Chelouche Gallery is proud to announce the opening of Nir Evron solo exhibition, Endurance, at LA><ART, Los Angeles. The exhibition will open on Saturday, 12th of July 2014.

In conjunction to the exhibition Endurance, the New Museum, New York, will host an evening with Nir Evron featuring a selection of his works, followed by a Q&A with the artist moderated by New Museum Curator Lauren Cornell.

Located ten miles north of Jerusalem, Rawabi is the first planned city in Palestine. For his solo exhibition at LA><ART, Nir Evron presents Endurance, a film work composed of gray scale rectangles representing the doors, windows, and furniture reduced from the architectural plans of Rawabi. Every shot in Endurance represents the length of one wall based on a formula transposed into filmic time. In this abstraction of Rawabi homes one meter equals 5.4 seconds (shot in 16mm at 24 frames per second). The duration of the film calculated down to the millisecond corresponds to the total enclosure of a family’s living quarters in the matrix of infrastructure and superstructure. In this finale to Evron’s architectural trilogy (Oriental Arch 2009 followed by a Free Moment in 2011) Endurance aligns a blue print to the rectangular footprint of 16mm film by scanning, digitizing, transferring and finally projecting the interiors of Rawabi within the cube of the gallery.

Endurance takes the fundaments of apartments to create an indexical series, advanced as montage. In the artist’s words Endurance is more than moving image; it is “a mechanism to translate space into time and vice versa.” Each blank capsule on the screen presents an everyday environment and a utopian geometry consistent with early avant-garde film and reductive modernist designs. By listing the total running time of the projection as 19373 frames the artist evokes structuralist film composed not of scenes, but single frames advanced in succession. In this formal exercise we are asked to ponder increments of the first planned city in Palestine, displaced in succession along a strip of film.

Nir Evron is an artist and filmmaker based in Tel Aviv, Israel. He has shown extensively in biennales, festivals, galleries and museums, including the 19th Biennale of Sydney (2014), The Israel Museum (2014), The International Center for Photography Triennial, New York (2013), The Maison Européene de la Photographie, Paris (2012), The Tel Aviv Center for Contemporary Art (2011) and the 6th Berlin Biennale (2010). In 2015 the artist will present a solo exhibition at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. Evron is represented by Chelouche Gallery in Tel Aviv.

LA><ART is Los Angeles’ leading independent contemporary art space supporting and presenting experimental exhibitions, public art initiatives, and publications with emerging, mid-career, and established local, national, and international artists.

LA><ART’s programs are produced with generous support from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; The National Endowment for the Arts; The Los Angeles County Arts Commission; Nathan Cummings Foundation, with the support and encouragement of Roberta Friedman Cummings, Dashiell Driscoll and Clea Shearer; California Community Foundation; City of Los Angeles, Department of Cultural Affairs; Pasadena Art Alliance; Robert Rauschenberg Foundation; Foundation for Contemporary Arts; and The Anthony & Jeanne Pritzker Family Foundation.

Nir Evron and Orit Raff's programs were made possible with the generous support of The Artis Grant Program; The Philip and Muriel Berman Foundation; Consulate General of Israel; Michael Hittleman Trust.

For more details on the evening with Nir Evron at the New Museum, New York: http://www.newmuseum.org/calendar/view/an-evening-with-artist-nir-evron

LAXART

2640 S La Cienega Blvd
Los Angeles, (CA) 90034 United States
Ph. +1 (310) 5590166
office@laxart.org
www.laxart.org

Opening hours

Tuesday - Saturday
From 11am to 6pm

Related images
  1. Nir Evron, Endurance, 2014, five frames scanned from 16mm BW film
  2. Nir Evron, Endurance (2014) Still image from 16mm bw film 2
  3. Nir Evron, Endurance, 2014, six frames scanned from 16mm BW film