(Ex)Urban Futures of the Recent Past, curated by David Hartt: Gordon Matta-Clark
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Automation House, 1972
16mm film, 32 min, black and white, sound
Overall dimensions variable
Edition 5 of 10, 2 AP
The camera became Gordon Matta-Clark’s companion throughout his artistic career and an instrument of perception for his architectural interventions. Automation House is an exercise in spatial perception and on the...
The camera became Gordon Matta-Clark’s companion throughout his artistic career and an instrument of perception for his architectural interventions. Automation House is an exercise in spatial perception and on the role of bodies in a building full of people. By means of a mirror, the artist captures people’s movements in a spectacular manner. The framing alters the normal perspective of the space, while the depth of field allows for different situations to be juxtaposed. A mixture of performance and filmic construction, the work leaves the viewer confused and unable to identify automatically the actions in the image. The principle of framing with mirrors prefigures Matta-Clarks’ famous ‘building cuts’: the reflections in the mirror create openings that transform all architectural logic.