Morgana Plains, from Silver to Gold, December 2009 – January 2010
Five site-specific installations at the downstairs gallery (bank lobby) and on the 2nd floor gallery:
Morgana Plains, New York City Ghosts: two video projections on glass plateau, music, ground floor main hall
From Silver to Gold: Slide projections on glass, diptych, ground floor side space
It’s Full of Stars: mixed media, slide projection and collage, ground floor former vault.
Morgana Plains, Water in the Sky: multiple video and slide projections on the architecture, 2nd floor
Red Light, Poses I: video projection on walls, 2nd floor
The works are spread over both ground floor and 2nd floor gallery spaces in a former bank building. Visitors are invited to wander through the five installations, exploring the work and the exhibition spaces from different points and perspectives.
Catalogue:
'From the twin skyscrapers of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in White Plains one can see the city far below, one can overlook the Hudson Valley, and even see the New York City skyline as a fata morgana in the distance. There is the magnetic attraction of Manhattan, as opposed to the suggestion in the name of White Plains, of open spaces and clear air. The Hudson River is like a filmic horizon, a binding element'.
Gartz is well known for making integral use of the architectural environment for her site-specific installations. The exhibition consists of five separate multimedia works with constantly changing video and slide projections occupying the entire Artswestchester Arts Exchange building. Its centerpiece, Morgana Plains, New York City Ghosts I, was installed at the heart of the building in the Grand Banking Room. It was a large tableau of glass, placed on the floor and measuring 20 x 14 feet, upon which video images were projected, suggesting a platform or tray serving up images. The horizontal tableau ‘carried’ the images, while the glass mirrored them back onto the ceiling, emphasizing the height of the space. At the back of the space, the illumintaed circular entrance of the former bank vault resembled a sun, a perfect backdrop for the video landscape. Thus, the former bank lobby was transformed into a church-like space. It was accompanied by the other works, both in the side and upstairs spaces, which created a highly concentrated situation. As a consequence, this drew people into the work and into a mental space.
‘Moving through those spatial compositions, which consisted of projections, glass, drawings, mirrors, sound, and light, was like a journey enabling one to compose one’s own movie, as though moving through a succession of different storyboards or mood boards. With the artworks and the building thus melting into a whole, the building in its entirety became an artwork.’
The manner in which Gartz draws upon the filmic qualities of light and shadow in her video installations recalls her early career as a painter. Her projections consist of highly complex overlays of imagery: combining the new footage she shoots for her installations with a wealth of material from her archives, she creates what she calls ‘video landscapes’.
'Born and raised in The Netherlands, I have been deeply influenced by Dutch landscape painting. This also began my interest in 19th century American landscape painting. I wanted to combine the horizontality of landscape, river, and earth with the verticality of New York City’s skyscrapers.
Since I’ve been trained both in contemporary painting and art history, I use the ‘old’ formulas from painting, sculpture, and architectural history, such as Flemish medieval painting, or the way the Renaissance made use of the Golden Mean. I combine these images and concepts with tricks and techniques from advertising, movies, magazines, comics, and contemporary visual arts. Morgana Plains showed images from everyday New York life: car parks, traffic lanes, advertisements from Time Square, video walls on buildings, shots of shop windows, people walking in the streets or disembarking from the ferry at night, culminating in the video installation Red Light, Poses I at the top of the building. The large scale of the projection – a red and black sequence of shots of my own body in vaguely erotic poses, typical of advertising – which spread across the architectural elements, meant my own body became part of the building too. My installations are assembled with a painterly eye. For me, when making the work, the space is the canvas, and the video images and slides are the colors and the forms; there is chiaroscuro too.’
"Wineke Gartz, Morgana Plains, from silver to gold', Published by Artswestchester, White Plains NY, 2010
Special thanks to Janet Langsam and Marianne Brouwer