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Mac AdamsProgramme
Robert Breer
Elina Brotherus
Omer Fast
Ryan Gander
Mark Geffriaud
JĂșlius Koller
JirĂ Kovanda
Deimantas Narkevicius
Roman OndĂĄk
Dominique Petitgand
Pratchaya Phinthong
Pia Rönicke
Yann Sérandour
ProchainementAilleursPratchaya PhinthongEn cours
JĂșlius KollerA common feelingArchives2012FoiresRyan Gander2011
Pia RönickeMark Geffriaud2010
Deimantas Narkevicius
Mac Adams
Yann Sérandour
Dominique Petitgand
JirĂ KovandaRobert Breer, "Clouds"2009
Omer Fast "Nostalgia"
Both Before and After
The Boy Who Cried Wolf (Lefty Loosey, Righty Tighty)
Elina Brotherus, "Artists at Work"
Elina Brotherus, "Rétrospective"Deimantas Narkevicius2008
"LĂ oĂč les eaux se mĂȘlent"
Pratchaya Phinthong "What I learned I no longer know; the little I still know, I guessed"
"Nord, Nord-Ouest"
Roman OndĂĄk "Fluid Border"
Ryan Gander « Itâs a right Heath Robinson affair » (A stuttering exhibition in two parts)
Mark Geffriaud « Si lâon pouvait ĂȘtre un Peau-Rouge »
Berlin-Paris, un échange de galeriesYann Sérandour « Weiss »2007
Pia Rönicke & Zeynel Abidin Kizilyaprak «An Usual Story from a Nameless Country»
« Faces »
Jiri Kovanda «Two Cushions»
Omer Fast «De Grote Boodschap»« Cinematic Panorama »2006
Elina Brotherus
Pratchaya Phinthong «if I dig a very deep hole»
Julius Koller «Space is The Place»
Mac Adams «07-70»
« The Last piece By John Fare »
« Time Flies »Dominique Petitgand «Quelquâun par terre (Someone one the ground)»2005
Pia Rönicke «Rosa's Letters - Telling a Story»
« Jiri Kovanda VS Reste du monde (Tentatives de Rapprochement) »
Roman Ondåk «More Silent Than Ever»
« Outside The Living Room »
Deimantas Narkevicius «Instead of Today»
Omer Fast «Godville»« Petites Compositions entre amis - Séquence 3 »2004
« Petites Compositions entre amis - Séquence 2 »
« Petites Compositions entre amis - Séquence 1 »
Elina Brotherus «Model Studies»Pia Rönicke «Without a Name»2003
Loris Gréaud «Ending Introduction»
Robert Breer
Alban Hajdinaj «My Home is Your Home»« Links »2002
« Present Perfect »
Roman Ondåk «Talker»Mac Adams «Beneath The Shadow»2001
Omer Fast
Deimantas Narkevicius
Dominique PetitgandRobert Breer
Elina Brotherus «Suites françaises 2»
« Hors-jeu »Art Basel Miami Beach
Artissima, 11
Fiac 11, Paris
Art Basel 42
Independent 2011, New York
ArchivesArtissima 17, Turin
Fiac 10, Paris
Sunday, Londres
Art 41 Basel
Independent
Art 40 Basel
Art Basel Miami Beach
FIAC 09, Paris
The Fair Gallery > Frieze Art Fair
Mac AdamsLevel One
Robert Breer
Elina Brotherus
Omer Fast
Ryan Gander
Mark Geffriaud
JĂșlius Koller
Jiri Kovanda
Deimantas Narkevicius
Roman OndĂĄk
Dominique Petitgand
Pratchaya Phinthong
Pia Rönicke
Yann Sérandour
InfosLiens
Joris Lacoste - 12 rĂȘves prĂ©parĂ©s
John Smith with John Berger, Black Audio Film Collective, Peter Watkins
St.op-St.art (1965-2011 â UIPT, superintendent Tamas St.Turba)
Mac AdamsProgram
Robert Breer
Elina Brotherus
Omer Fast
Ryan Gander
Mark Geffriaud
JĂșlius Koller
JirĂ Kovanda
Deimantas Narkevicius
Roman OndĂĄk
Pratchaya Phinthong
Dominique Petitgand
Pia Rönicke
Yann Sérandour
UpcomingOffsitePratchaya PhinthongCurrent
JĂșlius KollerA common feelingArchives2012FairsRyan Gander2011
Pia RönickeMark Geffriaud2010
Deimantas Narkevicius
Mac Adams
Yann Sérandour
Dominique Petitgand
JirĂ Kovanda, "Wait, please, she will come"Robert Breer, "Clouds"2009
Omer Fast "Nostalgia"
Both before and after
The Boy Who Cried Wolf (Lefty Loosey, Righty Tighty)
Elina Brotherus "Artists at Work"
Elina Brotherus, "Retrospective"Deimantas Narkevicius2008
Where water comes together with other water
Pratchaya Phinthong "What I learned I no longer know; the little I still know, I guessed"
Nord, Nord-Ouest
Roman OndĂĄk "Fluid Border"
Ryan Gander "Itâs a right Heath Robinson affair" (A stuttering exhibition in two parts)
Mark Geffriaud "If one were only an Indian"
Berlin-Paris, a gallery exchangeYann Sérandour "Weiss"2007
Pia Rönicke & Zeynel Abidin Kizilyaprak "An Usual Story From a Nameless Country"
"Faces"
Jiri Kovanda "Two Cushions"
Omer Fast "De Grote Boodschap""Cinematic Panorama"2006
Elina Brotherus
Pratchaya Phinthong "if I dig a very deep hole"
Julius Koller "Space is The Place"
Mac Adams "07-70"
"The Last Piece by John Fare"
"Time Files"Dominique Petitgand2005
Pia Rönicke "Rosa's Letters- Telling a Story"
Jiri Kovanda "Jiri Kovanda vs Reste du Monde (Tentatives de rapprochement)"
Roman OndĂĄk "More Silent Than Ever"
"Outside The Living Room"
Deimantas Narkevicius "Instead of Today"
Omer Fast "Godville""Petites compositions entre amis - Sequence 3"2004
"Petites compositions entre amis - Sequence 2"
"Petites compositions entre amis - Sequence 1"
Elina Brotherus "Model Studies"Pia Rönicke "Without a Name"2003
Loris Greaud "Ending Introduction"
Robert Breer
Alban Hajdinaj "My Home is Your Home""Links"2002
"Present Perfect"
Roman OndĂĄk "Talker"Mac Adams "Beneath the Shadow"2001
Omer Fast
Deimantas Narkevicius
Dominique PetitgandRobert Breer
Elina Brotherus "Suites Françaises 2"
"Hors-Jeu"Art Basel Miami Beach
Artissima 11, Torino
Fiac 11, Paris
Art Basel 42
Independent, New York
ArchivesArtissima 10, Torino
Fiac 10, Paris
Sunday, London
Art 41 Basel
Independent
Art 40 Basel
Art Basel Miami Beach
Fiac, Paris
The Fair Gallery > Frieze Art Fair
Mac AdamsLevel One
Robert Breer
Elina Brotherus
Omer Fast
Ryan Gander
Mark Geffriaud
JĂșlius Koller
Jiri Kovanda
Deimantas Narkevicius
Roman OndĂĄk
Dominique Petitgand
Pratchaya Phinthong
Pia Rönicke
Yann Sérandour
InfosLinks
Joris Lacoste - 12 rĂȘves prĂ©parĂ©s
John Smith with John Berger, Black Audio Film Collective, Peter Watkins
St.op-St.art (1965-2011 â UIPT, superintendent Tamas St.Turba)
John Smith with John Berger, Black Audio Film Collective, Peter Watkins
With the work of John Smith (1952, U.K.) as a point of departure, Level One brought its attention toward other British personalities, sharing with John Smith the desire to underline, within the very interior of the process of creation, the context determining the reading of a piece of information or a work of art. Each of them develop a narrative dimension in their work, while also signaling the limits of such a construction. These artists, writers and filmmakers are entirely aware of their role as intermediaries of a history and aim at rendering the spectator conscious of potential manipulations. The works, films or documentaries, made in Great Britain between 1965 and 1984 and presented in this exhibition, testify to the most inventive and radical of experimentations, both in terms of their form and the profound intellectual integrity of their content.
We present three works by John Smith: Associations (1975), a seven minute, 16 mm film in which the images of magazines accompany an off-camera voice extracted from Herbert H. Clark's book âWord Associations and Linguistic Theoryâ. This film reveals the ambiguities inherent to the English language, demonstrating that there is never just one possible reading. In the 16 mm, black and white film, The Girl Chewing Gum (1976), a long street scene of a London neighborhood carries on for almost twelve minutes. Each action is described by a voice, like that of a director commanding the sequence of a film shoot.
In a game of references between image and sound, John Smith guides us toward an ambiguous space-time. Using an English proverb, the 16 mm film in color Shepherdâs Delight (1980-1984), presents a humorous and absurd take on word games and linguistic misunderstandings in order to accent the ambivalence in meaning. This films also demonstrates a new stage in John Smith's work, where it becomes not just field of experimentations, but a receptacle for more intimate thought.
For almost 60 years, filmmaker Peter Watkins (1935, U.K.) has deconstructed narrative linearity, mixing fiction and reality in order to reveal the artifice of cinema. He was particularly attached to mass media critiques and to that which he called the monoform. In 1965, the BBC commissioned Peter Watkins to make a documentary on the effects of nuclear warfare. He subsequently made The War Game, where in a newscast style influenced by film documents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he filmed the onset of war between NATO and the USSR and that latter's atomic attack on Kent, with its disastrous consequences: the massacre of thousands of people, the sacrifice of civilians for the state, the struggle for survival, and a politically biased media. The actors were recruited by way of public meetings in Kent and the majority of the shooting took place in the abandoned military barracks in Douvres. Peter Watkins wanted to implicate «ordinary people» in the search for their own history, reflecting contemporary preoccupations of events that were, at the time, feared as imminently possible. The BBC showed moderate appreciation for the film and after it incited heated Parliamentary debates, the channel banned the film, using qualitative criteria as justification. Upon discovering that the ban was pressured by the British government, Peter Watkins later resigned from the BBC.
In 1972, again for the BBC, author and screenwriter John Berger (1926, U.K.) conceived Ways of Seeing, an art history audiovisual series divided in four 30 minutes chapters. His book, published later under the same title, became influential to an entire generation. John Berger presents a critique of western aesthetic thought and questions the hidden ideologies in images and in our visual culture. The first chapter of Ways of Seeing elaborates theories presented in Walter Benjamin's âThe Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproductionâ, postulating that modern age technology continually re-contextualizes works in a non-objective way. The second section retraces the female nude in the history of art, reminding us that the images at hand are almost always that of masculine idealization and not portraits of a woman. The third chapter addresses oil painting and the historic importance of the role of the commissioner. Finally the fourth program recounts the invention of photography and its place in a society of consumers. Here, John Berger invents another way of looking at images, making us aware of the time and ideology of the moment in which we look at them. Paradoxically, with John Berger's critical point of view in a mass media program, the BBC also participated in a certain kind of political engagement.
Other personalities, for example John Akomfrah (Black Audio Film Collective), a collective formed by seven people created and 1982 and disbanded in 1998, continue in this critical vain. It is precisely this intellectual and political demand combined with an artistic radicalism that this exhibition aims to present. If we were to find a French historic counterparts to this British experience, we would have to direct our research to the field of cinema. It was, in fact, while watching François Truffaut's âDay For Nightâ that John Smith thought of the concept of The Girl Chewing Gum.
In the future, Level One will develop a continuation of this exhibition in order to follow the interrogations it presented.





In the 16 mm, black and white film, The Girl Chewing Gum (1976), a long street scene of a London neighborhood carries on for almost twelve minutes. Each action is described by a voice, like that of a director commanding the sequence of a film shoot.
In a game of references between image and sound, John Smith guides us toward an ambiguous space-time.

Using an English proverb, the 16 mm film in color Shepherdâs Delight (1980-1984), presents a humorous and absurd take on word games and linguistic misunderstandings in order to accent the ambivalence in meaning. This films also demonstrates a new stage in John Smith's work, where it becomes not just field of experimentations, but a receptacle for more intimate thought.
Associations (1975) is a seven minute, 16 mm film in which the images of magazines accompany an off-camera voice extracted from Herbert H. Clark's book âWord Associations and Linguistic Theoryâ. This film reveals the ambiguities inherent to the English language, demonstrating that there is never just one possible reading.


In 1965, the BBC commissioned Peter Watkins to make a documentary on the effects of nuclear warfare. He subsequently made The War Game, where in a newscast style influenced by film documents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he filmed the onset of war between NATO and the USSR and that latter's atomic attack on Kent, with its disastrous consequences: the massacre of thousands of people, the sacrifice of civilians for the state, the struggle for survival, and a politically biased media. The BBC showed moderate appreciation for the film and after it incited heated Parliamentary debates, the channel banned the film, using qualitative criteria as justification. Upon discovering that the ban was pressured by the British government, Peter Watkins later resigned from the BBC.






In 1972, again for the BBC, author and screenwriter John Berger (1926, U.K.) conceived Ways of Seeing, an art history audiovisual series divided in four 30 minutes chapters. His book, published later under the same title, became influential to an entire generation. John Berger presents a critique of western aesthetic thought and questions the hidden ideologies in images and in our visual culture. Paradoxically, with John Berger's critical point of view in a mass media program, the BBC also participated in a certain kind of political engagement.