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Hourglass Sand in the Vaseline

Hourglass Sand in the Vaseline, 2012

Hourglass Sand in the Vaseline, 2012

Egg yolk on moiré

Painting used for invitation card. 

 

 

Hourglass Sand In The Vaseline

Hourglass Sand In The Vaseline

"Hourglass Sand in the Vaseline, Dyment's third solo exhibition at MKG127, continues the artist's exploration of the language and idioms inherent to cinema and popular culture. Formal tropes such as the diptych, the duet, the recto-verso and the alternate-take are employed to investigate black-outs, gaps, and other temporal disruptions and ellipses."                        

- gallery press release

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Copy of Blacking Out / Coming To, 2012

Copy of Blacking Out / Coming To, 2012

Blacking Out/Coming To #11, 2012

Blacking Out/Coming To #11, 2012

Ultrachrome ink on rag paper. Edition of 3    

A diptych taken from a collection of over one hundred film stills that feature instances of the camera taking the point of view of the protagonist as he/she is drugged, knocked unconscious, or awakening from either.  

Blacking Out/Coming To #4, 2012

Blacking Out/Coming To #4, 2012

Ultrachrome ink on rag paper. Edition of 3    

A diptych taken from a collection of over one hundred film stills that feature instances of the camera taking the point of view of the protagonist as he/she is drugged, knocked unconscious, or awakening from either.  

Blacking Out/Coming To #9, 2012

Blacking Out/Coming To #9, 2012

Ultrachrome ink on rag paper. Edition of 3    

A diptych taken from a collection of over one hundred film stills that feature instances of the camera taking the point of view of the protagonist as he/she is drugged, knocked unconscious, or awakening from either.  

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Lester Bangs' History of Punk, 2012

Lester Bangs' History of Punk, 2012

Biographies, shelf, photograph

An excerpt from a larger ongoing collaborative project with Scott Rogers that looks at backwards histories, in particular the connection between contemporary performance art and Diogenes of Sinope (404 BC), by way of Greil Marcus, Walter Benjamin and Blackadder. This work concretizes a letter rock critic Lester Bangs wrote to the Soho Weekly News in which he claims that he invented punk, but he stole it from a series of musicians, activists, actors, writers, a president and eventually Lady Godiva.

 

 

 

Cartoon Psychomachia, 2012

Cartoon Psychomachia, 2012

Letterpress print diptych. Edition of 10

A call and response with dialogue from animated angels and devils, often offering conflicting advice. The frames are hung so that they appear to hover over the viewers shoulders like a good and bad 'conscience'. 

 

Postscript, 2012

Postscript, 2012

A twenty minute video consisting entirely of epilogues from films, arranged chronologically according to the date noted. There are 100, one for every year of the 20th century. 

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Copy of Rose Mary Woods, 2012

Copy of Rose Mary Woods, 2012

Vinyl picture disk. Edition of 3

Nixon’s secretary illustrates to the press corps the improbable choreography that led to the erasure of 18.5 minutes of subpoenaed audiotape, which is presented in its entirety, on the disk.

Copy of 18 1/2, 2012

Copy of 18 1/2, 2012

Bookwork. Edition of 50

The aforementioned erasure, described by reporters, audio and forensic experts.

Seaside [a-side, b-side], 2012

Seaside [a-side, b-side], 2012

Seaside [a-side, b-side], 2012

Seaside [a-side, b-side], 2012

Dedicated to Arthur Lintgen, an American physician who was awarded a brief moment of fame in the late seventies when it was discovered that he could read the grooves of vinyl records and identify the music they contained. The bookwork uses the verso-recto of the page to illustrate the A and B sides of a clear vinyl recording of water lapping at the seashore. 

Self-erasing Memento [for Clive Wearing], 2012

Self-erasing Memento [for Clive Wearing], 2012

VHS tape, magnet, slipcase. Edition of 3     

Christopher Nolan's 2000 film outfitted with a rare-earth magnet just beyond the playhead, erasing the film immediately after the viewer watches it. Dedicated to Clive Wearing, a musicologist whose retrograde  and anterograde amnesia make it impossible for him to retain a memory for longer than a few moments.