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Kunstmuseum Basel unearths Richard Serra's overlooked video works

Serra shows his hand in front of and behind the camera

Victoria Stapley-Brown
30 April 2017
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Richard Serra and Philip Glass in Serra’s film Hands Scraping (1968) (Photo © ProLitteris)

Richard Serra and Philip Glass in Serra’s film Hands Scraping (1968) (Photo © ProLitteris)

Richard Serra has not made a film or video since 1979, which may help explain why this aspect of his work is sometimes overlooked, says Søren Grammel, the curator of Richard Serra: Films and Videotapes at the Kunstmuseum Basel, which opens this month (20 May-15 October). The show presents 15 works on 16mm film (copied from fragile originals) and videotapes made from 1968-79, including ten from the museum’s collection. Serra’s interest in process and materials, which drives his sculpture, also figures in his films, Grammel says, pointing to a series of works from 1968 that focus on Serra’s hands, which “always demonstrate a particular action that can be applied to a material”. In Hands Scraping (1968), lead shavings initially fill the frame and resemble a grainy image, but are gradually cleared away by Serra and his collaborator, the composer Philip Glass, to reveal clean floorboards underneath. “In a way, that’s like focusing an image,” Grammel says.

Originally appeared in The Art Newspaper as 'Richard Serra shows his hand'

ExhibitionsVideo, film & new mediaKunstmuseum BaselRichard Serra
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