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Few
video artists have worked so determinedly within the conceptual
problematic as Chris Meigh-Andrews. However, his commitment to the
intelligence of art as a way of thinking has, in a career spanning
sixteen years, been more than theoreticist. Early works share the
neo-modernist aesthetic of his contemporaries, unpacking the dominance
of television to unearth a mode of practice entirely appropriate
to video. The works of the 1980s are language-based and semiotic
in inspiration, but marked, especially in Time Travelling/A True
Story (1982), by an attention to the making of the image which lifts
it out of the run of Screen- derived work of the period. Interlude
(Homage to Bugs Bunny) (1983) loops a detail of an impossible chase
from a Chuck Jones cartoon, while the soundtrack churns a detail
of music into existential vertigo.
Mid -80s single channel works return to earlier autobiographical
studies, but with a meticulous sense of the capacity of the video
image to generate unreality as fast as it builds recognition. In
The Stream (1985-87), elementary, even elemental aspects of an English
landscape are slowed, mirrored and colourised to produce a statement
on the transmutation of nature that balances between the philosophical
and the alchemical. Other tapes explore the transformation of the
personal in this most intimate of media, notably in An Imaginary
Landscape (1986) in which a recognisable domesticity is re configured
out of illegible but carefully equilibrated pixels, digitised into
blocks of colour. As the image clarifies, the scale of abstraction
rises, as the symmetry of the frame about its vertical axis intrudes
further into consciousness: is this landscape imaginary because
it is symmetrical? Like mud sedimenting out of river water, the
raw footage emerges as the imaging of the imaginary, of self image
and imagination. In Other Spaces (1986), images of interior and
exterior meet, compound and confound one another, marked in each
instance as the trace of someone constantly passing out of vision,
a figure (the artist?) running across the screen. This interplay
of natural and artificial, of perception and image-making, underlies
Meigh-Andrews' major work in installation since the beginning of
the 1990's, notably in three sculptures, Eau d'Artifice (1990),
Streamline (1992) and Perpetual Motion (1994), each of which draw
natural and artificial into complex interplays. The first reconstructs
a rococo fountain, the second a stream from Monet's Givenchy garden,
from monitors, playing on the flows of water and current, while
the third uses the standard electricity supply to power in turn
a fan, a wind turbine, a computer and its images of the wind- a
kite in the ceiling, blown grass on the floor. In all three, the
complexities of drawing the natural world into the gallery provide
the founding metaphor for the work. More recently, these researches
have been enhanced by an adventure in interactive media, notably
in CD-ROMs drawing on a library of self-portraits amassed over the
years. Throughout a distinguished career, Meigh-Andrews' meticulous
craft and intelligence mask a slow-burning, passionate commitment
to the interface of technology and intimacy.
Sean Cubitt, Directory of British Film & Video Artists,Arts
Council of England, London, 1996.
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