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FREELOAD
DENNIS ADAMS
Naumon, La Biennale di Venezia,
September 9 – 11, 2004
Barcelona Pavilion, September 8 – October 30, 2004
The American artist Dennis Adams presents Freeload, an
installation created exclusively for the Mies van der Rohe Pavilion on
the occasion of the 75th anniversary of its construction.
Adams has produced a portable replica of one of the eight mirrored cruciform
columns that support the Pavilion.
By installing a miniature video camera at each of its ends, the artist
has transformed the column into a bi-directional camera designed to record
forward and rear shots of a procession through La Mina, a social housing
project on the outskirts of Barcelona.
The route of the procession was determined by the Plataforma d’Entitats
i Veïns de La Mina, a group of community representatives, and the
column was carried on the shoulders of two members from the local Greco-Roman
wrestling club.
The procession began at the boundary between the Forum and La Mina and
continued through the neighbourhood, terminating at the Rambla Camarón,
the symbolic centre of the community.
Returned to the Pavilion and installed in front of the small pool under
the silent watch of Georg Kolbe’s sculpture, the column/camera is
supported horizontally on two video monitors that display the recorded
footage of its journey.
Adams selected La Mina for its location within Sant Adrià de Besòs,
the town where the workers lived that constructed the International Exposition
of 1929, including Mies’ original Pavilion. For the artist, both
the Pavilion and La Mina are architectural icons that bracket the history
of Modernism, framing both its utopian promise and social reality.
Since the late 1970s, Dennis Adams’ works have framed Blindzones
within public space and architecture. In relation to Freeload, Adams explains,
'by exempting Mies’ column from its function as a vertical support,
I envisioned the release of all that compression as a kind of extension.
Turned horizontally, it becomes a sight line free to probe the physical
and symbolic limits of the Pavilion.'
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Production by:
Elke Lehmann, Cameras
Zac Poff, Assistant to the artist and editing
Diane Gray, Curator
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