press release

WILLIAM KENTRIDGE Marian Goodman Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by William Kentridge which will open on January 19th and will be on view through February 25th.

On view will be fifty working drawings and fragments used in the creation of the scenic design and animation for The Magic Flute, the Mozart opera given brilliant interpretation by William Kentridge in a long-awaited production this past spring (2005) which premiered at the Theatre Royal de la Monnaie, Brussels where it recently had a second run this September.

Related to the drawings, Kentridge will exhibit a working model, a theater-in-miniature, used in preparation for the full-length opera . The model, which incorporates front- and rear- projections on its screen, legs and borders, presents elements of the full-scale production, in-depth projections, and sound.

The drawings and models on view are the second stage of working materials related to the fully realized production of the opera The Magic Flute, which featured the direction of William Kentridge; the musical direction of Rene Jacob and Piers Maxim; and the set decoration of William Kentridge and Sabine Theunissen. The next years will see the worldwide tour of the production as it travels to Caen and Lille, France; Tel Aviv, Israel; and Naples, Italy in 2006-07, as well as Johannesburg, Brussels, and to the Brooklyn Academy of Music New York in the spring of 2007.

The first stage was presented last year in the form of drawings and projections onto blackboard, in a work titled Learning the Flute (2003). In both stages of Kentridge's preparatory studies, the tonal contrast and inversion of positive and negative within the drawings refers to a broad photographic metaphor relevant to the overall meaning of the drama, illustrating the two realms of Mozart's opera: with black associated with darkness, the moon and the figure of the Queen of the Night, and white with lightness, the sun, and the figure of Sarastro. The renderings by Kentridge, and the metaphor of illuminated shadows, point to inherent contradictions within the areas of wisdom, the Enlightenment,and authority.

This theme is explored and continued in a newly commissioned work by the artist recently completed for the Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin: Black Box/Chambre Noir, 2005, a project whose subject is also knowledge, violence and the Enlightenment, particularly Germany's colonial history in Africa and the massacre of the Hereros in 1904. The exhibition, which opened at the Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin on October 29th 2005, will be on view through January 15, 2006.

In his program notes Kentridge writes about the multiplication of implications within the opera: "At the end of the opera we are in the temple of the sun, the theater filled with a pure light. In projection terms, we are at the end of the film….our only hope in cinema is to make sense from the interplay between shadow and light—the platonic clarity of staring at the sun is the expiration of truth and meaning rather than its creation. … There is a clue here as to our reaction to Sarastro's teachings. The years since Mozart wrote the opera have made us more wary of philosopher autocrats. The enforced bringing of wisdom has had unintended but calamitous consequences all through the years, not just in the Robbespierian terror of the years immediately after the writing of the opera, but throughout the colonial era, and throughout our own century. Though we may believe in Sarastro's benevolent guidance, in the end we believe in Mozart more, in his mix of the rational, the fantastic, the contradictory.."

He also elaborates on the idea of the 'chambre noir": "If we were in the belly of the camera, the empty stage is the working space for the optics of the camera…where the three-dimensional world is recreated on a smaller scale, in a flattened form. The tradition of baroque flat scenery, arranged in a perspective from the proscenium to the back of the stage put me in mind of the layers in a bellows of an old camera…. So we now have a combination of elements : the photographic, the camera, the positive and negative, a reference to film, and the structure of the baroque theater, the type of theater and scenery that would have been used in early productions of the opera. Following this, Schinkel and his famous paintings for the scenery became an element of the design." - William Kentridge

William Kentridge's work has been exhibited widely throughout the world. He was the recipient in 2003 of the Kaiserring Prize, Monchehaus-Museum for Moderne Art, Goslar, and in 2000 of the Carnegie Prize, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh for his contributions to contemporary art. His recent one-man retrospective, which originated at Castello di Rivoli, Italy, has just opened in its only U.S. venue of the tour at Miami Art Central (MAC) and can be seen there through May of this year. Earlier legs of the tour included, in addition to Castello di Rivoli, K-21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; Musee d'Art Contemporain, Montreal, and the Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg.

Two previous survey shows have toured internationally: one in the U.S. in 2001 which traveled from Washington, to New York, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and Cape Town, and one in Europe in 1988-1999 which was seen in Brussels, Munich, Barcelona, London, Marseille, and Graz. The artist's work has been included in many important group exhibitions including recently, The Experience of Art, at the 51st Venice Biennale, 2005; Documenta II, Kassel, 2002; the Carnegie International, 1999; Documenta I0, 1997; The 10th Sydney Biennale, Sydney, 1996, and numerous others.

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EIJA-LIISA AHTILA Marian Goodman Gallery is pleased to announce our first exhibition in the New York gallery of the critically acclaimed Finnish filmmaker, video artist, and photographer Eija-Liisa Ahtila.

On view from January 19 – February 25th will be Eija-Liisa Ahtila's film The Hour of Prayer (2005, 14 min.,12 sec.).

The work consists of an installation made up of simultaneous DVD-projections with sound, which will be shown continuously on four adjacent screens in the South Gallery. This will be the first U.S. presentation of the work, which was seen earlier this summer and fall in "The Experience of Art" in the Italian Pavilion at the 51st Venice Biennale.

The Hour of Prayer is the artist's most personal work to date, a short tale of attachment and loss, based on the artist's own life. The events begin in New York during a winter storm in January and end in Benin, West Africa, eleven months later.

"The first part of the narrative retells a classical tale, in which the words and events explain each other and form a chronological progression. As the narrator speaks, words for time are prominent and images and sounds record the changes of season in various landscapes… The work moves away from the events in the story and the attribution of meaning, becoming a more general presentation of a private experience… The intention is to explore the possibilities of disrupting the traditional causal logic, structure and space for perception in screen narrative…" -- Eija-Liisa Ahtila

Eija-Liisa Ahtila has long been considered a master of the multimedia form. Her work is conceptually organized around the construction of image, language, narrative, and space, and she has often probed individual identity and the boundaries of the subject in relation to the external world. Exploring the fragile inner life of her protagonists and the tenuous line separating fantasy from reality, Ahtila's narratives provide tales of disturbing intimacy, loss, repression, and neuroses and are often focussed on the unsettling emotions at the heart of personal relationships. Using the visual language of cinema, Ahtila presents large-scale installations with split-screen projections on multiple panels. These viewing conditions, with their simultaneously charged vantage points and stories, enhance the experience of a psychologically mutating time and space.

Eija-Liisa Ahtila was born in 1959 in Hameenlinna, Finland and currently lives and works in Helsinki. She was the recipient in 2000 of the Vincent Van Gogh Biannual Award for Contemporary Art in Europe, Maastricht, The Netherlands as well as the Coutts Contemporary Art Foundation Award, Switzerland. In 1998 she received the Edstrand Art Prize, Sweden. She attended Helsinki University, Faculty of Law (1980-85); Independent Art School, 1981-84; and London College of Printing, School of Media and Management, Film and Video (1990-91). She received a Certificate from U.C.L.A. in Film, TV, Theater and Multimedia Studies, Los Angeles (1994-95) and attended special courses at the America Film Institute, Advanced Technology Program, Los Angeles (1994-95).

She has exhibited extensively at numerous museums and film festivals around the world and her films have received distinctive film awards and prizes over the years. Her work has also been widely seen on television in Europe.

In 2007, a solo exhibition of Ahtila's will open at the Jeu de Paume, Paris, and will travel thereafter.

Numerous one-woman exhibitions of her work have been seen internationally at venues such as Tate Modern, London; Museo d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Bolzano, Italy; De Appel Center for Contemporary Art, Amsterdam; The Dallas Museum of Art; Zurich Kunsthalle; Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki; Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin; Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; and Museum Fridericianum, Kassel. Retrospectives of her cinematic work have been recently shown at Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate Modern, London; the Institute Finlandais, Paris.

Important group exhibitions include Ecstasy: In and About Altered States, currently at MoCA, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles through February 2006; The World is a Stage: Stories Behind Pictures, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo; Girls Night Out, Orange Country Museum of Art, Los Angeles, which traveled to Aspen and St. Louis, and will be on view in Houston at the Blaffer Gallery, University of Houston, from January through February 2006; 51st Venice Biennale 2005; The Friedrich Christian Flick Collection, Hamburger Bahnhof Museum fur Gegenwart, Berlin; Outlook, Athens; Away from Home, Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio; Reel Sculpture, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Documenta II, Kassel; Sydney Biennale 2002; Venice Biennale 1999 and 1997; Manifesta 2 1998, Luxembourg; and the 5th Istanbul Biennale 1997.

Presestext

William Kentridge:The Magic Flute: Drawings and Projections

Eija-Liisa Ahtila: : "The Hour of Prayer", 2005