Beirut 2005-2007, Hale Tenger

Hale Tenger is a Turkish woman artist. Experimenting with different mediums and styles, Tenger questions the issues of femininity and rule making in society, political suppression, immigration and cultural identity. Beirut 2005-2007 was a video installation at the Istanbul Modern Museum in 2011.

Bruce and Sara Walking, Julian Opie

Julian Opie is a British artist belonging to the New British Sculpture movement. Opie tries to portray someone’s personality in as little detail as possible. Opie uses computers in art for other works.

House, Ben Rivers

The films of Ben Rivers (born Somerset, 1972, lives in London) are rich, cinematic portraits that explore wilderness environments and self-contained worlds, representing memory through visual fragments. Primarily shot on 16mm black and white film, sometimes on out-of-date stock, Rivers’ work has the appearance of ageing, archival footage.

Interview, Ben Rivers

The films of Ben Rivers (born Somerset, 1972, lives in London) are rich, cinematic portraits that explore wilderness environments and self-contained worlds, representing memory through visual fragments. Primarily shot on 16mm black and white film, sometimes on out-of-date stock, Rivers’ work has the appearance of ageing, archival footage.

Exhibition, Rosa Barba

Italian artist Rosa Barba has brought her beguiling mix of film and sculpture to Tate Modern’s Level 2 gallery. In her work film projectors command the viewer’s attention as much as the images they project.

Obstructions, Ali Kazma

Ali Kazma is a Turkish video artist. This video portrays his series of some twelve films entitled Obstructions. His videos represent human activities, particularly the relation to work and the conditions of work.

Syndromes and a Century, Apichatpong Weerasethakul

Apichatpong “Joe” Weerasethakul is a Thai independent film director, screenwriter, and film producer.

El Ojo Pensante, Juan Downey

Juan Downey was a pioneer of video art in Latin America. This Chilean artist spent most of his career in New York and exhibited his work at the Whitney Museum. Back in the 1960’s and 1970’s he discussed topics such as ecology, intercultural aspects and globalisation through extraordinary projects such as a video voyage in the depths of the Amazonia. Video in Spanish.

Studio Banana TV Interviews Annika Larsson

Studio Banana TV interviews videoartist Annika Larsson.

Turbulent, Shirin Neshat

On the occasion of the release of “Women Without Men” I would like to share “Turbulent”. A dual channel video installation created by Shirin Neshats in 1998.

Two-screen installation, two singers (Shoja Azari playing the role of the male and Iranian Vocalist and composer Sussan Deyhim as the female) create a powerful musical metaphor for [...]

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