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Kebab Menu: June 2025
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First US Survey of Artist Stan Douglas in Over Two Decades Opens June 2025 at the Center for Curatorial Studies’ Hessel Museum of Art

a photo of a hanging video installation showing a man playing the saxophone
Stan Douglas, Hors-champs, 1992, two-channel video installation. 
The acclaimed artist Stan Douglas will be the subject of a major survey organized by the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College’s (CCS Bard) Hessel Museum of Art, marking the first U.S. survey of his practice in over 20 years. On view June 21 to November 30, 2025, Stan Douglas: Ghostlight will be the North American premiere of an immersive, multi-channel video installation that revisits D.W. Griffith’s 1915 film “The Birth of a Nation” framed by a selection of nearly 40 works from the 1990s to the present that explore topics ranging from settler colonialism in the Americas, to the legacies of transatlantic slavery, to modern movements for liberation in Africa and Europe. Douglas’ deeply researched and longtime commitment to these histories provide an expansive view of the present, one that sheds light on moments of breakdown and chaos that attend societies in upheaval.

“Across moving image, photography, and theater, Douglas’ work recalls histories that haunt: unresolved, turbulent moments, uprisings, and plots that retain a hold, however imperceptible, on the present,” said Lauren Cornell, Director of the Graduate Program and Chief Curator at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College. “This survey seeks to show his indelible influence on global contemporary art and also how his work offers one of the most lucid and vital ways to understand our present—a time when societies around the world are at a profound turning point.” 

Since the 1980s, Douglas has created films, photographs, and other multidisciplinary projects that investigate the parameters of their respective mediums. His ongoing inquiry into technology’s role in image making, and how those mediations infiltrate and shape collective memory, has resulted in works that are at once specific in their historical and cultural references and broadly accessible. Many works in the exhibition—rendered in film, video, photography, and installation—investigate pivotal historical events. Through ambitious restagings of battle scenes, covert plots, riots, civic collapse, and social tension and unease, Douglas focuses on moments of rupture where, in his words: “history could go one way or the other.” Global in scope, Douglas’ projects also provide a longer timeline and broader context for cycles of insurgence and loss or reprisal that have accelerated in our present.

Premiering in North America at CCS Bard’s Hessel Museum of Art as a centerpiece of the exhibition will be a new work that critically re-envisions D.W. Griffith’s 1915 film “The Birth of a Nation” which has long been credited as the foundational work of modern cinema despite its blatant racism and championing of the Ku Klux Klan. Douglas’s Birth of a Nation (2025) reimagines a notorious scene from the original film as an immersive, five-channel video installation. Shot on set in Los Angeles, Douglas’s sequences across channels are largely synchronized with the movement, editing, and environs of the original. They tell different stories, however, and eschew the inter-titles and melodramatic acting for a visual cacophony of muted speech and behaviors that fall in and out of alignment with the original. Griffith’s film was championed for its historic verisimilitude—its “realism”—and Douglas’s recreation is meticulous in attending to its source. Yet it does so to reveal narrative ambiguities and a wider context of racial terror.

Douglas’ reinterpretation of this landmark film is presented alongside early and recent works that serve to destabilize the narratives that inform how history is remembered. Highlights include: 
  • Ghostlight (2024), a recent largescale photograph depicting the vacant Los Angeles Theater illuminated by a single floor lamp, also referred to as a ‘ghostlight,’ which allows stage workers to navigate after hours and is the source of superstitions around the ghosts that haunt such spaces;
  • Horschamps (1992), a live recording of four American musicians with ties to France’s “free jazz” movement of the 1960s and ’70s that speaks to the longstanding influence of African Americans abroad;
  • Photographs from Douglas’ 2017 Scenes from the Blackout series, an extension of Douglas’ fictional storytelling, in which he envisions an emergency power outage across New York City, evoking real past and future events such as the 1988 blackout and Hurricane Sandy;
  • LuandaKinshasa (2013), a filmic recreation of the renowned Columbia 30th Street Studio in Manhattan, featuring a fictitious band recording in the early 1970s, when African and other foreign musical styles were merging to create a new sound;
  • Photographs from Douglas’ 2010 Midcentury Studio series, which blurs the line between what is real and what is fabricated by juxtaposing photographs from that era with images Douglas captured through painstakingly recreating a photography studio replete with authentic equipment and actors dressed to the time period;
  • The 1996 film Nu•tka•, for which Douglas captures the landscape of Vancouver Island, the site of English and Spanish fleet battles for trade routes during the colonial period, blended together against a soundtrack featuring excerpts of paranoid sea captains’ diary entries offering competing and irreconcilable ambitions; and
  • Der Sandmann (1995), a 16mm multichannel film that considers the relationship between memory, place, and history through the lens of postCold War Germany.
The exhibition at the Hessel Museum of Art coincides with Stan Douglas: Metronome, on view at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City, MO) March 27 through October 11, 2025. The presentation at the Kemper Museum showcases three major video works, each focused on the theme of music, which Douglas uses as a metaphor for social and political conditions and a means for global cultural exchange. 

About Stan Douglas 
In 2022, Douglas represented Canada at the Venice Biennale, where he debuted a major video installation, ISDN (2022) and a related body of photographs titled 2011 ≠ 1848 (2021). Subsequently, the exhibition Stan Douglas: 2011 ≠ 1848 traveled across Canada and continued in 2023 at De Pont Museum, Tilburg, the Netherlands. In 2023, this body of work inaugurated David Zwirner’s new Los Angeles location, and was presented subsequently at the Parque de Serralves in Porto, Portugal. The photographs will be featured in the survey at the Hessel Museum of Art.
The artist’s permanent public commission in Penn Station’s Half Century was unveiled in Moynihan Train Hall, Penn Station, New York, in 2021. This body of work, commissioned by Empire State Development in partnership with Public Art Fund on the occasion of the dedication of New York City’s new Moynihan Train Hall, is composed of nine vignettes arranged into four thematic panels that explore the rich history of Penn Station.
Douglas has been the recipient of notable awards, including the Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography (2016); and the Audain Prize for Visual Art (2019). In 2024, Douglas was made an Officer to the Order of Canada, and in 2021, he was knighted as a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture. He was additionally awarded an honorary doctorate by Simon Fraser University, Greater Vancouver in 2023. Work by the artist is held in major museum collections worldwide, including the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; and The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Douglas lives and works in Vancouver. Douglas (b. 1960) was born in Vancouver and studied at Emily Carr College of Art in Vancouver.

Exhibition Catalogue 
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published by CCS Bard and the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City, MO), along with Dancing Foxes Press. A lasting resource, the book will feature new essays by CCS Bard curator Lauren Cornell; Kevin Moore, curator of the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art’s exhibition; as well as scholars including Christian Ayne Crouch, Associate Professor of History and American and Indigenous Studies at Bard College; Christina Sharpe, Professor and Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Black Studies in the Humanities at York University in Toronto; and Laura U. Marks, Professor in the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University.  

Exhibition Organization and Credits  
Stan Douglas: Ghostlight is organized by CCS Bard’s Hessel Museum of Art and curated by Lauren Cornell, Director of the Graduate Program and Chief Curator at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College.

Curatorial research provided by Omar Farah (CCS '25).

CCS Bard acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.

Exhibitions at CCS Bard and the Hessel Museum of Art are made possible with generous support from Lonti Ebers, the Marieluise Hessel Foundation, the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, the Board of Governors of the Center for Curatorial Studies, and the Center’s Patrons, Supporters, and Friends.

Birth of a Nation (2025) is commissioned by the Hartwig Art Foundation with the Brick, Los Angeles.

The exhibition would not have been possible without the generous support of David Zwirner, New York. Special thanks to Victoria Miro, London, for their additional support to the project.

Post Date: 11-25-2024
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