Omer Fast
18 September - 13 November 2010
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| © Omer Fast
Nostalgia, 2009
Video installation |
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OMER FAST
"Nostalgia"
’September 18 - November 13, 2010
gb agency is pleased to invite you to the inauguration of its new space
18 rue des 4 fils F-75003 Paris
on Saturday September 18th, 2010 from 12 to 9 pm.
With this new space gb agency will keep developing and expanding work
realized by the gallery since 9 years and will reinforce its will by
planning new curatorial forms in Paris and beyond. With its design and
schedule, gb agency creates an autonomous entity that will reinforce a
different approach to contemporary creativity. This structure will be on
view next November.
OMER FAST
at this occasion, gb agency is pleased to present a solo exhibition by
Omer Fast offering two works for the first time in France: his video
Nostalgia and the installation The Forlorn Lover’s Guide to the
Underground and to Doubles.
The three-part scenario of Nostalgia is based on a memory that gets
told, passed on and reformulated several times. Each of the three
chapters (three films) appears in its own space, and the viewer travels
spatially and physically through the story. The origin of the work is a
conversation between the artist and a Nigerian political refugee in
London. Nostalgia portrays that conversation all the while creating a
new fiction.
To start the work, the first video Nostalgia I shows a man moving around
in the woods. His voiceover tells the story: a difficult and solitary
childhood in a war torn country and his meeting with a mentor who
teached him many things including how to hunt partridge. The pictures
are shaky, the camera wobbles, the style is clumsy, and the video
appears to be amateur.
Further on, we see in Nostalgia II a meeting between a filmmaker (or an
artist) and a young man. The filmmaker asks the man to tell his story,
about a young African in the UK who seeks political asylum. Two video
monitors side by side replicate the dialogue between the two men. The
installation becomes complex and the images more polished. After a
series of mixed up comments and misunderstandings, both focus on a
childhood memory: the story of how the father taught his son to make
traps to catch partridge.
The final part of the piece Nostalgia III is more cinematographic. Shot
on 16mm, it’s reminiscent of a 1970s sci-fi movie: an emigrant from
post-apocalyptic Europe is arrested on the coast of West Africa. Omer
Fast combines disparate elements, using opposition and anachronism with a
futurist vision, retro treatments, geopolitical shifts to conduct the
viewer through a tender and violent tale. First the asylum seeker is
interrogated by the local authorities, then let go in exchange for
information on the underground gang and its secrets, then other reverse
illegal immigrants are captured in a tunnel. The story is sidetracked by
the memory of the bird traps which is told by other characters in the
film.
While Nostalgia addresses the idea of displacement — mental or physical —
its focus is mainly the transformation of memory: from an intimate
experience to the story of it, and from room to room memory becomes a
story to be told. Reality becomes instrumentalized by numerous
realities, moments and places. The arrangement of the installation
reflects the multiple points of view.
The Forlorn Lover’s Guide to the Underground and to Doubles is the first
ever non-video installation by Omer Fast. It includes more than forty
items: texts, photos, drawings, photocopies and documents. The rhizomic
placement of the elements is designed around Omar al-Gougle, the
central character of a story with multiple entry points. Different
narratives are intertwined, cross over and even contradict one another.
If the totality of the stories produces a closed loop system, the images
and illustrations present openings to different perspectives.
From the ‘Tomb of the Patriarchs’ in Hebron to Edison’s ‘camera
obscura’, the viewer is caught in a maze of data, both real and
fictional. There is a current of rumor throughout the installation: a
successful writer, Omar al-Gougle has allegedly killed himself following
the appearance of a bad review of his latest book. An attack by members
of a group known as ‘The Wheatherman’— which has appeared in another
work by the artist — is oddly linked to Hollywood through the actor
Dustin Hoffman. The activism of the 1970s brushes up against today’s
terrorism in the Middle East.
Thus the artist de-hierarchizes information, the historic and the
anecdotal become equalized, and fiction can’t be separated from reality
in the telling of this obscure life of Omar al-Gougle. If CNN
Concatenated thrashed television news, and if historic reconstruction
was revealed as obsolete in Godville, then The Forlorn Lover’s Guide to
the Underground and to Doubles deflates internet media and belittles the
findings of its search engines. As with other works by Fast, the piece
displays a fine precision of terms and a broad creativity of
composition.
This exhibition reveals certain new directions for the artist —
especially in Nostalgia III — while still affirming his fundamental
principles.
Nostalgia was co-produced by South London Gallery, UC Berkeley Art
Museum and Pacific Film Archive and Verein der Freunde der
Nationalgalerie, Berlin.
www.gbagency.fr |