FOCUS: Mario García Torres
Focus Artist Mario García Torres talks about the work in FOCUS: Mario García Torres. The exhibition is onview at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth through June 28, 2015. Mexico City–based artist Mario García Torres creates cinematic narratives that explore obscure histories and personalities associated with conceptual art of the 1960s and 1970s. He presents his projects in a variety of media, including video, installation, photography, and sculpture, and he often uses antiquated technology, such as 16-mm film and slide projections, to parallel the era he is revisiting. For each work, García Torres researches evidence and myths related to relatively unknown events from the larger, more well-known moments of that specific period in art history. Embellishing these events through reenactment and fictionalized narrative, his work analyzes how history is constructed and interpreted. By juxtaposing facts with imagined scenes and dialogue, García Torres also emphasizes how the division between truth and fiction is blurred. He also investigates subjectivity and nostalgia and how they come into play through author and reader biases when history is retold. In the video The Schlieren Plot, 2013, García Torres uses the well-known artist Robert Smithson’s lesser-known and unrealized projects in Texas from 1967 to 1973 as his springboard. As Schlieren unfolds, Smithson’s proposal for the Dallas-Fort Worth airport is loosely re-imagined by García Torres. Also featured is Smithson’s now-decaying semi-circular earthwork Amarillo Ramp, which is seen from the viewpoint of a circling helicopter. The helicopter makes reference to Smithson’s tragic death in 1973; he died in a plane crash while surveying the site in preparation for the piece, and the work was completed posthumously. García Torres’s video is punctuated by a road trip that maps the Texas landscape, emphasizing how the environments where Smithson’s earthworks were originally planned have changed over time. García Torres also wrote the soundtrack for Schlieren, including lyrics that meditate on the Texas landscape and reinforce Smithson’s main artistic concerns. García Torres’s works illuminate such glimpses from the history of art, yet through his artistic lens, provide a narrative relating to broader topics. As the artist states, “I see the art stories I sometimes use as starting points to begin research. Then, they become excuses to talk about something else.” FOCUS: Mario García Torres will be the first solo presentation of the artist’s work in Texas.

The FULL VIDEO of Trump they didn’t want released

Princess Of Boogie Woogie Delights Everyone

Ruth Asawa: documentary on an artist who worked every minute | HOW TO SEE

The Proof That Leonardo da Vinci Was a Genius

"Color is like breathing to me"

Exhibition Tour—Vertigo of Color: Matisse, Derain, and the Origins of Fauvism | Met Exhibitions

No Celebrity Has ZERO Filter Like Harrison Ford _ and It’s HILARIOUS!

Art This Week-At The Modern-FOCUS: Katherine Bradford

Mario García Torres expone al ritmo de reggaeton en el MoMA | El Tocadiscos #adn40radio

German Shepherd and Kitten Become Best Friends From Day One

Rhythm And Movement In Art (1969)

25 UNVERGESSLICHE Fairplay-Momente im Fußball

Bauhaus vs. Brutalism: What's The Difference? Architecture + Art History 101

books i want to read this summer | classics, fantasy, summerween!!!

Five Must See Masterpieces at the Kimbell Art Museum || Texas & Travel

Geschenk und Herausforderung: Edgar und seine musikalische Hochbegabung I 37 Grad

MERZ ATTACKS WEIDEL LIVE IN THE BUNDESTAG – THEN THINGS ESCALATE!

FOCUS: Jamal Cyrus

Unbelievable Workers | Working with Talented Engineers #46 #fail #adamrose #smartworkers

