Skip to main content

Letters in the Dark

Doug Hall

2016 00:24:26 United StatesEnglishB&WStereo16:9Video

Description

Letters in the Dark was originally shown as a two-channel video installation, accompanied by photographs at the Benrubi Gallery, New York, in 2016. In 2024, Hall decided to make it available as a single-channel work. Its subject matter is the brief epistolary romance between Franz Kafka and Milena Jesenská. From his gallery statement, “In my mind, the focus of the work is, to quote Judith Butler, the ‘poetics of non-arrival [that] pervades […], if not afflicts, his love letters…,’ a condition that is not entirely unfamiliar to most of us.” We only know of Kafka’s side of this exchange, which was originally published in 1952 under the title, Letters to Milena Jesenská’s letters were lost or perhaps destroyed at her request. A central part of this work is Hall's recreation of Milena’s letters. Again, from the gallery promotional materials, “I have tried to return her lost letters by writing them myself, which I did by assembling fragments of her published writings and by imagining the style and tone in which her exchange with Kafka might have been written.” 

About Doug Hall

Much of Doug Hall’s work in video centers upon the idea of media presentation as anthropological rite—as social spectacle heavily encoded with cultural values and contradictions. In addition to his well-known solo projects, during the 1970s Hall was a member of the media art/performance collective T. R. Uthco (with Diane Andrews Hall and Jody Procter) and a collaborator with Ant Farm. From the late 1980s to the present, Hall has produced a significant body of work in photography, in addition to his work in video and media installation. Over the years, he has written extensively on a range of issues from art, media, and politics as well as on more personal matters. Among the most notable literary efforts is Illuminating Video: An Essential Guide to Video Art (1990, Aperture Books) which he co-edited with Sally Jo Fifer. More recently, he completed a memoir, This Is Doug Hall (2004, ORO Editions), in which he traces the influences that led him to become an artist or as he puts it, “a maker of stuff.” Over the years he has received numerous grants and awards, including from The National Endowment for the Arts, The California Arts Council, The Fulbright Foundation, and The Guggenheim Foundation. In 1995 he received The Rome Prize awarded by the American Academy in Rome. His work in video, installation, and photography is included in the collections of numerous museums, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Contemporary Art Museum, Chicago; The Berlinische Galerie, Berlin; Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive, California; Museum für Moderne Kunst, Vienna; Tate Modern, London; The San Jose Museum of Art, California; and The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. He lives in San Francisco.