GUIDO VAN DE WERVE, Free X Show, 2008

GUIDO VAN DE WERVE, Free X Show, 2008
DVD, 24′ 15″, original drawing on couver
edition 25
numbered, signed

Acts of freaks performed in a living room by Rúna Thorkelsdóttir, Guido van der Werve, Johanna Ketola, Henriëtte van Egten, Erwin van der Werve and Solveig Bergsteinsdóttir and a cat called Sushi. Each cover comes with an unique original drawing by the co-operating artists, signed by all participants and edited by Guido van der Werve who added a sound track, recorded in 2004. The edition as an item was published in 2008.

PETER FISCHLI & DAVID WEISS, Making Things Go / The Way Things Go / Sketch, 2007

PETER FISCHLI & DAVID WEISS, Making Things Go / The Way Things Go / Sketch, 2007
3 DVD’s 71’27” / 1’52” / 29’57”
sleeves, cardboard box, embossed texts
edition 150, signed, numbered
mint
published by Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich, Switzerland
not available anymore

Fischli and Weiss adapted objects and situations from everyday life and placed them in an artistic context—often using humour and irony. Wurstserie (1979) was Fischli and Weiss’s first collaborative project, setting the tone for their future work. In the series, ordinary sausages and slices of sausages became the protagonists of scenarios, alluding to situations such as cars in a traffic accident in an urban setting, layers of carpets and other situations. By the end of the 1980s, the duo had expanded their repertoire to embrace an iconography of the incidental, creating deadpan photographs of kitsch tourist attractions and airports around the world.

 

History of prices:
published by Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich, Switzerland  €  6.100,- / US$ 7,900.- October 2012

CHRISTIAN JANKOWSKI, Überhappy, 2005 [DVD]

CJankowskiDVD650

CHRISTIAN JANKOWSKI, Überhappy, 2005
DVD, 2’28” min.
composition “Überhappy (1)” by Chiel Meijering
2nd film by counterpart advertising company DDB, Berlin and Chief Creative Officer Amir Kassaei
booklet, 12 pp., English text by Paul Groot
one time limited edition 800
published by the Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam
menu for both loop and single play
€ 180,-

Basically Christian Jankowski is collaborative in nature and his works are based on interactions with non-artworld counterparts, including bankers, weight-lifting champions, cleaning companies, porn studios, horror film producers and in this case director/founder Thora Johansen of the Bifrons Foundation in Amsterdam. Often incorporating chance, accident, and spur of the moment decisions lead to the finished artwork, Jankowski never fulfils a brief as expected, identifying contemporary phenomena that interest him and inverting their meaning.
In the case of Überhappy Christian Jankowski asked both director and harpsichordist Thora Johansen to let herself musically involved and to dance in her studio which she co-operatively did. Question is whether this is painful for her or the artist. Or both…..

CJankowskiDVD-booklet650

MARLENE DUMAS, My Daughter, 2003 [DVD]

MARLENE DUMAS, My Daughter, 2003
DVD, original film, music by Ryuitchi Sakamoto, stapled booklet 16 pp.
limited edition 800
menu for both loop and single play
rare, very few copies left
€ 320,- plus € 15,- for Track & Trace registered EU mail
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Each DVD of this “Loud & Clear Too” series is provided with a menu for single play and loop play. Therefore the film can also be played as a genuine piece of art on its own. The jewell box contains a booklet of 16 pages with a English text by Dirk van Weelden.

‘My Daughter’ is the very first film made by Marlene Dumas, commissioned by and specifically made for the Bifrons Foundation (director Thora K. Johansen). Well-known for her paintings and drawings about ‘Helena’ the artist has made a touching vanitas art piece about her daughter innocently sleeping while the eye of the camera moves around in the sleeping room passing a skull on a table as a momento mori suggesting an unknown future. The dramatic slurring music of Ryuitchi Sakamoto gives the work an important second layer to the apparently motherly worries. This is one of the best films in this genre I have ever seen, “comparable” to films like ‘Phat Free’ (1995-1997) of David Hammons and ‘Wave’ (2006) of Marijke van Warmerdam. KvG

This DVD is an unique combination of art and contemporary music.

‘For Marlene Dumas and Erik Kessels it was a challenge to work together with such a well-known (film) composer as Ryuichi Sakamoto. He is used to taking account of the images for his compositions, and in this case he has allowed himself to be inspired by both of them. Dumas and Kessels have been working closely since the start and have based themselves on a common concept.
For ‘My Daughter’ Dumas filmed the sleeping body of her child. It is her first video work and the slightly slowed-down shots and the blurred use of colour make it seem as though she is painting with the camera. The camera glides over her daughter’s body, zooming in onto her hand, her buttocks, her loose hair… We as viewers soon feel like voyeurs as the camera records more than a sleeping girl alone. Willingly or not, something of a Lolita effect crept into the innocent image. As both mother and artist, it seems as though Dumas is aware of this and wanted to show how the erotic slowly but surely takes possession of someone (perhaps this is why there is that one shot of a skull placed somewhere in the room).

Erik Kessels’ contribution is called ‘My sister’ and seems at first sight also an ordinary home movie. Brother and sister are playing table tennis in the garden, with the mother intervening now and then. Styled in the warm brown and orange tones of the Seventies, Kessels has adapted their movements to the whipped up, repetitive rhythms of Sakamoto’s music. Nothing seems able to disturb the idyll – only the music suggests something ominous – until suddenly we are told that Kessels’ sister was killed in an accident twenty-five years ago. This unexpected information causes a shiver to run down your spine and makes the sounds, which are like children’s voices, in Sakamoto’s composition extra cruel. Dumas’s ode to her daughter would seem to imply a sequel, while with Kessels the message is implacable. His sister only still exists by the grace of memory.’ Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam 2003

PIPILOTTI RIST, Lullaby, 2002

‘Lullaby’, 2002
DVD 1’53’, composer Caroline Berkenbosch
original film, limited edition, menu for both loop and single play!
Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam, Netherlands     € 75,-   January  2012                                                                                               Galerie van Gelder, Amsterdam, Netherlands     € 75,-   August 2012


 

 

JOHN M ARMLEDER, Rotorura Perpetual Glow Machine [film on DVD]

JOHN M ARMLEDER, Rotorura Perpetual Glow Machine, 2001
DVD, duration 1’23”, sound by Hans van Manen, booklet with text by Dirk van Weelden
limited edition 800
published by The Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam, with co-organizer Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK
€ 65,- plus € 8,- Track & Trace EU registered mail


 

This DVD is an unique combination of art and contemporary music. For this John Armleder, accompanied by Sylvie Fleury, filmed hot mud pools in Australia. The choreographer Hans van Manen proposed to have the bubbling mud sound covered by the shuffling sound of a ballet danser executing one of his dance pieces.
Each DVD of this Loud & Clear series is provided with a menu for single play and loop play. Therefore the film can also be played as a genuine piece of art on its own.

Poster Loud & Clear mounted on window of Solo Bar, Guangzhou, PR of China, 7-8 November 2004 announcing the screening of films produced by The Bifrons Foundation and concert of rockband Steamboat Switzerland.

HENK PEETERS, rain of feathers, 1999 [signed DVD]

HENK PEETERS, rain of feathers, 1999
19 x 14,2 cm
feather hand glued on cover of booklet, DVD in jewell box
series of 30 unique collages on couver of 16 pp. inserted booklet
signed, dated, numbered
published by Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam 1999
€ 500,- plus € 18,- Track & Trace registered EU mail

In 1998 Thora Johansen, director of the Bifrons Foundation in Amsterdam, invited Henk Peeters to make a film for her Flash project that found its premiere with nine DVD’s in the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 1999. Peeters very soon came up with an idea of having a rain of white feathers coming down on a glass plate until this was completely covered with a layer of down. It was filmed in colour with a blue background, added with music of invited composer and guitarist Eric Calmes. For the second request to make also a very short film of one minute Henk Peeters decided to have the film in negative run backwards within the given sixty seconds.

MAURA BIAVA, For Urano, 1999

 

MAURA BIAVA, For Urano, 1999
DVD, booklet
Bifrons Foundation, Amsterdam, Netherlands
€ 60,- plus € 8,- Track & Trace registered EU mail





First film of Maura Biava with music of composer Roderik de Man.