James Nares’ Video Street to be Centerpiece of Exhibition Opening March 5 at Metropolitan Museum. Street, a new video by artist James Nares, will have its New York premiere as the centerpiece of an exhibition by the same name at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from March 5 through May 27, 2013.

A recent acquisition of the Museum, the mesmerizing 61-minute high-definition video—which was shot on the streets of Manhattan over the course of a week in September 2011—will be shown continuously on a large screen in the central gallery of the Museum’s Drawings, Prints, and Photographs Galleries. The exhibition Street will also include 60 works of art—selected by the artist from the Met’s encyclopedic collections—that situate his video in relation to earlier works that capture the spirit of the street.

My intention was to give the dreamlike impression of floating through a city full of people frozen in time, caught Pompeii-like, at a particular moment of thought, expression, or activity…a film to be viewed 100 years from now.

James Nares

Street, a new video by the British-born artist James Nares, forms the centerpiece of this exhibition. Over the course of a week in September 2011, Nares—a New Yorker since 1974—recorded sixteen hours of footage of people on the streets of Manhattan from a moving car using a high-definition camera usually used to record fast-moving subjects such as speeding bullets and hummingbirds. He then greatly slowed his source material, editing down the results to one hour of steady, continuous motion and scoring it with music for twelve-string guitar composed and performed by his friend Thurston Moore, co-founder of Sonic Youth.

Accompanying Street in its New York premiere are two galleries of objects from the Museum's permanent collection, chosen by Nares to provide different points of entry into aspects of his work. The artist's selection spans 3000 B.C. to A.D. 1987—from the first urban places to contemporary cities—though not every object has a one-to-one correspondence with the video. A few, for example, are meant to evoke the dynamism and abstract energy of the metropolis or to show early attempts at capturing motion in photography and film. Both video and installation are meant to suggest that looking at people in the city—their irreducible gaits and gestures, how they leave traces like signatures across the page of public spaces before vanishing—is one of the eternal wellsprings of the creative impulse.

Venue.- Galleries for Drawings, Prints, and Photographs. MET Museum. New York City. NY. USA.
Dates.- March 5—May 27, 2013

Street is organized by Doug Eklund, Associate Curator in the Department of Photographs, and Ian Alteveer, Associate Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Exhibition design is by Brian Cha, Exhibition Design Associate; graphic design is by Norie Morimoto, Graphic Designer; and lighting is by Clint Ross Coller and Richard Lichte, Lighting Design Managers, all of the Museum’s Design Department.

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James Nares (born London, 1953) lives and works in New York. His oeuvre encompasses painting, sculpture, drawing, film, and video. In his paintings, he seeks to capture the very moments in which he is creating them; individual paintings are most frequently made in single brush strokes that record a gestural passage of time and motion across the canvas. Nares’ films and videos reference many of the same preoccupations with movement, rhythm, and repetition, while also ranging further afield in their scope.

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Published on: February 28, 2013
Cite:
metalocus, JOSÉ JUAN BARBA
"James Nares’ Video Street" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/james-nares-video-street> ISSN 1139-6415
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