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Krzysztof Wodiczko: Projections

Transforming Façades of Buildings into Political, Public Art

This title is no longer available from the Roland Collection. Details remain on this site for the reference of previous customers.

The image of a homeless person materializes on a Boston war monument. A swastika suddenly appears on the South African Embassy in London. A city watches skeletal hands play a tuneless dirge on a war museum in Pittsburgh. These are just some of the controversial `projections' created by Polish artist Krzysztof Wodiczko, who transforms buildings and structures into political, public art. This documentary intercuts scenes of Wodiczko preparing a public projection in Jerusalem in 1991 with other projections in Europe and North America. Each reflects the artist's involvement in a broad range of political issues: a blistering attack in Edinburgh on Margaret Thatcher's economic policies; a reflection on American-Canadian free trade at a Toronto water filtration plant; a street-level protest against the problem of homelessness in New York through a controversial prototype mobile shelter. Interestingly, the only site where Wodiczko is denied permission for a projection is Montreal, at the Promenades de la Cathédrale, despite his participation in the city's Cent Jours d'Art Contemporain. This innovative film reflects the personal and political aspects of Wodiczko's art.







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This title is no longer available from the Roland Collection
Additional information
Order number: 666











Krzysztof Wodiczko The Border Projection, Part Two, at Centro Cultural Tijuana


We apologise the film is no longer available, however you may find other titles of interest on our new streaming web site. Click Here.
 
 
Credits Director/Scenario
Derek May

National Film Board of Canada
 
55 minutes
Color
Recommended audience age range 14-adult



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