Dreamlands: Immersive Cinema and Art, 1905–2016

Oct 28, 2016–Feb 5, 2017


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Andrea Crespo

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In Andrea Crespo’s work, the screen is a sensual interface on which images are constantly appearing, splitting, rejoining, and disappearing in a composite of selves that presents identity as a complex state of being. Hand-drawn figures appear, their embodiments ambiguous or multiple, punctuated by words and phrases describing internal states. Identities, biological and psychological states merge fluidly, revealed then wiped away by the hypnotic white light of a vertical scanner, whose slow, calming movement engages various registers of bilateral sensory perception.

Andrea Crespo (b. 1993), still from parabiosis: neurolibidinal induction complex 2.2, 2015

A still of a video work by Andrea Crespo. Text inscribed on a black background with a while line running down the center of the screen
A still of a video work by Andrea Crespo. Text inscribed on a black background with a while line running down the center of the screen

Andrea Crespo (b. 1993), still from parabiosis: neurolibidinal induction complex 2.2, 2015. Video, color, sound; 11:12 min. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Film, Video, and New Media Committee 2016.3. © Andrea Crespo


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On the Hour

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Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

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