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Stan Douglas: Inconsolable Memories

2006 / ISBN 0-88865-636-X
152 pages, b/w and colour, hardcover

$40
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Exhibition catalogue from Stan Douglas: Inconsolable Memories at the Belkin (20 January-19 March 2006) with texts by Sven Lutticken and Philip Monk. The exhibition presents a new film work by Douglas and a series of photographs inspired by his recent trips to Cuba. The photographs were shot over the last two years and depict the recycled and often dilapidated urban architecture of Havana and its environs. Banks converted into motorcycle lots and villas transformed into schools embody the shifting economies of use under Castro’s Revolution. Douglas’s prints are immaculate and technically flawless, in obvious contrast to the ruin and entropy they portray. Douglas’s film work Inconsolable Memories is based on the Cuban cinematic masterpiece, Memories of Underdevelopment, directed by Tomas Gutierrez Alea in 1968. Alea’s film portrayed the alienation of Sergio, a bourgeois intellectual caught up in the rapidly changing social reality of Cuba following the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion and the missile crisis of 1962. Douglas’ film relocates Sergio in 1980, the year of the Mariel boat exodus, when Castro allowed tens of thousands of Cubans to leave the island on a procession of boats arriving from Florida. Past and present overlap in Douglas’ film through his use of two 16mm film loops, unequal in length, but projected simultaneously onto one screen. Shots of both documentary and fictional footage combine and recombine to unravel the experience of film and to confront us with existential questions about time.

  • Stan Douglas

    Artist

    Stan Douglas was born in 1960 in Vancouver where he continues to live and work. His interest in the social implementation of western ideas of progress, particularly utopian philosophies, is located in their often-divisive political and economic effects. His interrogation of the structural possibilities of film and video, in concert with intricately developed narratives, has resulted in a number of groundbreaking contemporary artworks. In 2013, a major survey of his recent work, Stan Douglas: Photographs 2008–2013, was presented at Carré d’Art — Musée d’art contemporain in Nîmes, France. Douglas is a recipient of numerous notable awards, including the  Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (2016), the third annual Scotiabank Photography Award (2013) and the Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography, New York (2012). Over the past decade, Douglas’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at prominent institutions worldwide, including the The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh (2014); Centre culturel canadien, Paris (2013); Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minnesota (2012); The Power Plant, Toronto (2011); Staatsgalerie Stuttgart and Württembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart (2007); The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York (2005); kestnergesellschaft, Hanover (2004); and the Serpentine Gallery, London (2002). His exhibition Inconsolable Memories at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery was held January 20 to March 19, 2006.

     

     

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  • Sven Lutticken

    Writer
  • Philip Monk

    Writer

Related

  • Exhibition

    20 January 2006 – 19 March 2006

    Stan Douglas: Inconsolable Memories

    Stan Douglas has an international reputation for his photographs and his film and video installations. Since the late 1980s, he has been a leader in pushing the museum space toward an involvement with the projected moving image and in blurring the boundaries between visual art, cinema and television.

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Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery

University of British Columbia

1825 Main Mall

Vancouver, British Columbia,

Canada V6T 1Z2 Map

xʷməθkʷəy̍əm | Musqueam Territory

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