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David
Claerbout (Kortrijk, 1969) can be counted among today's youngest talents in the
field of artistic video production. Originally trained as a painter, the artist
utilizes in his installations either overlays from static slide images and subtly
moving video projections or straight video projections, which sometimes react
via sensors to the movements of the visitors.
Claerbout
creates tension stemming from the apparent immobility of precise compositional
images which are then partially broken up. The mechanically reproduced eternity
of the single photographic image turns into a surreal movement with all the logic
of a dream, giving life back to the "frozen" image which was taken away
from it by the vampire-like photographic process.
Venice
lightboxes display architectural views of Venice by night. Slowly becoming visible
from the darkness, these images present the picture of a sinking city.
Rocking
Chair shows a woman sitting in a chair on a porch. She rocks slowly in the chair,
lending the image a subtle, almost imperceptible air of animated life. When the
viewer walks around to the other side of the screen, he finds himself "inside"
the house ? suddenly viewing the same scene but in reverse.
In
Vietnam, 1967, near Duc Pho (Reconstruction after Hiromishi Mine), the plane shot
down during the Vietnam war comes from a famous black and white photograph taken
by the war reporter Hiroshimi Mine. The landscape was filmed by Claerbout forty
years later.
In
the video installation titled Four Persons Standing, four figures, taken from
various photographic sources that the artist digitally collaged together, are
framed by the architecture behind them, There is a charged suggestion of narrative
emanating from the image, and a fraught, mysterious dynamic between these four
figures.
The
Piano Player appears to be an excerpt of a longer movie. A woman walks home through
he pouring rain. When she enters her house piano music in the background develops
into its own spatial dynamics.
Would
you write your opinion ? |

Four persons standing.

Rocking front.

Vietnam 1967
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