Miguel Amat: Dark Pool Knight Vision

Miguel Amat: Dark Pool Knight Vision

Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston

Miguel Amat, Frontrunners (installation view), 2014. Video, 12 minutes. Courtesy of the artist.
November 22, 2014
Miguel Amat: Dark Pool Knight Vision

October 19–December 13, 2014

Blaffer Art Museum
University of Houston
120 Fine Arts Building
Houston, TX 77204-4018
Hours: Tuesday–Saturday 10am–5pm

www.blafferartmuseum.org

Dark Pool Knight Vision, the first solo museum exhibition dedicated to Venezuelan artist Miguel Amat, unites a series of photographs responding to political repression in his home country with sculptures, collages and a video probing the importance of opacity and hidden liquidity for US military and financial operations.

The video Frontrunners (2014) draws on the financial sector’s reliance on military terminology, particularly for high-speed trading algorithms. Amat juxtaposes a sound montage of interviews with traders and investors in so-called “dark pools”—forums for trading securities out of the public eye—with scenes from their favorite movies. Their words and the associated images are thrown into comparative, often comical relief by the recollections of a former Blackwater contractor whose first childhood job on a golf course involved shooting gophers with BB guns.

The series “Capitalism and Avant-Garde” (2006) draws on the historical coincidence of two Cold War phenomena that marked a critical moment for the incorporation of new ideologies of “defense” and “protection” into US citizens’ everyday consciousness: the construction of the interstate highway system and the laying out of the financial sector as we now know it. Formally harking back to Futurism’s machinist thrust and belief in “universal dynamism,” these décollages consist of carefully superimposed silver-gelatin prints cut from low-resolution satellite captures of the shadows of hedge-fund headquarters and highway interchanges.

In the mixed-media installation Alpha/Underground Movements (2014), fiber-optic cable is unleashed like a lasso from the hand of a replica of Remington’s 1885 sculpture Bronco Buster. Running along pulleys and through drywalls from one gallery to the other, the optical cable keeps a wooden pentagon—cut from the very reel used to store and transport it—aloft. Dispersed throughout the installation are small clay Hydras with fiber-optic eyes. While the many-headed creature of Greek mythology has become a classic rhetorical figure for unruly or revolutionary forces, it remains ambiguous what position these Hydras assume in the fiber-optic network connecting political and military interests.

The photographic diptych Geronimo (2013) employs another Remington reproduction, pairing his 1909 painting Moonlight Wolf with a film still from Zero Dark Thirty‘s rendition of the raid of Osama bin Laden. The title refers both to military code for “mission accomplished” and to the elusiveness of the target who inspired that designation: the legendary Chief Geronimo, who led the Apache resistance against Mexican and US troops and whom Remington sought in vain during his years of covering the Apache Wars as a Harper’s Weekly correspondent.

The photographic series “Dams” (2010) presents uneasy landscapes that speak to the joys and conditions of a populace’s leisure. Shot with infrared film and often exposing the presence of armed guards, the “Dams” imply a regulatory tension imposed on many Venezuelans (the Spanish word for dam is represa). Amat allows the divers and bathers to elude the film’s surveillance capabilities through long exposures determined by a deep red filter. By deliberately allowing scanning liquid to leak during the drum-digitization of the 4×5 film, Amat reiterates this sense of elusiveness connecting the production of the image with his subject.

Miguel Amat: Dark Pool Knight Vision is made possible through the generous support of Pablo and Maria Henning and First Take patrons Bernard and Mary Arocha, Jereann Chaney, Cullen Geiselman, Heidi and David Gerger, Cecily Horton, Ann Jackson, Kathrine G. McGovern/McGovern Foundation, the Nightingale Code Foundation, James A. Prell, Vitol, Inc., and Lea Weingarten. Additional support comes from Texas Commission on the Arts, the Houston Endowment, Inc., the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance, the Jo and Jim Furr Exhibition Endowment at Blaffer Art Museum and The George and Mary Josephine Hamman Foundation.

Press contact
Devon Britt-Darby, T +713 743 9528 / [email protected]

 

Miguel Amat at the Blaffer Art Museum, University of Houston

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