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CARPENTER CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS | HARVARD UNIVERSITY
EXHIBITION: MARK LEWIS: THREE CINEMATIC WORKS The Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University is pleased to present Mark Lewis: Three Cinematic Works, the first exhibition in a newly created space for viewing moving image works located on the third floor of the Carpenter Center. Mark Lewis: Three Cinematic Works consists of three videos: Downtown, Pan and Zoom; Rush Hour, Morning and Evening, Cheapside; and Queensway Pan and Zoom, and was curated by Dominique Bluher, Lecturer on Visual and Environmental Studies at Harvard. Don’t be fooled by the apparent simplicity of these three short, single-shot movies. Rather, let yourself be enchanted by them. Lewis’ work could be seen as homage to the works of the Lumière Brothers, made 110 years before. His films fascinate us in new ways because they are rooted in aesthetic experiences that the cinema has never ceased to express. Each of the films read like imaginative speculations about the constitutive ingredients of moving images: stillness and movement, light and shadow, framing and reframing, contemplation and narration. We know that brevity is the soul of wit. But Charles Baudelaire also reminds us that formal constraints allow aesthetic idea to emerge all the more intensely. About the Artist Exhibition Hours: Sert Gallery: Tue-Sun: 1:00—5:00 pm
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