Structured on the central metaphor of Shakespeare's The Tempest, this work alludes to the position of the individual in (post) modern culture, and the tension between natural and technological power. Orchestrating these forces in a foreboding premonition of upheaval, Hall tempers his role as an omniscient Prospero with the passive condition of the contemporary individual. Natural and urban landscapes are juxtaposed with close-ups of his face, howling as if in pain. Through his use of time lapse, stop-action and color filtration, he creates effects of haunting strangeness. Conflict, danger and relief are suggested and dissipated with virtuosic control.
Prelude to the Tempest
Doug Hall
1985 00:14:59 United StatesEnglishColorMono4:3VideoDescription
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.