17 a 20 noviembre 2011 | English |
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ART FUTURA
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Curator: Erandy Vergara & Ima Picó |
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PROGRAMA CANADÁ |
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Anoxi | La synthèse Robin Dupuis Theorists of digital art have discussed the similarity of precinematic and postcinematic practices (such as early chronophotograhy and Quicktime video clips). The abstractions created by Robin Dupuis, such as Anoxi, can be understood as examining this connection in an aesthetic manner, but following and creating new forms and rhythms with the possibilities of the digital instrument. In Anoxi the elements in the picture are melting into new forms, separating and coming together in continuous transformation and variation. Mika Taanila, Avanto, Helsinki |
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Babayan Frédérick A. Belzile At dusk, a camera pans and shuffles on a ridge between two valleys. The sounds in the valley is an envelope standing between this horizon and us. |
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Hail the failure of urban planning Kim Kielhofner Hail the failure of urban is a possibility of creation and constraint through a visual movement as an urban dweller. Accompanying the visual movement is a text of tenets of urban practice, both sincere and ironic. |
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Hiémal Aurélie Pedron Hiémal is a series of three short dance videos. Audrée Juteau and Carla Soto constructed the latter from improvisations. The camera is like a part of the dancer´s bodies. They don´t see what they are filming. |
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Link Nelly-Ève Rajotte Passage, crosses, line and a fixed plan. Link is around the themes of the linearity and time that this video registers. Sound space is built while crossing the image via the line. |
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Stasis (vídeo) - mountain Pavitra Wickramasinghe The process of creation and mastery of the medium are crucial to Pavitra Wickramasinghe. Accordingly, the technology used in her work is never neutral; it explores and reflects the process of making and the act of viewing. Stasis was made by taping a single long shot of a distant mountain; the camera started in tight and over 2:37 minutes it pulled back until the mountain was a tiny indistinguishable smudge in the middle of the image. After, the artist edited every single frame back to the original composition of the mountain, thus, blowing the image up as much as necessary to fill the screen. Hence, the crisp, clear image slowly dematerialize into pixels. |
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N'acre Myriam Bessette N’acre explores crackles and sparkles in a kind of chromatic sputter that suggests a pause in our viewing. For the video image evokes a contemplative dimension, even a form of stasis in our reception of it. As filmmaker Anthony McCall pointed out, “when we look and listen to a video or movie, we enter into the elsewhere of the animated image, and we leave our physical body behind us, rooted in the place.” Which is to say that every image is a ubiquitous device: to look at it is in some sense to be not entirely there. |
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PROGRAMA MÉXICO |
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Occupation (Ocupación) Marcela Armas http://marcelaarmas.blogspot.com/ Ocupación is an action arising from the occupation of space for vehicular traffic, using the body, understood as a carrier and noise generator. The main idea is to walk instead of taking a car, taking into advantage of traffic congestion in cities. To perform the action was developed a portable kit with a choice of 7 different car horns. A control on the arm is used to activate of the devices. On an area of heavy congestion such as downtown Mexico, the artist’s action creates tension among car drivers, who are forced to slow down as she occupies a vital space that can get them a few meters closer to their destinies. |
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La Raza (From the series 3 Line)
Bruno Varela Zapata and La Raza are two works from the series Three Line, a DVD exploring the subway line running through Mexico City’s north (Indios Verdes station) to south (Universidad station). As most of the Three Line stations are named after key events of Mexican History, Bruno Varela uses it to reflect on its fractures and unofficial histories. La Raza station is located at the intersection of Vallejo avenue and Insurgents avenue, and it is named after a monument devoted to the Aztec race (Monumento a la Raza). Varela’s video, however, refers to “la raza” in its popular meaning, which refers to the Mexican people, as supported by film footage of Mexico de mi corazon (1963), on a scene where the main characters interpret popular song “Soy puro mexicano.” Zapata, on the other hand, mixes found images and film footage of the 1952 movie Viva Zapata!, starring Marlon Brando as the Mexican revolutionary who led a rebellion against dictator Porfirio Diaz, Emiliano Zapata. Central to these works is the notion of appropriation, as all material is downloaded from the internet: movies, documentaries, amateur videos, and recordings are recycled and re-used to critically explore the current meaning of national symbols, and its appropriation in the production of an alien cultural product. |
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This work involves a street characters commonly known as “viene-viene” (a squeegee), who cleans car windows at red lights to earn a living, and also arbitrarily appropriates parking places on the street, charging drivers for parking on “their” places. From an idle and childish dynamic (like smacking a friend with a cleaning rag), this video goes deeper into an ominous scenario that poses questions about our existence, particularly inside the complex, violent and confusing relationships existing between the different social structures of Mexican culture. To mention a few: What is it behind the apparent simulation of leisure and debauchery? Where are the limits between joking and excess? It is important to point out the implicit relationship that exists among these characters, and the artist as a participant on this dynamic, revealing a complicity between the lines that cannot be stated but that inevitably gives way to desire.
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Typography (Tipografía) Iván Edeza Typography offers a journey through marginalized neighbourhoods, in which “sonideros” and popular bands (most commonly cumbia, norteño, and rock) have taken over empty walls to promote their events. On white walls painted with lime, the colourful fonts mix with graffiti and messages of the community have become the landmark of Mexico City's frontiers. |
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Yellow Capitalism - Abel Carranza (Capitalismo Amarillo - Abel Carranza) Jota Izquierdo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNq23WlkUws The production of certain goods and devices in Mexico City, render ideals regarding democratic and empowering access to technology as the very means of challenging dominant narratives coming from technologically-driven societies. This documentary focuses on Abel Carranza, member of the “Fantastic Twins,” a team devoted to the production of speakers-backpacks used by subway vendors. This work is part of Izquierdo’s project Yellow capitalism (Capitalismo amarillo), which critically addresses capitalists conditions of production and consumption, along its failures and contradictions. An important part of this project has been devoted to researching the Mexican |
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El País del Miedo A. Salomón http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kkiEVq3GLA Two children begging in the street while praying for a Mexico filled with blessings. As the artists cover their faces and the lyrics of their song appear on the screen as a karaoke-style, this work points out to what the artist calls “the national caricature of a country convulsed between panic and despair.” |
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