Scott Reeder new video
1 May through 5 June 1999
front gallery exhibition
Scott Reeder is interested
in reexamining the everyday, in finding the extraordinary in the
ordinary. He is engaged in an ongoing experiment to encourage reconsideration
of images familiar and mundane. Reeder has created a quasi-video
data bank comprised of a growing archive of video tape loops. Like
files in an image bank, each tape records a unique image or set
of images. For example, one tape consists of clips of predatory
wild animals seeking prey; another is an extreme close-up of a computer-screen
clock; a third is a series of images excerpted from film and television
of people reading (or at least consulting texts). Each tape contains
images not identical, but of the same grouping.
In his untitled video
installation for Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, Reeder juxtaposed
three monitors, each playing found footage from his personal archive
with images minimally altered to show the potential of familiar
scenes: "Beeping Nature" plays on the first monitor (reading left
to right), "Slow Newhart" (an episode of "The Bob Newhart Show"
in slow-motion, accompanied by Chopin) plays on the center monitor,
and "Afterlife" (which is silent) plays on the third monitor.
The soundtracks tend
to offer a certain humming, Buddhist chanting quality to the images,
while often having no apparent relationship whatsoever. These mixes
create fluidity or melodic rhythms which might never be noticed/heard/picked
up. In "Beeping Nature," idyllic images of bubbling brooks, dripping
icicles, and sun-dappled leaves are accompanied by a metronomic,
electronic, utterly "unnatural" beep.
Unlike other contemporary
video strategies which rely on extensive special effects to obfuscate
the original source material, ReederŐs concerns are in the potential
to transform common images with as little manipulation as possible.
His adaptations of found images are extremely simple, consisting
of unlikely combinations of sound and image and the use of slow
motion and extreme close-ups. His is a subtle and quiet recontextualizing
that encourage the viewer, with as little artifice as possible,
to actually look at what might elsewhere be overlooked.
The ancient Greek philosopher
Epicurus enjoyed the site of battle from a distance because he found
beauty in the image of sunlight glinting from flashing swords of
warriors. Up close, he detested war, with its sights, sounds and
smells of violence and decay offending his senses. Reeder focuses
on how shifting one's perspective of or distance to an image, however
common or familiar, can result in a completely different understanding
or perception of it. Images transcend their commonalty and take
the viewer to a higher meditative or spiritual state. This meditation
conveys how ideas connect and become interchangeable when a viewer
reads the carefully planned chaos of images.
Also a painter, Reeder
has had shows in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Chicago, and at Pat Hearn
Gallery in New York.