Saturday 31 March 2012

Patrick Keiller - Tate Britain

Patrick Keiller, still from Robinson in Space, 1997
The Robinson Institute is an installation by Patrick Keiller in Tate Britain which draws upon the Tate collection and archive. 
Keiller is best known for his trilogy of 'Robinson' films: London, (1994), Robinson in Space (1997) and Robinson in Ruins (2010): 
In these film-essays, the fictional, unseen scholar Robinson and his companion, the ‘narrator’ … undertake journeys around England. In each film, these rogue flâneurs set out to study a particular ‘problem', which leads to meditations on the failings of capitalism, economic, environmental and cultural decline, the post-industrial landscape, and myriad literary, historical and occult threads that weave into a secret history. In the films’ measured pacing and crisply edited combinations of words and images, Keiller has a Ballardian capacity to find the poetry in a supermarket car park, a deserted US airbase nestled in the English countryside, or of lichen slowly consuming a metal road sign… “I think what is most urgently required to address the economic/environmental crisis is the political will to do so, followed by a certain amount of forward planning. Neither is much in evidence. But art, especially landscape art, has a key role. [French philosopher] Henri Lefebvre wrote that ‘to change life we must first change space’. Art can do this.” (From "The long awaited return of Patrick Keiller" - Phaidon)
Read reviews of the exhibition by Adrian Searle and Laura Cumming, an article by Owen Hatherley and an interview on Frieze Blog; watch a short video of Keiller talking about his films; see excerpts from London, Robinson in Space and a trailer for Robinson in Ruins; read an article about Robinson in Ruins by Brian Dillon.
The exhibition continues until 14 October.
Patrick Keiller, still from Robinson in Ruins, 2010
Patrick Keiller, still from Robinson in Ruins, 2010
Patrick Keiller, still from London, 1994
Installation shot of exhibition by everydaylife.style
Installation shot of exhibition by everydaylife.style
Installation shot of exhibition by everydaylife.style

No comments:

Post a Comment