Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

New Gregory Bennett Videos

AA
View Discussion
Still from Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017) HD video, 13 minutes, 22 seconds, looped. Still from Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017) HD video, 13 minutes, 22 seconds, looped. Still from Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017) HD video, 13 minutes, 22 seconds, looped. Still from Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017) HD video, 13 minutes, 22 seconds, looped. Still from Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017) HD video, 13 minutes, 22 seconds, looped. Still from Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017) HD video, 13 minutes, 22 seconds, looped. Installation of Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017). Photo: Sam Hartnett Installation of Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017). Photo: Sam Hartnett Installation of Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017). Photo: Sam Hartnett Installation of Gregory Bennett's Nature Morte (2017). Photo: Sam Hartnett Still from regory Bennett, Torsade III (2017) HD video, 8 minutes, 15 seconds, looped Still from Gregory Bennett, Torsade III (2017) HD video, 8 minutes, 15 seconds, looped Still from Gregory Bennett, Torsade III (2017) HD video, 8 minutes, 15 seconds, looped Still from Gregory Bennett, Torsade III (2017) HD video, 8 minutes, 15 seconds, looped Still from Gregory Bennett, Torsade III (2017) HD video, 8 minutes, 15 seconds, looped Installation of Gregory Bennett's Torsade III (2017). Photo: Sam Hartnett

The occasional arbitrary quality of Bennett's colour choices muddles the narrative in terms of categorisation, but underlines the movement and the artist's Godlike control. With such an emphasis, not only repetitive human behaviour is subject to mocking satire but also the ticks of art production, the controlling ethos of animation design, the mind of the artist him-or-herself.

Auckland

 

Gregory Bennett
Nature Morte

 

18 August-16 September 2017

In this latest moving image presentation from Gregory Bennett—upstairs in Two Rooms’ long gallery—there are two videos: the longer 13 minutes animated film Nature Morte on the end wall, and the shorter 8 minutes production Torsade III on a monitor near the top of the stairs.

For the former, to appreciate it properly you need to sit or stand a lot closer than the position of the one seat there indicates. It pays to be sneaky and move it closer a few yards, so the experience is more immersive.

These two recent works are very different:

Torsade III has a black background field while slowly ‘panning’ upwards through hovering rings, aligned in a tower formation, that support lines of naked men moving organically in Busby Berkley-style co-ordinated motion; Nature Morte has a grey backdrop of deep orthogonal space, while the ‘camera movement’ spirals back and forth horizontally. 

Torsade III has queues of robotic male dancers densely packed around the perimeter of each circular story, while in Nature Morte, the fitness-crazed bodies briskly trot around in fixed (repeatable) choreographic configurations, lie on the ground doing push-ups, or climb and descend steep staircases.

That in a sense Bennett is a kinetic artist who uses animation—not moving ‘real’ sculpture—for articulated android movement, here is the point, motion coordinated with concurrent movement of waving trees (leaves, or when inverted: roots), tapping and pounding machinery, and revolving cylinders or cubes nestled inside skeletal towers or gridded up oblongs. The constant visual pulse of different simultaneously throbbing components drives it along.

Both videos are loops, but one is in portrait format, the other landscape. The compositional structure of Nature Morte in particular transmutes over a period of a quarter of an hour, images first emerging from the bottom lefthand corner, expanding and spreading to dominate the entire horizontal screen for over fourteen minutes, and then finally shrinking to disappear out of the bottom righthand corner.

There is a playfulness about this emergence and withdrawal that bookends the work. It gives the video shape and drive. The sequencing within acquires an importance that allows different sections of figures—with buildings, orchards and machinery—to become distinctive and memorable, each portion acquiring its own significance so that it is looked forward to next time.

Bennett‘s colours hover in front of the rendered forms, and are flat and not volumetrically integrated as a plastic component. They are deliberately synthetic so that humans and, say, trees (sometimes on different parts of the same screen) are the same hue (in this case pale blue).

This sporadic arbitrary quality muddles the narrative in terms of categorisation, but underlines the movement and the artist’s Godlike control. With such an emphasis, not only repetitive human behaviour is subject to mocking satire but also the ticks of art production, the controlling ethos of animation design, the mind of the artist him-or-herself.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH

‘Take What You Have Gathered From Coincidence.’

GUS FISHER GALLERY

Auckland

 

Eight New Zealand artists and five Finnish ones


Eight Thousand Layers of Moments


15 March 2024 - 11 May 2024

 

JH
Patrick Pound, Looking up, Looking Down, 2023, found photographs on swing files, 3100 x 1030 mm in 14 parts (490 x 400 mm each)

Uplifted or Down-Lowered Eyes

MELANIE ROGER GALLERY

Auckland


Patrick Pound
Just Looking


3 April 2024 - 20 April 2024

JH
Installation view of Richard Reddaway/Grant Takle/Terry Urbahn's New Cuts Old Music installation at Te Uru, top floor. Photo: Terry Urbahn

Collaborative Reddaway / Takle / Urbahn Installation

TE URU WAITAKERE CONTEMPORARY GALLERY

Titirangi

 


Richard Reddaway, Grant Takle and Terry Urbahn
New Cuts Old Music

 


23 March - 26 May 2024

JH
Detail of the installation of Lauren Winstone's Silt series that is part of Things the Body Wants to Tell Us at Two Rooms.

Winstone’s Delicately Coloured Table Sculptures

TWO ROOMS

Auckland

 

Lauren Winstone
Things the Body Wants to Tell Us

 


15 March 2024 - 27 April 2024