iloveyouihateyou

iloveyouihateyou
Author: Lee Ranaldo, Leah Singer
Publisher: Libraryman
Language: English
Pages:
Size:
Weight: 220 g
Binding: Hardcover
ISBN: 9789197664646
Availability: In stock
Price: €25.00
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Contents

Introduction by Richard Julin, Chief Curator at Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall.
Conversation between Richard Julin, Lee Ranaldo and Leah Singer in New York, November 20, 2008
Biographies of participating artists in the exhibition.

Introduction (from the catalogue)

A mental squinting

About twenty years ago my idea about what art can be was shaken thoroughly. I was watching Jonas Mekas three hour, epic experimental movie “Walden”. It poetically depicts brief moments of beauty from quotidian situations. I quickly felt at ease with “Walden’s” quite slow tempo, hand held camera movements and voice-over sound track. So much that I fell asleep after a while. I woke up a bit later to new images of vaguely familiar faces, a snow storm in Times Square, hearing a voice reading something in French, images of a boat ride… and I dozed off again. When I woke up and followed the flow until the film ended I was exhilarated. I realized that I had felt no urge to understand a specific message or plot line. The experience was like being in a stream of image and sound; an allowing environment that embraced contemplation as well as sleep. It felt like a mental squinting where the focus was somewhere between the images, the sound and the thoughts they evoked. A liberating experience!

I got that same feeling when I first saw Leah Singer and Lee Ranaldo’s installation “Drift”. The work can be described as an immersive sonic/visual environment consisting of music, sounds and texts by Ranaldo in response to two 16mm analytical film projectors performed in real time by Singer. Starting in 1991 “Drift” was performed live in museums, galleries, concert halls and performing arts centers worldwide until 2005. At that time the work became a DVD film. This “fixed version” of something that had been in flux for so many years turned out to be a catalyst and starting point for a new work: “iloveyouihateyou”. This is the work that has its premiere as an installation at Magasin 3 during the Spring of 2009.

Leah Singer and Lee Ranaldo’s performance work and installations combine a flow of images and sounds taken from everyday situations, moments that reveal the beauty of the ordinary and turn the commonplace into something extraordinary. The contemporary poetic nature of their work echoes a history of experimental cinema that is included in the exhibition with three older works from the history of American avant-garde cinema: “Swamp” by Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson (1971), ”Children’s Tapes” by Terry Fox (1974) and ”City Slivers” by Gordon Matta Clark (1976). I doubt the exhibition “iloveyouihateyou” will make you fall asleep. But if you do – enjoy!

I want to thank Leah and Lee for the generous discussions on art that we’ve had and for a great time working together developing the exhibition “iloveyouihateyou”.

Richard Julin, Chief Curator at Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall