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Ciocca Arte Contemporanea

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A_Maze, 2001, installation view @SITE Santafe

Monika Bravo
ITINERARIES


February 20 - April 12, 2003
Opening: Thursday February 20, at 6:30 pm
Ciocca Arte Contemporanea
via Del Lauro 8 - 20121
Milano - Italia
tel. +39-02.86.46.31.67
fax +39-02.85.91.07.66
info: marco@rossanaciocca.it
http://www.rossanaciocca.it
http://www.sololab.com

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Ciocca Arte Contemporanea in Milan is pleased to announce the opening of ITINERARIES, a solo exhibition of recent work by New York-based Colombian artist Monika Bravo. The show consists of the interactive video installation A_Maze and two single channel videos Liquify and Wind-eye.

Sitting mutely, it is a quiet room, with a floor piece covering most of the space and two projectors with mirrors standing pat. At its core is a DVD based suite of images and sound-by the DJ collective Flora & Fauna-activated by walking on the sensitized sculptural mat. As its title implies, A_Maze revolves around a viewer activated video/sound installation that was configured to resemble a labyrinth, which maybe one of the most recognizable Borgesean tropes. The labyrinth, for Borges, was a multifaceted metaphor that was a formal device as it was an occasional leitmotif. Bravo seems to understand this quite well in that the Borges poem is inscribed on a giant square in a labyrinth-like schema that triggers a series of video sequences of landscapes and a host of other imagery filmed around the world: one moment we are in Manhattan, in a blink of an eye we are in Milan, Vietnam, Thailand, Tokyo, etc.

Liquify, is an elegant and thoughtful work, flat geometric forms, like rectangles and bars, mingle with ease among organic references to nature and atmosphere. Although each element seems to move individually, the subtle modulations of shifting arrangements unifies the imagery into a lovely balance of changing line, shape, color and mood. The adept fusion of abstract surfaces with literal glimpses of nature allows for a well-ordered, harmonious pictorial surface.

Bravo, in filming her video Wind-eye, was confronted with exactly this dilemma: how to disrupt the rigid verticality of Time’s Square’s woefully commercial skyscrapers, without falling into the fashionable incoherence of architecture as entropic ruin. Bravo’s response in Wind-eye is to organize the footage she shot into a series of amped-up split screens, jarring mosaics, and revolving kaleidoscopes. Each cut is seamlessly synched to the beat of an urgent, synthesized piano soundtrack. In its almost frantic, delirious pacing, in Wind-eye, Bravo is focused on -- not just the immediacy of a given place -- but the simultaneity of Times Square’s tidal wave of sense-data into a personal, flickering moment.



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