Franklin Sirmans writes:
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Paul Pfeiffer
Race Riot, 2001 (detail)
Digital camcorder, DVD player, and vitrine
Image: 1 1/2 x 2 in. (3.8 x 5.1 cm); 20 x 20 x 20 in. (50.8
x 50.8 x 50.8)
overall
Collection of the artist; courtesy The Project, New York and
Los Angeles
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In the old-dog, technology-laden realm of contemporary
art, new tricks are often hard to find. Galleries too often become darkened
white cubes for the presentation of video art desperately trying unsuccessfully
to provide the spectacle of cinematic experience usually sans any element
of narrative. In the long run, much new video art looks like a clean,
polished version of the groundbreaking video works of the late 1960s
and early 1970s by the likes of Vito Acconci, William Wegman, and Bruce
Nauman. Paul Pfeifffer, is not one of those copy-cats. The inaugural
recipient of the Whitney Biennial's Bucksbaum Award in 2000, Pfeiffer
takes the history of video art and the history of images to make innovative
video works, a new selection of which will be presented at the Whitney
Museum in December, a rare treat for a young artist.
While sculptors have long been concerned with the evidence of things
unseen, new digital technology has been the impetus for imagists like
Pfeiffer. Meticulously crafting video from the global archive of historic,
moving images, Pfeiffer has created a body of work that resonates presciently
with our present. His images of sports figures in particular and American
pop culture in general examine the power of mediated imagery in a consumer
driven society by taking iconic images of heroes and events, shedding
light on issues such as race and subjectivity. This exhibition premieres
two new videos, The Long Count and Race Riot.
The Long Count is a video triptych based on Muhammad Ali's legendary
fights against Sonny Liston in the United States, George Foreman in
Zaire, and Joe Frazier in the Phillipines. Taking his signature style
of removing the key figures from these events, the figures of the boxers
and the referee are merely wisps of pixilated digital information. What
we are left with is the spectacle created by the looped image of the
cheering crowd. Visually, Pfeiffer offers up art worthy of a spectacle.
Franklin Sirmans is the curator of Rumors of War, an exhibition
of works inspired by the art of Jacob Lawrence, which continues at Triple
Candie, a new venue in Harlem. His writings appear in Time Out New York,
the New York Times, and other publications.
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