Experiments with Truth
3 December 2004 — 12 March 2005

fast runner
Igloolik Isuma Productions. Still from Atanarjuat (The Fast Runner), 2000, 172 minutes, English subtitles. Photo: Norman Cohn. Image courtesy Igloolik Isuma Productions.

The Fabric Workshop and Museum (FWM) will collaborate with guest curator Mark Nash to present the film and video exhibition Experiments with Truth on view 4 December 2004 through 12 March 2005. This exhibition of work by moving image artists focuses on the documentary turn in contemporary art. It presents 13 artists from 11 countries, including many works presented in the United States for the first time.

This project has been supported by a grant from the Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative, a program funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, and administered by The University of the Arts, Philadelphia.

Opening Reception and Annual Holiday Party
Friday, 3 December 2004
5:30-9:30 p.m.

Panel Discussion with participating artists and scholars
Saturday, 12 February 2005
3:00-5:00 p.m.
Experiments with Truth catalog will be available.

This panel discussion is supported by the Humanities-and-the-Arts initiative, administered by the Pennsylvania Humanities Council and funded principally by the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.

About the exhibition
As an ever growing number of artists incorporate film and video into their practice, the moving image has become an increasingly common presence within the art gallery. Artists' films and videos have greatly influenced current discourse surrounding the moving image as they experiment with modes of filmmaking. Through this experimentation, the distinctions between narrative, avant-garde and documentary filmmaking have become blurred, as has the way viewers experience film and video. Experiments with Truth explores the relationship between these overlapping modes of cinema as filmmakers present their films in a gallery space and visual artists experiment with film traditions. Artists in Experiments with Truth include Zarina Bhimji (UK); Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi (Italy); Igloolik Isuma Productions (Canada); Isaac Julien (UK); Amar Kanwar (India); Langlands and Bell (UK); Glenn Ligon (USA); Multiplicity (Multi-national Cooperative); Ulrike Ottinger (Germany); Pere Portabella (Spain); Liisa Roberts (Finland/Russia); Ezequiel Suarez (Cuba); and Francesco Vezzoli (Italy).

The FWM will enlist the conceptual and technical consultation of visionary architects Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio, as well as Paul Kuranko, Media Arts Specialist at the Guggenheim Museum, and Lyn Rice of Open Office. These consultants will assist in designing experimental spaces between gallery and theater that balance the conceptual and practical demands of each artist's installation.


Langlands and Bell, Stills from The House of Osama bin Laden Suite: Zardad's Dog, 2003. Artists' film and video projection archived on DVD (PAL), 12 minutes, Edition of 3 and 1 Artist Proof. Courtesy of The Trustees of The Imperial War Museum, London and the artists.

Film Program
Philadelphia organizations, such as International House, Scribe Video Center, the Cinema Studies Program University of Pennsylvania, the PennDesign MFA Department of the University of Pennsylvania, and the Media Arts Department at the University of the Arts, will work with Nash to integrate the FWM's project into their programs, offering film screenings, lectures, and supplementary events. These offsite programs will provide a comparison between the audience's experience of the traditional cinematic experience and that of the gallery exhibition. Click here to view the Film Program schedule.

Catalogue
The FWM will publish a catalogue to accompany Experiments with Truth. In addition to Nash's text and essays about individual artists, the publication will include critical essays by leading voices in film and visual studies, documentation of artists' work, statements and related interviews.

While this exhibition marks a continuation of Nash's work, for the FWM it builds upon an interest in new media and the creation of recent major works that incorporate film and video through its Artist-in-Residence program. Residency projects such as Doug Aitken's Interiors, Lee Bul's Live Forever, and Bill Viola's The Veiling resulted in the creation of influential new works, expanding discourse surrounding video installation. Such experimentation with new materials and new media, and artists who are advancing this spirit of experimentation is central to how the FWM conceives its role as a collaborative-based organization.

About the curator
Mark Nash lives and works in London. The co-curator of 2002's Documenta 11, he was a Senior Lecturer in Film History and Theory at the School of Art and Theory, University of East London, London. He is currently (since 2/04) Reader in Fine Art at Central St Martins College of Art and Design, University of the Arts, London. He received his BA and MA from Cambridge University, a Postgraduate Diploma in Film Studies from the University College, London and attended Les Entrepreneurs de L'Audiovisuel Européen (EAVE), Brussels, for a Postgraduate Diploma in Film Production. Nash has also taught at Harvard University, New York University, and the University of California, Santa Cruz. Recent curatorial work includes: The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa 1945-1994 (co-curator, Film, traveling exhibition); My Generation (Curator with Alexandre Pollazzon); and Force Fields: Phases of the Kinetic (co-curator, Film, Macba, Barcelona and Hayward Gallery, London). His recent publications include Art and Cinema: Some Critical Reflections, in Documenta 11 (Catalog Kantz, 2002), The Modernity of African Cinema, The Short Century (Prestel, Munich, 2001); and The Art of Movement: Force Fields, Phases of the Kinetic (Macba/Hayward, Barcelona/London, 2000).


The Fabric Workshop and Museum (FWM) is the only museum of its kind, offering internationally renowned artists the resources to create new work in experimental materials. Artists come from all media-including sculpture, installation, video, painting, ceramics, and architecture-and use FWM's facilities and technical expertise to create works of art that they could not create on their own. Research, construction, and fabrication occur on-site in studios that are open to the public, providing visitors with the opportunity to see works of art from conception to completion. FWM's permanent collections include not only complete works of art, but also material research, samples, prototypes, and photography and video of artists making and speaking about their work. Access to the creative process provides visitors with a point of entry into understanding challenging works of contemporary art. FWM offers an unparalleled experience to the most significant artists of our time, students, and the general public.

FWM Exhibitions and Programs Admission: $3 for Adults, Children under 12 and FWM Members for Free. Group tours available by appointment.
Hours: Mon.–Fri. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sat.–Sun., 12 noon to 4 p.m.

The programs of The Fabric Workshop and Museum are supported by The Pew Charitable Trusts; The Judith Rothschild Foundation; Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency; National Endowment for the Arts; Miller-Plummer Foundation; LLWW Foundation; U. S. Institute of Museum and Library Services; Nimoy Foundation; The Arcadia Foundation; Claneil Foundation; Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro; Independence Foundation; The Philadelphia Cultural Fund; E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation; Stockton Rush Bartol Foundation; Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation; The Henry Luce Foundation matching gifts program; The Barra Foundation; LEF Foundation; Louis N. Cassett Foundation; Quaker Chemical Foundation; and the Board of Directors and members of The Fabric Workshop and Museum.

For more information, please contact Jeffrey Bussman, Assistant to the Directors, at 215-561-8888 ext. 229 jeff@fabricworkshopandmuseum.org. For general information, call 215-561-8888.

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