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Danielle Arnaud: Judy Price: Within this narrow strip of land - 23 May 2008 to 22 June 2008

Current Exhibition


23 May 2008 to 22 June 2008
Hours : Friday - Sunday 2 - 6 pm or by appointment
Private View: Thursday 22 May 6-9 pm
Danielle Arnaud
123 Kennington Road
SE11
London
United Kingdom
Europe
p: +44 (0) 207 735 8292
m:
f: +44 (0) 207 735 8292
w: www.daniellearnaud.com











Judy Price
The Refrain 2008
stills from double screen video projection
123
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Ellie Harrison
Adele Prince
Annie Whiles



Artists in this exhibition: Judy Price


Within this narrow strip of land is a video and sound installation by Judy Price. A number of video works are presented from her lengthy research in Israel and Palestine. The new works explore ways in which communities and individuals are framed and incited by the irreversibility of loss in Israel and Palestine. Price is interested in how power manipulates loss for its own end and decides whose loss is valid, how it is negotiated and from what perspective loss is seen and acted on.

The film material has been shot in a number of locations in Israel and the Palestinian territories, including a vestige of the British, St John�s Eye Hospital in East Jerusalem. St. John�s Eye Hospital, a charitable foundation founded in 1882 by the British is located in East Jerusalem and serves the predominantly Arab populations of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalemites irrespective of their ability to pay.

In The Refrain, a double screen video projection with sound, St John�s Eye Hospital is employed as a powerful metaphor for transformation and visibility, the process of healing of damaged sight, sight damaged by the �other�. The iris is a mirror, barrier or reflection in which images, actions and events are inscribed with or without the subject�s will. Filmed through objects, glass or medical tools The Refrain shows partial visibility of this environment.

For this work Judy Price has commissioned the Norwegian sound artist Maia Urstad to construct a sound piece incorporating ambient sounds from the eye hospital in East Jerusalem and abstract compositions.

A number of small vignettes, like moving stills, are placed around the gallery presenting day and night shots from different locations in Israel and the Palestinian territories. Caught moments with partial visibility they allude to a landscape filled with trepidation and in flux. The videos often depict a landscape framed by an elevated and suspended viewpoint, as a way of rearticulating the significance of territory in this disputed land. For example, a film of a cable car over Jericho offers both a privileged view of the city and at the same time it alludes to an ambiguous state of suspension and destabilised vision. As the viewer moves between the illuminated screens and projections, their passing recalls the crossing of conflicted borders and territories, which have come to define the experience of space and movement between Israel and Palestine. Within the images themselves, further displacements are orchestrated through the slippage between sound and image in the auditory blur between video screens.

From the 9 to 29 June, in parallel to this exhibition there will also be a number of screenings at the Imperial War Museum of archival films from the British Mandate in Palestine (1917-1948). As part of this programme Reel will be screened, a video piece by Judy Price using archival material from the British Mandate period, courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.

In Reel Price selected the disrupted residues of film � the lead-ins and endings of film stock. The scuffing and scratching from handling film material, black cue dots, overexposing at the end of the reel, numbering or logging marks evoke all that is not seen in the documentation of history. The images have been put to a piece of music called Kaene byr til engli composed by Johann Johannsson. The music brings to the images an intensity and spiritual dimension revealing the sensual and sublime that is found in the spaces disregarded by the more declarative ways of making sense of the world.

Judy Price is a London based artist who works with video, sound, photography and installation. Her practice is sited within the borderlines and interchanges between video and photography. Price was recently artist in residence at the London Jewish Cultural Centre, funded by the European Association for Jewish Culture working with archival film material from the British Mandate period in Palestine. In January 2008 she was curator of a programme of archival film material around the British Mandate in Palestine as part of the British Council Film Festival in Israel. In July 2008 she will be curating a similar programme for the Al-Ma'mal Foundation, in East Jerusalem as well as making site specific work for the Jerusalem Show, an art exhibition showcasing the works of Palestinian and international artists, around the Old City of Jerusalem.

Recent exhibitions include Unscene, solo exhibition, London Jewish Cultural Centre; Chisenhale Biennale; The Projection Gallery, Liverpool Biennial; Coin & Platform, The Common Place, Leeds; Performing Rights, Queen Mary, University of London; Refining Memory, Whitechapel Gallery, City Hall, London, Curzon Soho Cinema, London; Ciclope, Caracas, Venezuela; Art Caucasus, Tbilisi, Georgia; The Ice factory, Hastings; Shifting Time, solo exhibition at Wingfield Arts, Suffolk; The Well, Danielle Arnaud contemporary art, London; Lost Hours, Pump House Gallery, London; Fairplay Angel Row, Nottingham; Tweener, Norwich Gallery, Norwich.

Maia Urstad is a sound artist operating at the intersection of audio and visual art in Norway and internationally. Her latest works have primarily been outdoor and indoor sound installations and performances, making use of fibre optics, CD and cassette-radios as both sound and visual objects. She is currently working with sound-textures based on found/concrete sound sources, emphasizing on signals from radio broadcasting and telecommunication. Maia Urstad is published by Touch Music [MCPS].




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