BELKIN GALLERY - ESTHER SHALEV-GERZ

On from now until April 14, 2013 at the Belkin Gallery:

Esther Shalev-Gerz, In Between Listening and Telling: Last Witnesses 1945-2005, 2005

"Esther Shalev-Gerz brings together key works by the Paris-based artist in the first solo exhibition of her work to be organized in Canada. First shown at the Kamloops Art Gallery in the spring of 2012, the exhibition will be presented with additional work by Shalev-Gerz at the Belkin Art Gallery.

For over twenty years, Shalev-Gerz has created installation and photographic work that addresses questions of collective and personal memory, of portraiture’s possibilities within contemporary discourses, the politics of representation, history, place and citizenship. The pieces in this exhibition are emblematic of her work and offer new ways to approach our relationship to these questions.

Among the works to be exhibited is WHITE-OUT: Between Telling and Listening (2002), which presents a portrait of sorts—one comprised of fugitive stories that exist fleetingly between the actual and the fictional, between the imagined and the experienced. Like previous works by Shalev-Gerz, WHITE-OUT explores and discloses the space between telling and listening through a video portrait of Åsa Simma, a woman who is both Sami (the indigenous peoples of Northern Sweden, Finland, Norway and Russia) and Swedish.

Perpetuum Mobile (1998-2000) depicts a 10 Franc coin spinning in constant motion so that both sides merge into one, just as Åsa Simma’s dual identity merges in a unified and perpetually evolving sense of self. A study of a currency replaced by the Euro and thus no longer in use, Perpetuum Mobile reflects upon money’s symbolic value and its role among the other economic forces that determine and interconnect national and individual identities.

In Between Listening and Telling: Last Witnesses 1945-2005 (2005), a commemoration of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, Shalev-Gerz worked with the testimonies of sixty survivors now living in Paris to create a three-channel video installation that shows the same film on each screen, with a seven-second time-lapse between each one.

Shalev-Gerz returns to her childhood house in Vilnius, Lithuania in Still/Film (2009). One series of photographs show the house where she lived until she was eight; the second shows the site of the house from which her mother was forced to flee when she was nine, which Shalev-Gerz discovered by chance in the nearby town of Alytus." 
Press release from the Morris & Helen Belkin Gallery

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