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The long gaze, the short gaze

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The long gaze, the short gaze

Contributors:

By (Author) Knut sdam
By (author) Philippe Pirotte
By (author) Simon Sheikh
By (author) Kaja Silverman
By (author) Solveig vsteb

ISBN:

9781934105283

Publisher:

Sternberg Press

Imprint:

Sternberg Press

Publication Date:

7th July 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Dewey:

700.92

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

280

Dimensions:

Width 203mm, Height 267mm, Spine 15mm

Weight:

666g

Description

For several decades Norwegian artist Knut sdam has worked independently and uncompromisingly with his artistic projects, and he is today considered one of the central contemporary practitioners of film and video art. This book appears as a result of sdam's 2010 exhibition at Bergen Kunsthall, and the production of his two new films Abyss and Tripoli (both 2010).

Concepts like transformation and relocation constitute a thematic framework for most of sdam's works. In his films and photographs, for example, relocation is about the migration of people between land areas, or about physical movement and the bodily experience of architecture in urban surroundings. Transformation is a key word in terms of social, economic, linguistic, psychological, identity-related and architectural processes of change. Underlying this is an awareness that the meaning of architecture is changeable and that it is experienced and expressed differently by different social groupings. Perhaps even more than before, the places portrayed are themselves central to the new films Abyss and Tripoli, not only as generic urban surroundings, but also with their distinct histories, demographic conditions, and architecture.

sdam has long worked with the exploration of all the components of the language of film, and consequently the filmic has also become a central theme in this book. Under the title The long gaze, the short gaze, this publication presents a collection of new commissioned texts that do not only deal with the new films, but also place them in a retrospective context with the whole of sdam's film production in the 2000s.

Co-published with Bergen Kunsthall

Author Bio

Kaja Silverman is Class of l940 Professor of Rhetoric and Film at the University of California at Berkeley, and the author of six books, including World Spectators, Male Subjectivity at the Margins, and a monograph on James Coleman. She is presently working on a book entitled Appropriations.

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