Everybody Loves Nothing: Video 1996 - 2004
By (Author) Steve Reinke
Introduction by Mike Hoolboom
Afterword by Lisa Steele
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
19th September 2000
Canada
General
Non Fiction
796.01
Paperback
180
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
340g
Artist and writer Steve Reinke is best know for his video work, an acerbic oeuvre that spans over a decade and includes his most famous piece, The Hundred Videos, literally a hundred short videos in which he explores the myriad permutations of identity, sexuality and art. The titles of his videos In the Realm of Perpetual Embarrassment, Sad Disco Fantasia, How Photographs Are Stored in the Brain are some examples encapsulate the tenor of Reinke's work: deadpan, self-deprecating, personal and always funny. Composed of original and found footage (from home movies, training films, porn flicks), the videos are typically diaristic, often philosophical, even elegaic. The writing itself is extremely well-crafted, possessing a wit and intelligence that translated well to the page; what seems improvisatory on screen is in fact very polished and precise prose.
Everybody Loves Nothing contains Reinke's scripts from 1996 to the present, accompanied by numerous illustrative stills. An extensive interview with filmmaker Mike Holboom provides a broad overview of Reinke's career, themes and ambitions. Introduction by Lisa Steele, artistic director of Vtape.
Steve Reinke has exhibited widely, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Centre Pompidou, the Tate, the National Gallery, International Film Festival Rotterdam and the New York Video Festival. He is the co-editor, with Tom Taylor, of Lux: A Decade of Artists, Film and Video and, with Chris Gehman, the forthcoming The World is a Cartoon: Artists' Animation at the End of Cinema. In 2006, Reinke was awarded the prestigious Bell Canada Award for Video Art. He lives in Toronto and wherever he happens to find employment (most recently Chicago and Los Angeles).