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Phill Niblock: Working Title
Read The Book Review - The Wire


Phill Niblock retrospective in Lausanne CH - the exhibition will be realised in partnership between Circuit (Contemporary Art Centre Lausanne - http://www.circuit.li/ ) and the Musée de l’Elysée (the national museum devoted to photography - http://www.elysee.ch/ ), Mathieu Copeland, curator; January 29 until May 12, 2013
The exhibition is now closed.
 
Phill Niblock
Working Title
2012
édition bilingue (français / anglais      à paraître
Un panorama des activités de l'artiste multimédia et compositeur new-yorkais depuis les années 1960, à travers des essais de musicologues, critiques et historiens de l'art, de nombreuses illustrations, des partitions et 4 films sur DVD.
A collection edited by Yvan Etienne       http://www.lespressesdureel.com/
http://www.lespressesdureel.com/collection_serie.php?id=28&menu=1
 

CIRCUIT
centre d’art contemporain
9, av. de Montchoisi, accès quai Jurigoz
case postale 303, CH - 1001 Lausanne
+41 21 601 41 70 – contact@circuit.li – www.circuit.li

and

Musée de l’Elysée
18, av. de l’Elysée
CH-1006 Lausanne
Tél. +41 21 316 99 11 – www.elysee.ch
ma-di de 11h à 18h


   

CDs and DVDs
Sample from the recently re-released The Movement Of People Working (11.3 MB)
 
Music and video available
at Forcedexposure.com
 
Compositions List
Discography
Reviews
Links
Events 2011
Event Archives
Previous Events
Photo Gallery

Nothin’ but Working                                        
Phill Niblock, une rétrospective                     
une exposition de Mathieu Copeland présentée conjointement
 à Circuit, centre d’art contemporain et au Musée de l’Elysée

vernissage le mardi 29 janvier à 18h00
exposition du 30 janvier 2013 au 12 mai 2013
je-ve-sa de 14h00 à 18h00 et sur rendez-vous


    P. P.
   
1000 Lausanne 1


 

Ville de Lausanne, Canton de Vaud, Fondation Alfred Richterich, Fondation Casino Barrière Montreux,
Banque Cantonale Vaudoise, Pour-cent culturel Migros, Loterie Romande et Prfiducia Conseils SA

JAPAN89-SlideShow-01, Phill Niblock, 1989

 

Nothin’ but Working
Phill Niblock, a retrospective
Exposition
from 30 January to 12 May 2013

Contents

Presentation of the retrospective     3

The exhibition at Circuit
     4

Dates & series and exhibition spaces
     5

Images available for the press
     6

Practical information
     7


















Press Conference

Tuesday 29 January 2013 at 10am

Opening
Tuesday 29 January 2013 at 6pm

Press Contact
Julie Maillard
+41 ( 0 ) 21 316 99 27
julie.maillard@vd.ch

Press contact Circuit
François Kohler
+41 (0) 21 601 41 70
conta@circuit.li

All images © Phill Niblock




Nothin’ but Working
Phill Niblock, a Retrospecive

From 30 January to 12 May 2013


Phill Niblock has produced, for over more than fifty years, a multidisciplinary work. His “Intermedia Art” features a combination of minimalist music, conceptual art, structural cinema, systematic or even political art, and strives to transform our perception and experience of time.

Upon a proposal by Circuit, the photographs, films, installations and all his recorded music are brought together for the first time in a retrospective exhibition dedicated to Phill Niblock’s entire artistic endeavour. This exhibition by Mathieu Copeland is presented simultaneously at the Contemporary Art Center Circuit and at the Musée de l’Elysée in Lausanne.

Admittedly one of the greatest experimental composers of our time, Phill Niblock initiates his career as a photographer and film director. Born in 1933 in Indianapolis, a jazz afficionado, he settles in New York in 1958. Niblock starts photography in 1960, specializing in portraits of jazz musicians such as Charles Mingus, Billy Strayhorn and Duke Ellington, whom he frequently follows to recording sessions and concerts. In the mid-60s, he shifts from photography to film, and encouraged by Elaine Summers, choreographer and founder of the Experimental Intermedia, he starts
realising films for dancers and choreographers at the Judson Church Theatre, including Yvonne Rainer and Meredith Monk. From 1968 on, Niblock focuses on music and composes his first pieces, which - according to the artist - should be listened to at loud volume in order to explore their overtones.

Since the mid-60s, his analogue photographic work explores New York’s architecture and urban planning. The sequencing and layout of his images offer a mapping of the location and object photographed, such as the abandoned buildings of Welfare Island (today Roosevelt Island) in 1966, the areas fallen into disuse in the South Bronx in 1979, or the facades of SoHo Broadway district in 1988. Starting in 1966, Niblock engages in a reflection about the projection of moving images through a series of films and slideshows. Produced between 1966 and 1969, Six Films, a series of short films with sound realized with 16 mm film, heralds his experimental method through portraits of artists and musicians such as Sun Ra and Max  Neuhaus.

Starting in 1968, the artist begins experimenting a combination of his visual productions with his musical scores in order to create architectural and environmental compositions with sound.
Recreated by the artist at the Musée de l’Elysée for the first time since its last presentation in 1972, the Environments series extracts through images the reality of different surroundings, all the while generating a dense and intense temporary environment of projected images, music and movements throughout the museum’s space.

From the series Buildings along SoHo Broadway, 1988
From the series Underground Gallery Exhibition, 1966
© Phill Niblock




Exhibition at the Contemporary Art Center Circuit
Presented for the first time in its entirety, re-edited and remastered by the artist for the retrospective, the series of films The Movement of People Working portray human labour in its most elementary form. Filmed on 16mm colour film, and later on video, in locations including Peru, Mexico, Hungary, Hong Kong, the Arctic, Brazil, Lesotho, Portugal, Sumatra, China and Japan – with more than 25 hours of film footage, The Movement of People Working focuses on work as a choreography of movements and gestures, dignifying the mechanical yet natural repetition of labourers’ actions.
Phill Niblock says of these that The Movement of People Working «came out of necessity because I was doing music performances with live dancers, and it was too cumbersome and expensive to tour with so many people. So I started doing those films that I could project when performing».

These films are accompanied by the whole corpus of Niblock’s slowly evolving, harmonically minimalistic music, released between 1968 and 2011. The sound level of these compositions offers a visceral experience of the long drones and inhabits the ringing, beating overtones. These scores, presented in the exhibition as photographs released for his personal exhibition at London’s ICA in 1982, are the composer’s mixing instructions and are not used by the musician during the performance. While moving through space, he plays with the recorded material, sometimes creating tonalities that coincide with the recording or, on the contrary, that produce dissonances. The result is a constant movement of beat, rhythm and pulsation, as well as changing and continuous harmonics during his own motion through space. The layering of tones echoes the repetitions of the workers’ actions; the evolution of the films on each screen (changing throughout the day), combined with a program that randomly plays back different music pieces, results in a constant renewal of forms, continuously offering an exhibition of new juxtapositions of sound and image.

The Movement of People Working offers a strong social and political comment, as highlighted by the title and represented by the closeness with the workers. In this, the series of film echoes the work of several filmmakers including Jean Luc Godard or Chris Marker who as from 1967 gave workers the cameras and informed them of cinematic techniques so that they could actually make their own films. In a fascinating turn of events, rather than doing fictional or pure documentary film, some workers formed the Groupes Medvedkine and decided to film themselves working.

The Movement of People Working, 1973 - 1991 (Film stills) © Phill Niblock



Important dates and major works

1933: Birth in Indianapolis
1958: Settles in New York
1961-1964: Realizes a series of portraits of jazz musicians
1966: Presents his first photography exhibition at the Underground Gallery, New York
1966: Realizes films for dancers and choreographers of the Judson Church Theater in New York, including Elaine Summers, Yvonne Rainer, Meredith Monk, Tina Croll, Carolee Schneemann, and Lucinda Childs 1966-1969: Six Films
1968-1971: Environments
1973 - 1991: The Movement of People Working
1979: Streetcorners in the South Bronx
1982: Scores Photographs
1984: Boatyards
1985: Becomes director of the Experimental Intermedia Foundation
1985-1992: Anecdotes from Childhood
1985-1992: Light Patterns
1986 - 1989: China 88, 87, 86 & Japan 89
1988: Buildings along SoHo Broadway
2011: N + M and Nomis
2012: Working Title, an anthology of Phill Niblock’s work edited by Yvan Etienne, published by Presses du Réel
2012: Phill Niblock revisits the
Environments




The following images are available for the press.

The use of these images is limited to the promotion of the exhibition presented at the Musée de l’Elysée. They must not be altered in any way and must mention the whole caption as well as the copyright.



From the series Buildings Along SoHo Broadway, 1988 © Phill Niblock Presented at the Musée de l’Elysée




From the series Underground Gallery Exhibition, 1966 © Phill Niblock Presented at the Musée de l’Elysée


Japan89, 1989 © Phill Niblock Presented at Circuit


Practical Information


Musée de l’Elysée

18, avenue de l’Elysé
e CH - 1014 Lausanne
T + 41 (0) 21 316 99 11
F + 41 (0) 21 316 99 12

http://www.elysee.ch


Opening hours
Tue-Sun, 11am - 6pm
Closed Monday, except for bank holidays


Admission fee

Adults CHF 8.00
AVS CHF 6.00
Students / Apprentices / AC / AI CHF 4.00
Free entry for those under 16
Free entry on the first Saturday of the month















Upon a proposal by the Contemporary Art Center Circuit,
the exhibition Nothin’ but Working – Phill Niblock, a Retrospective
is presented simultaneously at the Musée de l’Elysée and Circuit.




































































Exhibition Curator
- An exhibition by Mathieu Copeland, upon a proposal by the Contemporary Art Center Circuit
- Coordinated for the Musée de l’Elysée by Lydia Dorner



















































































Exhibition Sites



Exhibited at Circuit + Musée de l’Elysée


Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée







Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at Circuit
Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at Circuit
Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée


Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at Circuit + Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée
Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée


Exhibited at the Musée de l’Elysée






To download the images:

p://84.16.80.83/web/press/Phill_Niblock

user : press
password : 1006_mel_13




From the series Streetcorners in the South Bronx, 1979 © Phill Niblock Presented at the Musée de l’Elysée



The Movement of People Working, 1973 - 1991 (Film Stills) © Phill Niblock Presented at Circuit



Duke Ellington in control booth, 1962 © Phill Niblock Presented at Circuit






Contemporary Art Center Circuit

Access via Quai Jurigoz
CH – 1001 Lausanne
T + 41 (0) 21 601 41 70
F + 41 (0) 21 601 41 70
http://www.circuit.li/


Opening hours
Thu-Fri-Sa from 2 to 6pm
and by appointment

Admission fee

Free admission








































































 


Events 2012

Hangar Bicocca
Milan, Exhibition



Video Excerpts


Wall Street Journal Article


MusikTexte Journal February
The February issue of the journal Musik Texte, published in Cologne,
and in German only, is devoted to Phill Niblock.
The cover and contents can be seen on the website.
MusikTexte - Zeitschrift für neue Musik; Gisela Gronemeyer,
Reinhard Oehlschlägel Postfach 19 01 55, 50498 Köln (Briefpost); Gladbacher Straße 23, 50672 Köln (Paket- und Kurierpost)     www.musiktexte.de


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