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Single Channel, HD video, colour, sound
Edition of 5 + 2 AP
Filmed in France and Canada, in the boreal forests of the Morvan mountains and Ontario, Once Upon a Time tells the terrifying story of mechanical felling.
Filmed in France and Canada, in the boreal forests of the Morvan mountains and Ontario, Once Upon a Time tells the terrifying story of mechanical felling. Gathered by “the ogre” (tree feller), the trees are subject to a repetitive hypnotic choreography: in less than a minute, the trunks are felled and “swallowed” by the mandibles of a mechanical arm, plucked off their branches, their bark and then cut to pieces: methodical procedure, maximum profit. Void of human presence, the close-up of the shot and the edited speed accentuate the dehumanization of an expeditious deforestation. Inspired by the Brothers Grimm tales, Tania Mouraud went into the boreal forest of Canada and two forests of France to film the forest industry and different machines linked to the wood industry. The choreography of the moving images, the visual rhythms and the richness of colours provoke a deep emotional impact. The machines look like voracious monsters and bring back memories of the mythical figure of the ogre.
With the Support of the Romanian Cultural Institute
The work of Tania Mouraud has continued to evolve since she started creating in the 60s, alternatively exploring multiple media including painting, installation, photography, performance, video and sound. She suggested integrating meditation rooms in standard homes, 1968. She plastered her discontentment with society, with materialism taking precedent over man, on 4 x 3 meter billboards, 1977. She has also examined the limits of perception by creating “words of form”, 1989. Her more recent museum exhibitions include: Tania Mouraud. A retrospective at Centre Pompidou Metz, March, October 2015; AD NAUSEAM at MAC/VAL – Musée d’art contemporain du Val-de-Marne, Vitry-sur- Seine (France); Exhausted Laughters, Musée d’Art Moderne de Saint-‐Etienne Métropole, France.