Richard Mosse
The Enclave

Richard Mosse
The Enclave

National Institute for Experimental Arts (NIEA) at University of New South Wales (UNSW)

Richard Mosse, The Enclave (still), 2012–13. 16mm infrared film‬ ‪transferred to HD video, 39:25 minutes. Courtesy of the artist and Jack‬ ‪Shainman Gallery.‬
March 12, 2014
Richard MosseThe Enclave

15 March–7 June 2014

Opening: 14 March 2014

Galleries UNSW, COFA
Oxford Street
Paddington NSW 2021
Sydney, Australia
Hours: Tuesday–Saturday 10am–5pm

T +61 2 8936 0888

www.cofa.unsw.edu.au

Galleries UNSW will present the Australian premiere of The Enclave, a major six-channel video installation by Richard Mosse that represented Ireland in the 55th Venice Biennale. The Enclave is the culmination of Mosse’s work in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.Mosse was drawn to eastern Congo because of the inherent problems of representing its cancerous cycle of war. Struck by the absence of a concrete trace of the conflict on the landscape, Mosse documented rebel enclaves and sites of human rights violations in a way that attempts to overturn traditional realism, and see beneath the surface.Using an extinct type of infrared film once employed by the military to detect camouflaged installations from the air, Mosse renders The Heart of Darkness in irradiating technicolor. With a significantly slower life than images constructed by photojournalism, Mosse’s highly aesthetic approach considers problematic imagery from an oblique angle that strategically allows a different temporality in seeing. Mosse embraces the infrared medium’s subtle shift in wavelength in an attempt to challenge documentary photography, and engage with the unseen, hidden and intangible aspects of eastern Congo’s situation—a tragically overlooked conflict in which 5.4 million people have died of war related causes since 1998.

To produce The Enclave, Mosse worked with the cinematographer Trevor Tweeten to evolve a style of long tracking shot made with Steadicam, resulting in a spectral, disembodied gaze shot on 16mm infrared film. The piece’s haunting, visceral soundscape is layered spatially by eleven-point surround sound, composed by Ben Frost from recordings gathered in North and South Kivu.

The Enclave comprises six monumental double-sided screens installed in a large darkened chamber creating a physically immersive experience. This disorienting and kaleidoscopic installation is intended to formally parallel eastern Congo’s multifaceted conflict, confounding expectations and forcing the viewer to interact spatially from an array of differing viewpoints. The Enclave is an experiential environment that attempts to reconfigure the dictates of photojournalism and expanded video art.

Mosse was born in 1980 in Ireland and is based in New York. He earned a Postgraduate diploma in Fine Art from Goldsmiths, London, in 2005 and an MFA in Photography from Yale School of Art in 2008. Mosse is a recipient of Yale’s Poynter Fellowship in Journalism (2014), the B3 Award at the Frankfurt Biennale (2013), an ECAS Commission (2013), the Guggenheim Fellowship (2011), and a Leonore Annenberg Fellowship (2008–2010). Foreign Policy Magazine listed Mosse as a Leading Global Thinker of 2013.

Mosse’s most recent monograph, The Enclave, was published by Aperture Foundation in 2013 to accompany his presentation at the Venice Biennale.

Director/Producer: Richard Mosse
Cinematographer/Editor: Trevor Tweeten
Composer/Sound Designer: Ben Frost
Production Assistant: John Holten
Colourist: Jerome Thelia
16mm processing: Rocky Mountain Film Lab
16mm scanning: Metropolis Film Labs
Projection: Eidotech

 

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National Institute for Experimental Arts (NIEA) at University of New South Wales (UNSW)
March 12, 2014

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