SODIUM DREAMS
June 29-September 7, 2003 | Curated by Elizabeth Fisher
(subhead)


J u l i e   B e c k e r

b. 1972, Los Angeles, CA
Lives and works in Los Angeles, CA

Federal Building W(hole) Julie Becker
Federal Building W(hole)
2002
Digital video projection, 29 minutes
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali Gallery, New York

 

Julie Becker’s work draws on a vast visual language that amalgamates personal history, pop culture, vernacular iconography, spaces and surfaces of Los Angeles. Becker lives in LA, and seems to absorb the dense, conflicted context of her environment with undifferentiating ferocity. Her working process, like the city, is labyrinthine – epic and interconnected, but at the same time fragmented and radically decentered. Her delirious, sprawling practice mirrors the structure of the post-modern city itself. Recalling the unfocused absorption of Walter Benjamin’s viewer of both city and film, Becker engages the undifferentiated attention of distraction both as a creative production process and as a mode of reception. The resulting bodies of work, organized around projects that last several years, interweave the subliminal, the personal, and emotional with critical and conceptual perspectives with overwhelming intensity.

Frequently using liminal spaces such as corridors, waiting rooms or elevator shafts constructed within her own apartment, Becker locates her exploration of the outside world in interior – often psychologically charged – spaces and experiences. The film Federal Building: W(hole), 2002, is part of a total installation project Becker has been working on for over five years, an accumulating body of material that includes drawings, letters and interviews, photo-studies and film footage that center on the California Federal Bank, a building that looms over Echo Park and can be seen from the apartment in LA where the artist lives. Most of the jerky, home-movie footage is filmed inside her apartment, using a meticulously crafted model of the California Federal building and an elaborate, elevator-like shaft constructed inside a closet. A few brief glimpses of the actual building, at the beginning and the end of the film, frame twenty minutes of footage inside the apartment. Close-ups from a handycam strapped to the top of the model as it is lowered and raised gingerly through a hole cut into the floor are cut with images of wood panelling projected onto a screen in front of the same panelling in one room, or panning shots of surfaces cluttered with what looks like amateur scientific equipment – interspersed with views of the suspended model bank from above and below. A cassette tape found in the parking lot of the bank provides the film’s soundtrack: the crazy lilting medley of Mariachi muzak lending an unhinged pace and tone to the imagery. Taken as a whole, this obsessive (25 minutes long), nostalgic, kitschy, opaque and anarchic film suggests a myriad possible narratives, from a hazy cityscape to conspiracy theories and political critique; a sense of everything in the world, all at once.

Federal Building W(hole) Julie Becker
Federal Building W(hole)
2002
Digital video projection, 29 minutes
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali Gallery, New York

Selected Solo Exhibitions
1997 Kunsthalle Zurich, Switzerland.

Selected Group Exhibitions
2002 Remix: Contemporary Art and Pop Music, Tate Liverpool, UK. 2001 Casino 2001, Stedelijk Museum voor Aktuele Kunst, Ghent, Belgium. 2000 In Sync: Cinema and Sound in the Work of Julie Becker and Christian Marclay, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY. 1999 Cinema Cinema – Contemporary Art and the Cinematic Experience, Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands. Peace, Museum für Gegenwartskunst Zurich, Switzerland. 1998 L.A. or Lilliput?, Long Beach Museum of Art, CA. 1997 Model Terrains, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA. Stills: Emerging Photography in the 1990’s, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN. Gothic, Institute for Contemporary Arts, Boston, MA. New Works: Drawing Today, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA. Hot Coffee, Artists Space, New York, NY. 1996 Universalis: 23 Bienal Internacional Sao Paolo, North American Section, Sao Paolo, Brazil.

Federal Building W(hole) Julie Becker
Federal Building W(hole)
2002
Digital video projection, 29 minutes
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali Gallery, New York

Further Reading
Bürgi, Bernhard, & Chris Kraus, Julie Becker; Researchers, Residents, a Place to Rest, exh. cat. (Kunsthalle Zurich: Zurich, Switzerland, 1997)
Gibbs, Michael, “Cinema Cinema,” Art Monthly no.225 (Apr. 1999): 24-26
Hauptman, Jodi, “Imagining Cities – Julie Becker’s Metropolitan Labyrinths,” Fernand Leger, exh.cat. (Museum of Modern Art: New York, NY, 1998): 91-97
Myers, Terry, “Julie Becker: un lieu ou sèjour/A Place to Rest,” Art Press no.223 (Apr. 1997): 42-46
Muller, Markus, “Julie Becker: The Invisible is Real (Walter De Maria),” Afterall no.2 (2000): 7-16
Smith, Roberta, “Julie Becker, Padraig Timoney, Kelley Walker,” New York Times (Sept. 27, 2002): E33
von Schlegell, Mark, “Sparkle Girl,” Artext no.72 (Feb.-Apr. 2001): 44-49
Wollen, Peter, “Julie Becker,” Afterall no.2 (2000): 17-26


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SODIUM DREAMS June 29-September 7, 2003 | Curated by Elizabeth Fisher Artists