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Kelly Mark: White Cube, White Couch

Lawrence Eng, Vancouver May 17 to Jun 28 2008
Kelly Mark  <i>REM</i>  2007  Production stills Kelly Mark REM 2007 Production stills

Kelly Mark <i>REM</i> 2007 Production stills

If you have ever wondered what it might take to watch 170 films and television programs in one sitting, grab a couch seat (open a beer and light a cigarette, if the artist has her way) and get ready for a 2-hour onslaught of condensed and commercial-free viewing in Kelly Mark’s video installation REM. The feature-length film work, compiled from late-night cable TV sources over a 4-month period, is the latest in Mark’s trademark application of artful endurance, irreverent time wasting and fine-tuned conceptual technique. Skeptics may snigger: Since when is watching television art? But Mark’s carefully edited sequencing of mass media images into a new, non-linear narrative structure strikes at the critical heart of longstanding issues surrounding mechanical/digital reproduction. REM—which is also part of Mark’s touring survey exhibition, “Stupid Heaven,” wrapping this week at Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery in Halifax—joins selected recent works in a solo exhibition that opens the relaunched and expanded exhibition space of Lawrence Eng (formerly Tracey Lawrence Gallery) in downtown Vancouver. (1531 W. 4th Ave., Vancouver, BC.)

This article was first published online on May 29, 2008.

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