 20 countries, on view
from June 29 through September 11, 2005. This exhibition brings
together recent works that are structured around a single situation,
action or individual and often reinterprets the process-oriented
concerns of performance and conceptual art from the 1970s, while
exploring an expanded social and psychological landscape.
While
a number of videos in this show reflect on political and cultural
situations in different parts of the world, what ultimately unites
these diverse works is their ability to draw complex meanings from
singular situations and actions. They make the case that even the
simplest gestures and moments can generate an irreducible aesthetics
experience. These “short form videos” are distinguished not simply by
their brief running times, but above all their formal and conceptual
concision.
Some
of the work is staged or occurs in controlled studio situations. Devoid
of sound, Aernout Mik’s Park, for example, draws the viewer in much
like a traditional painting, presenting a wooded park filled with
people who remain disconnected from one another as they engage in both
ordinary and mysterious activities. Other works feature interventions
in the flow of everyday life. Kimsooja’s A Homeless Woman (Cairo), a
mixture of video, performance and sculpture (involving the artist’s own
body), explores the uneasy relationship between the individual and mass
society and the dislocation of being a foreigner engulfed by another
culture. Lying on her side on a street in Cairo while surrounded by
staring men and boys, who respond to her presence in various ways, the
artist becomes a female “other” confounding the onlookers.
Featured artists
in Irreducible include Dan Acostioaei (Romania) and Ann Wodinski
(Belgium), Mauricio Alejo (Mexico), Jennifer Allora and Guillermo
Calzadilla (Puerto Rico), Douglas Gordon (Scotland), David Hammons
(USA), Kimsooja (Korea), Glenda Leon (Cuba), Mark Lewis (Canada), Mads
Lynnerup (USA/Denmark), Euan Macdonald (USA/Canada), Aernout Mik
(Holland), Will Rogan (USA), Aïda Ruilova (USA), Anri Sala (Albania),
Song Dong (China), Su-Mei Tse (Luxembourg), Gillian Wearing (England),
Wood & Harrison (England), David Zink Yi (Peru / Germany ), Artur
Zmijewski (Poland), Yael Bartana (Israel), Jesper Alvear (Denmark /
Czech Republic), and Mircea Cantor (Romania). Some additional new
videos have been included in MAC’s presentation of this exhibition,
such as works by Lida Abdul (Afghanistan), Dara Friedman (Germany/USA),
Adrian Paci (Albania), Francis Alys (Belgium/Mexico), Robin Rhode
(South Africa/Germany) and Eva Koch (Denmark).
Irreducible
crosses a wide range of themes, moods and situations. The scope of the
exhibition’s subjects include the body, landscape, video relationship
to painting, drawing and performance, the intersection of language and
vision as well as social and political issues around the globe. In
their diversity, the works presented offer an illuminating and
provocative look at a vein of international video production that has
become increasingly significant over the past decade.
This
exhibition is on view from June 29 through September 11, 2005 at Miami
Art Central. An opening reception will take place on Tuesday, June 28,
from 7 to 10 p.m. Please RSVP via e-mail to or
by phone 305.455.3336.
Miami, Florida – Miami Art Central
presents Irreducible: Contemporary Short Form Video, an international
survey featuring video work by artists from over 20 countries, on view
from June 29 through September 11, 2005. This exhibition brings
together recent works that are structured around a single situation,
action or individual and often reinterprets the process-oriented
concerns of performance and conceptual art from the 1970s, while
exploring an expanded social and psychological landscape.
While
a number of videos in this show reflect on political and cultural
situations in different parts of the world, what ultimately unites
these diverse works is their ability to draw complex meanings from
singular situations and actions. They make the case that even the
simplest gestures and moments can generate an irreducible aesthetics
experience. These “short form videos” are distinguished not simply by
their brief running times, but above all their formal and conceptual
concision.
Some
of the work is staged or occurs in controlled studio situations. Devoid
of sound, Aernout Mik’s Park, for example, draws the viewer in much
like a traditional painting, presenting a wooded park filled with
people who remain disconnected from one another as they engage in both
ordinary and mysterious activities. Other works feature interventions
in the flow of everyday life. Kimsooja’s A Homeless Woman (Cairo), a
mixture of video, performance and sculpture (involving the artist’s own
body), explores the uneasy relationship between the individual and mass
society and the dislocation of being a foreigner engulfed by another
culture. Lying on her side on a street in Cairo while surrounded by
staring men and boys, who respond to her presence in various ways, the
artist becomes a female “other” confounding the onlookers.
Featured artists
in Irreducible include Dan Acostioaei (Romania) and Ann Wodinski
(Belgium), Mauricio Alejo (Mexico), Jennifer Allora and Guillermo
Calzadilla (Puerto Rico), Douglas Gordon (Scotland), David Hammons
(USA), Kimsooja (Korea), Glenda Leon (Cuba), Mark Lewis (Canada), Mads
Lynnerup (USA/Denmark), Euan Macdonald (USA/Canada), Aernout Mik
(Holland), Will Rogan (USA), Aïda Ruilova (USA), Anri Sala (Albania),
Song Dong (China), Su-Mei Tse (Luxembourg), Gillian Wearing (England),
Wood & Harrison (England), David Zink Yi (Peru / Germany ), Artur
Zmijewski (Poland), Yael Bartana (Israel), Jesper Alvear (Denmark /
Czech Republic), and Mircea Cantor (Romania). Some additional new
videos have been included in MAC’s presentation of this exhibition,
such as works by Lida Abdul (Afghanistan), Dara Friedman (Germany/USA),
Adrian Paci (Albania), Francis Alys (Belgium/Mexico), Robin Rhode
(South Africa/Germany) and Eva Koch (Denmark).
Irreducible
crosses a wide range of themes, moods and situations. The scope of the
exhibition’s subjects include the body, landscape, video relationship
to painting, drawing and performance, the intersection of language and
vision as well as social and political issues around the globe. In
their diversity, the works presented offer an illuminating and
provocative look at a vein of international video production that has
become increasingly significant over the past decade.
This
exhibition is on view from June 29 through September 11, 2005 at Miami
Art Central. An opening reception will take place on Tuesday, June 28,
from 7 to 10 p.m. Please RSVP via e-mail to or
by phone 305.455.3336.