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Douglas Gordon. I Had Nowhere To Go

Saturday 12 October 2019, 9 pm

Douglas Gordon, 'I Had Nowhere To Go', 2016
Douglas Gordon, 'I Had Nowhere To Go', 2016
Artists
Douglas Gordon and Jonas Mekas
Curators
Pascale Cassagnau
Venues
Zumzeig
Price
3 €
Date and hours
Saturday 12 October 2019, 9 pm Add to calendar

As a result of the long term collaboration with curator Pascale Cassagnau and responsible of the audiovisual and new media collection of the Centre national des arts plastiques – CNAP, and on the occasion of the Barcelona Gallery Weekend, LOOP presents I Had Nowhere To Go: A Portrait of a Displaced Person (2016) by renowned visual artist Douglas Gordon. The film is a ninety-seven minute project in which experimental filmmaker Jonas Mekas is heard via voice-over reading passages from his 1991 autobiography of the same title, while his image intermittently appears out of the dark blankness that the black screen of the work is governed by.

Another example of Gordon’s tendency to play with the expectations around moving image works and a somewhat hybrid production between video art and experimental cinema, I Had Nowhere To Go continues the artist’s practice as a portraitist while creating a space for debating on the frontiers between different disciplines.

Artists: Douglas Gordon, Jonas Mekas

Pascale Cassagnau

Pascale Cassagnau

Pascale Cassagnau holds a PhD in Art History and Criticism and is responsible for the audiovisual and new media collection at the CNAP (Centre national des arts plastiques, Paris). She writes extensively for Art Press and is the author of texts on artists such as Chris Burden, James Coleman, John Baldessari, Pierre Huyghe, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster and Matthieu Laurette, among others. She is mainly interested in the study of new film practices and their cross-over with contemporary art. Her essay “Future Amnesia, Enquêtes sur un troisième cinéma” (Ed. Isthmus, 2006) investigates new filmic forms, existing between fiction and documentary. “Un pays supplémentaire” (Ed. Ecole nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris, 2010) focuses on contemporary creation in the media architecture. Her book, “‘Apichatpong Weerasethakul,’ Une théorie des objets personnels” was released as an e-book in 2016. Her essay “Diagramme Monteiro, on Joao Cesar Monterio, was written in collaboration with Hughes Decointet and published in Editions de L’Oeil in 2017. Her essays “La répétition générale,” — a work on the processes of creation and research in the fields of cinema, contemporary art — and “Dispositifs-jeux” — on Jean Frapat, inventor of television devices — are currently in progress.

Last update 9th March 2017