Bill Viola: Anthony D'Offay gallery. (Reviews - London).It's been suggested that moving pictures represent an advance over still images insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as the latter arc unable to depict movement, to do any more than suggest its absence. Bill Viola's new video works (all 2001) are about movement, but they evidence a kind of nostalgia for the stillness of paintings and photographs--as though the dependence on motion were symptomatic of a deficiency of memory, a lack of monumentality. Viola proposes a compromise: Slow movement down so radically that it seems to approach stillness asymptotically. The best way to see the motion in these pictures was not to look at the images steadily but to look away for a while and then turn back. They retain the monumental quality of a still image, its availability for contemplation--but by magnifying movements in time, increasing their temporal scale, so to speak, video becomes a kind of microscope enlarging things in space, submitting them to an almost forensic scrutiny. In this way Viola aims to synthesize To create a whole or complete unit from parts or components. See synthesis. the individually inadequate pro grams of painting and photography on the one hand and of cinema and video on the other. Perhaps Viola also wants to synthesize religion and magic with science and technology. Certainly his big video-projection installation Five Angels for the Millennium seems to want to depict miracles: Figures suddenly shoot up out of water as if ascending to heaven. But miracles are elusive. You spend a long time waiting, you don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. for what, and then something's happened almost before you can register what it is. With its five screens often nearly as dark as the space around them, Five Angels is about unframed, ungraspable experience. The eight other, smaller-scale works here, on the contrary, were contained, iconic. The hinged diptych Mater--showing the heads of two women, apparently mother and daughter--was displayed much like a pair of family photos on an end table, for instance, while the larger wall-hung diptych Surrender, also shown at this year's Venice Biennale Venice Biennale International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of , suggested a Caravaggiste painting. In both, a kind of piety is foregrounded: the intimate, filial piety The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. “Hyo” redirects here. For other uses, see Hyo (disambiguation). invested in family portraits--her e magically given life, as if by the viewer's adoring gaze--or the public, churchly church·ly adj. 1. Of or relating to a church. 2. Appropriate for or suggestive of a church: "aspires to the pure fragrance of churchly incense" Martin Bernheimer. (or simply art-historical) piety pertaining to devotional de·vo·tion·al adj. Of, relating to, expressive of, or used in devotion, especially of a religious nature. n. A short religious service. de·vo painting. Viola's work has always tended to be overwrought o·ver·wrought adj. 1. Excessively nervous or excited; agitated. 2. Extremely elaborate or ornate; overdone: overwrought prose style. , so these are not just slow-motion images of people--they are slow-motion images of people self-consciously emoting. Four Hands focuses on pairs of hands ostentatiously os·ten·ta·tious adj. Characterized by or given to ostentation; pretentious. See Synonyms at showy. os worrying each other; the anguished writhing of the two figures in Silent Mountain would probably be unwatchable in real time. Still worse is the righteous quietude of the figure in Catherine's Room as she goes through her simple routines (meditating, writing, lighting candles) in an ascetic atmosphere somewhere between that of Fra Angelico's cells at San Marco in Florence and a Shaker village. And yet as Surrender reminds us, Viola can at times surpass his pretentions. Here, in what might be a kind of indirect response to Caravaggio's Narcissus Narcissus, in the Bible Narcissus (närsĭs`əs), in the New Testament, Roman whose household was partly Christian. Narcissus, in Roman history Narcissus, d. A.D. , Viola both identifies the surface on which the image is projected with the reflective surface of water and denies that identification; he both invokes the claim to represent reality and defies it. To plunge into the reflection, to go behind or beyond the image, as the two figures in Surrender do, is not simply to destroy it hut to demonstrate that one never knew just what one was seeing anyway. More than deepening or prolonging the image, movement undoes it. |
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