avs. kino serie #5 Gordon Matta-Clark

avs. kino serie #5 Gordon Matta-Clark
another
vacant
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Gordon Matta-Clark

avs. kino serie #5

April 28 2015 8pm/ 20h







Fresh Kill
Gordon Matta-Clark
1972, 12:56 min, color, sound, 16 mm film on video






Fresh Kill
Gordon Matta-Clark
1972, 12:56 min, color, sound, 16 mm film on video






Fresh Kill
Gordon Matta-Clark
1972, 12:56 min, color, sound, 16 mm film on video















Gordon Matta-Clark












To convert a place into a state of mind. . . .
—Gordon Matta-Clark, 1976






The son of Chilean Surrealist Roberto Matta and Anne Clark and the godson of Marcel Duchamp, Gordon Robert Matta-Echaurren (1943–78) studied architecture at Cornell from 1962 to 1968, including a year at the Sorbonne in Paris, where he studied French literature. In 1971, he changed his name to Gordon Matta-Clark, adopting his mother’s last name. Frustrated with the limitations of his chosen profession, Matta-Clark used his training in architecture instead as a base for his artistic explorations of space. He was an extremely prolific artist in a career barely spanning a decade that combined minimalist, conceptual, and performance practices. Best remembered for site-specific projects known as “building cuts,” these architectural interventions consisting of direct cuts into actual buildings scheduled for demolition now exist only as sculptural fragments, photographs, drawings, collages, and film and video documentations.











Dating from 1971 to 1977, are documents of many Matta-Clark’s well known performances and architectural interventions in New York, Poughkeepsie and Niagara Falls (NY), Englewood (NJ), Paris, Antwerp, and Berlin. Not only documents, these moving-image works also reveal Matta-Clark’s aesthetic attitudes and philosophical and political inquiries, all the while playing with the texture and space of the cinematic image.





Working in New York City in the 1970s, “Matta-Clark was among those at the center of the avant-garde,” giving primary importance to the individual and to considerations of everyday life, an emphasis, which was in complete opposition to the focus on formalism during his education at Cornell. “War, political and racial assassinations and street riots, conflict between generations, all contributed to the feeling that a new order was evolving. Matta-Clark sensed both the dissolution of the old and the invigoration of seeking the new. . . . He proceeded like an inspired alchemist—experimenting, remaking what art can be, and turning unexpected things, acts, and sites into poetic and memorable aesthetic experiences.”








Matta-Clark’s radical explorations into space and structure, which he referred to as Anarchitecture, called “for an anarchistic approach to architecture, marked physically by a breaking of convention through a process of ‘undoing’ or ‘destructuring,’ rather than creating a structure—and philosophically by a revolutionary approach that sought to reveal and later alleviate societal problems through art.”











While the buildings that he cut into have long been demolished and even the neighborhoods that he worked in—Soho and the meatpacking district, for instance—are completely different places today, Matta-Clark’s dynamic engagement with the urban environment not only garnered high regard from his contemporaries but has influenced many artists since.

Andrea Inselmann


(abridged)