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Gerard Byrne's first major survey in Australia opens at ACCA

6 October 2016

In Samuel Beckett’s one-act play Krapp’s Last Tape, the curtain rises to the mise-en-scène: ‘a late evening in the future’. For his exhibition of the same name at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne, Australia, Gerard Byrne employs a similar sense of drama, transforming the museum into a theatre and implicating the audience within an intricate, multi-sensory network of lights, flickering TV monitors, video projections and architectural structures.

In the case of Beckett’s character Krapp, the ‘tape’ in the play’s title refers to audio recordings made by the protagonist as a younger man. In this first scene he is revealed listening over them and adding new commentary to reflect on recent years. Byrne’s exhibition pays homage to this history of recordings, bringing together a dense accumulation of his own video works spanning more than fifteen years.

Throughout his varied practice, Byrne has explored historical ideas, conversations and locations in order to consider their contemporary relevance and to blur distinctions between past and future, myth and reality. The first major survey of the artist’s work in Australia, A late evening in the future builds on this interest in collective history and dramatic reconstruction, employing the device of a playback system to convulsively shuttle and scroll through moments of memory and cultural amnesia.

The exhibition runs from 8 October until 27 November 2016. For more information, please click here.

Image: Gerard Byrne, A thing is a hole in a thing it is not, 2010, film installation.


Gerard Byrne's first major survey in Australia opens at ACCA
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