New Cinema & Contemporary Art

An experience of hybrid film, art and performance

Saturday 14 December 2024

13 - 15 December 2024

EXHIBITIONS

Exhibitions | Contemporary Intersects

“Contemporary Intersects” explores different strata comprising our contemporary reality, or rather, questions the possible intersections between different ensembles, different spaces.

The starting point of the project is Gordon Matta-Clark’s monumental work “Office Baroque”, an intervention through the architecture of a building, of which only photographic and filmic traces remain today, which, while resonating with the Loods 6 building and its spaces, operates a radical transgression of our perception.

How can we speak of transgression, of transgressing, when it’s not a question of moral transgression? Rather, it’s a matter of crossing, or overflowing, what is posited as a boundary for our senses, for hearing and sight. It’s also, just as much, and perhaps more precisely, about fracturing. Of what fracturing – of what is not supposed to break – lets us hear or see.

Gordon Matta-Clarck‘s work literally cuts through a building, like an architect-sculptor, stripped of all the materiality that accompanies sculpture. The building is hollowed out, emptied, pierced along contours that seem at once governed by the most rigorous geometry, but also by the appearance of the most perfect arbitrariness, so that only a general view makes it possible to understand its purpose.

It’s a reversal of the act of seeing. Matta-Clarck acts; the work is the action. The film shows us an action whose result is no longer visible. The building has been destroyed.

As in “Conical Intersect” (1975), it is the act of seeing that transgresses, crosses and transforms the materiality of a building, reconnecting different spaces and scales. The act of seeing reveals something incomprehensible, if not monstrous, about our existence in the world: how is it possible for the unassignable interiority of an individual and the world that unfolds in complete exteriority to come together? Through our gaze, which reverses not only inside and outside, but also intimate private time and shared public time.

In “Office Baroque”, the gaze traverses’ space in unusual ways, ways that were previously impossible in the usual use of space. In this way, Matta-Clark transgresses the logic of the senses, exposing the monstrosity of the act of seeing, which brings together the invisible of the most intimate gaze with the exteriority of the world and its constructed spaces.

By projecting the shadow of vast foliage onto the ground, “Invisible Presence” literally opens up the space, abolishing the walls of the exhibition space. With Theis Wendt‘s installation, the transgression or reversal here is not that of up and down, but rather that of depth and surface.

What is evoked is not so much the shadow of foliage, but the trees and light that produce it, just as the thing precedes the word, presence exceeds representation. The installation creates a monumental off-screen space, on the scale of the world. The gap between the evoked presence and what is visible evokes a world of strange tones, a world buried or past, imbued with a strange nostalgia. With the slow quivering of leaf shadows, the entire surface of the world vibrates.

We’re in that part of the world: a world beyond our contemporary times, after our society has collapsed, there’s only invisible trees and sun, perceptible only through shadows.

Yet there is no hidden truth in the depths of the sky. In line with Deleuze’s reflection in “The Logic of Sense” that the search for the meaning of something ceases to be a search for its “deeper meaning”, hidden beneath visible appearances, here, through these projections, all depth is brought to the surface; there is no depth or invisibility outside what is present on the surface.

With his installation “Topia”, Zalán Szakács questions these notions by confronting us with the vision of immaterial screens interwoven through space, made perceptible by light and haze. What he questions are the very notions of surface and projection. The surfaces of the screens are themselves dissolved, no longer a material support stopping the light and allowing us to perceive projected images, they become images themselves and are the very finality of what is to be perceived, without opacity, constituted by light, now imbricated in the depth of space. The screens become thresholds, fractures of light, opening onto suspended spaces where perception wavers.

In “Under Boom”, Louis Braddock Clarke makes the fracturing of the world audible. His installation plunges us into the deep murmurs of the Earth, where the inaudible becomes vibration and time, resonance. From an island in the middle of the Atlantic, the distant sounds of the planet, captured and recorded as infrasound – air strikes, calving of ice sheets, seismic guns, etc. – are amplified and become the sonic signs of the disturbances and crises of our time. Sound becomes a trace inscribed in our disrupted ecosystems. The installation acts as a listening station, a sensitive point where the deep vibrations of the world and the traces of our history intertwine, thus opening up the possibility of a different kind of listening and a different experience of the world.

Each of the four works in the exhibition represents a transgression or reversal of our way of perceiving and understanding the world. Each work designates different spaces, crosses and transforms them, and, at their intersection, questions the possibility of a common world.

These four works connect us to the urgent and necessary nature of a common perception, at the intersection of the multiple contemporary spaces we cross.

EXHIBITIONS

Louis Braddock Clarke: Under Boom

Video installation, two screens, sound | colour | 00:18:00 | United Kingdom, Netherlands | 2024

EXHIBITIONS

Gordon Matta-Clark: Office Baroque

Exp. documentary, 16mm on HD, excerpt on videoprojection, entire work on flatscreen, sound | colour | 00:44:00 | USA, Belgium| 1977-2005

EXHIBITIONS

Zalán Szakács: Topia

Installation, GLP fusion sticks light fixtures, haze machine | Netherlands | 2024

EXHIBITIONS

Theis Wendt: Invisible Presence

3 channel video installation | Denmark | 2019-2024

VR PROGRAMME

VR Programme

The Rencontres Internationales in Amsterdam invites you to experience eleven works in virtual reality. Eleven experiences akin to traversing shifting landscapes, spaces that stretch and dissolve, narratives where time and matter vacillate. Gathered together under the title ‘Contemporary Intersects’, these works explore the fractures and recompositions of our perceptions, between private and collective spaces, intimate and political.

Walls tremble and shift, and time seems to fade away. The strata of space become scores. The links between individuals and spaces are loosened and recomposed, memories are rearranged in new combinations, revealing the unspoken aspects of social and emotional interactions.

Here, everything is recomposed: the links between bodies and places, promises and disillusions, the architecture of a museum transformed into a field of possibilities.

These works plunge into history, breaking down the common space and questioning the fragile foundations of our societies. They probe the promises of technology - a force for progress or an instrument of domination - capitalism, which commodifies young people reduced to data, and the denial of the passage of time. 

Virtual reality spaces also take on a political and historical dimension, asking us questions about the over-exploitation of resources and the extinction of living beings, and about the human dignity that has been abused in the course of history. 

From poisoned industrial soils to contemporary migrations re-enacting the tragedies of Sophocles, a loop is drawn, insistent and necessary. These works do not show: they question. They fragment and recompose space, exposing its political charge and its capacity to embody both the common and the intimate. They invite us to feel, to question and, perhaps, to invent new arrangements of reality.

VR PROGRAMME

Loukia Alavanou: On the Way to Colonus

VR 360 video | colour | 0:20:00 | Greece | 2021

VR PROGRAMME

Inti Gallardo, Lucian A. Meister: Mnemoc(y)ne

Experimental VR/XR | colour | Argentina, Chile, Spain | 2019

VR PROGRAMME

Nicolas Gebbe: Lockdown Dreamscape VR

VR 360 video | colour | 0:07:00 | Germany | 2021

VR PROGRAMME

M+M: Olympic Vertigo

VR 360 video | colour | 0:05:50 | Luxembourg, Germany | 2023

VR PROGRAMME

Lauren Moffatt: Image Technology Echoes

Experimental VR/XR | colour and b&w | Australia, Ireland, Germany | 2021

VR PROGRAMME

Doireann O'Malley: New Maps of Hyperspace

VR 360 video | colour | 0:06:44 | Ireland | 2020

VR PROGRAMME

Marlies Pöschl: Vivo Vision

VR 360 video | colour | 0:34:30 | Austria, Thailande | 2024

VR PROGRAMME

Chi Yin Sim: The Garden of No Return

VR 360 video | colour | 0:10:36 | Singapour | 2023

VR PROGRAMME

Matthijs Vuijk: With the Whole World Crumbling, We Pick This Time to Fall In Love

VR 360 video | colour | 0:07:00 | Netherlands, South Africa | 2021

VR PROGRAMME

Amy Louise Wilson and Francois Knoetze: The Subterranean Imprint Archive

Experimental VR/XR | colour | South Africa | 2021

VR PROGRAMME

Omid Zarei and Anne Jeppesen: A Vocal Landscape

Experimental VR/XR | colour | Denmark, France, Iran | 2023

16:00 | Screening | “What She's Going Through”

At emblematic post-industrial sites in Germany’s Ruhr region, Melanie Manchot films women working the night shift. Known for its mining history, the region has long been dominated by male success stories.  Rebecca Jane Arthur spends three days with a woman in her home. Each woman tells her stories of artistic creation, immigration, family ties and break-ups. Wendelien van Oldenborgh combines contemporary voices with two women from Japan’s literary and political past. Fumiko Hayashi and Yuriko Miyamoto were popular authors in their day – from the late 1920s onwards – and both died young, in 1951. Both had a strong feminist and class consciousness, as well as an impressive literary voice.

16:00 | SCREENING | “What She’s Going Through”

Melanie Manchot: Liquid Skin

Exp. documentary | hdv | colour | 0:23:19 | Germany, United Kingdom | 2023

16:00 | SCREENING | “What She’s Going Through”

Rebecca Jane Arthur: Barefoot Birthdays on Unbreakable Glass

Exp. film | 16mm | colour | 0:18:20 | Belgium | 2023

16:00 | SCREENING | “What She’s Going Through”

Wendelien van Oldenborgh: Of Girls 彼女たちの (kanajo tachi no)

Exp. documentary | 4k | colour | 0:43:13 | Netherlands, Japan | 2023

18:00 | Screening | “Queer Community”

Christopher Tym tells a choral story of shared intimacy, where days and nights follow one another as a window emerges from a burning tunnel. Jade Kallio and Remi Vesala write a love letter to things that cannot be written. Either the writing hurts or it is impossible to find the words. Young-Jun Tak analyses sensitive bodies and polarised gendered representations by following soldiers of the Spanish Legion on a Holy Thursday parade in Malaga, and dancers in a Berlin forest.  Damir Očko celebrates Zagreb’s queer community, and pays homage to the kingdom of birds and their songs, performed by an anti-fascist lesbian choir from Zagreb. Simon(e) Jaikiriuma Paetau and Laura Ruiz Paetau put on a performance, evoking the spirit of their recently deceased trans sister, Aérea Negrot.  Fernanda Polacow presents a documentary-poetry-manifesto on Angolan artist Kiluanji Kia Henda. Reflecting on the legacy of colonialism and war, his creations propose toppling statues and symbols, building new memories, framing the destroyed landscape, writing letters to the future and reversing power dynamics.

18:00 | SCREENING | “Queer Community”

Christopher Tym: Hole is the Bubble I Blew

Exp. documentary | 4k | colour | 0:07:32 | Netherlands, United Kingdom, Brazil | 2024

18:00 | SCREENING | “Queer Community”

Jade Kallio, Remi Vesala: Laava

Exp. fiction | 4k | colour | 0:15:00 | Finland | 2024

18:00 | SCREENING | “Queer Community”

Young-Jun Tak: Love Your Clean Feet on Thursday

Video | Digital | colour | 0:18:53 | South Korea, Germany, Spain | 2023

18:00 | SCREENING | “Queer Community”

Damir Ocko: The Dawn Chorus

Video | 4k | colour | 0:17:43 | Croatia | 2023

18:00 | SCREENING | “Queer Community”

Simon(e) Jaikiriuma Paetau, Laura Ruiz Paetau: The Beautiful Invisibles Las Hermosas Invisibles

Exp. documentary | hdv | colour | 0:09:05 | Colombia, Germany, Canada | 2024

18:00 | SCREENING | “Queer Community”

Fernanda Polacow: Big Bang Henda

Video | Digital | colour | 0:22:00 | Portugal, Brazil, Angola | 2023

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