Stan Douglas, Pursuit, Fear, Catastrophe : Ruskin, B.C., 1993, installation: film 16 mm, black and white, edition 2/2, 14’50’’, collection of the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain. © Stan Douglas. Picture © Migeat P. service photographique du musée d’art moderne - centre Georges - Pompidou.
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Exhibition overview

In an attempt to experiment with the different kinds of language we use to express ourselves—from cinema to literature and from photography to music—, Stan Douglas has been working on a series of devices which revolutionize the relationship between a work of art and technology.

Artists and contributors of the exhibition:
  • Stan Douglas

The exhibition in detail

This search for reciprocity in the relationship between a work of art and the viewer, the freedom he grants him, the state of anticipation and uncertainty in which he puts him, all stem from his interest in the theatre of Samuel Beckett. 

In Pursuit, Fears, Catastrophe: Ruskin, B. C. (1993), Stan Douglas offers a prelude to this exploration of the relationship between the image and sound by combining the projection of a black and white piece of music played on a boudoir grand player piano. This work is an artistic adaptation of history evoking the conflicts of racial identities inherent in the integration of a Japanese community in Canada during the thirties. It also highlights the desire, which Douglas shares, to revolutionize sound and visual conventions.

Image gallery

Stan Douglas, Pursuit, Fear, Catastrophe : Ruskin, B.C., 1993, installation: film 16 mm, black and white, edition 2/2, 14’50’’, collection of the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain

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© Stan Douglas

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© Philippe Chancel

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Stan Douglas, Pursuit, Fear, Catastrophe : Ruskin, B.C., 1993, installation : film 16 mm noir et blanc, édition 2/2, 14’ 50", collection Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain

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© Stan Douglas

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© Philippe Chancel

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