White Cube Hoxton Square is pleased to present a new video installation and
group of collages by Christian Marclay. Since the early 1980s, Marclay has
been developing a distinctive body of work that explores the relationships
between sound and image. Renowned for his exuberant and witty collages,
Marclay has made use of everything from record covers to film clips to
construct pictures, objects and installations.
The video installation 'Crossfire' creates a charged, physical space in
which the viewer is surrounded by four large projections playing a rapid
montage of guns and gunfire. The gun is perhaps the most iconic image in the
media, a constant presence in everything from newscasts about faraway wars
and local crimes to its persistent role as a narrative device in movies.
While guns always foreshadow violence, they also offer a false promise of
safety from an outside threat. Marclay plays with this twin sense of dread
and fascination. 'Crossfire' features characters handling a variety of guns,
from small pistols to unruly rifles – a man pulls back his jacket to reveal
a thick handgun in a holster, fingers caress a steely gun barrel as if
stroking a fetish object, a thumb pushes bullets into the cylinder of a
revolver. When the shooting begins, the viewer is engulfed by a cadenced,
pulsating violence that diminishes and intensifies with mesmerising rhythm.
Although the viewer is under a continuous assault, Marclay’s precise
arrangement of sound and image allows the gunfire to become a kind of
percussion instrument, and 'Crossfire' coaxes a strange music from the
westerns, gangster flicks and war movies that the artist has used as raw
material.
For the second part of the exhibition, Marclay has created a group of prints
made from onomatopoeic words that he has torn from comic books and collaged
before scanning and reprinting them at a large scale. Onomatopoeic words,
with their huge letters and strings of unbroken vowels, blaze across the
page at decisive moments in every superhero’s escapade, yet their forceful
presence remains silent until interpreted and read aloud. Marclay treats
these chunky words like objects, creating collages that emphasise the
materiality of the paper and the ink of the original comic book. Removed
from their narrative context, the words fizz with random violence and barely
contained energy.
Christian Marclay has exhibited widely in both solo and group exhibitions. A
mid-career retrospective began at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles in 2003 and
concluded at the Barbican Art Gallery, London in May 2005. “Christian
Marclay: Replay” will be at the Cité de la Musique, Paris, from 9 March – 24
June 2007.
A fully illustrated catalogue, with a text by Tom Morton, will accompany the
exhibition.
White Cube is open Tuesday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm. For further
information, please contact Honey Luard or Sara Macdonald on +44 (0) 7930
5373.