Nira Pereg, solo show, Melt Away Before You or I Can’t Believe it’s Not Battle!, LAXART, Los Angeles

February 19, 2018

 

Melt Away Before You or I Can’t Believe it’s Not Battle!

March 3 – April 7, 2018

 

Curator: Hamza Walker

 

Opening: Saturday, March 3rd, 4 – 7 pm at LAXART
There will be a walk-through with the artist at 4 pm

 

7000 Santa Monica Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA
90038

Braverman Gallery is pleased to announce the premier of I Can’t Believe it’s Not Battle! Melt Away Before You, a new multi-channel video installation by Israeli artist, Nira Pereg at LAXART. This new body of work revolves around the site of Fort Irwin National Training Center, a major training area for the United States Military located in the Mojave Desert in northern San Bernardino County, California. Fort Irwin is a simulation of another place—a fake Middle Eastern town—that becomes a subject of investigation into the nature of authenticity, simulation, fiction, and the theater of war. As America’s embedment in the Middle East has become increasingly entrenched, complicated, and violent, the Armed Forces are looking to theater and performance as new counter strategies to keep apace with the shifting specificities of war. The army has constructed vast simulations of wartime Iraq and Afghanistan to train troops for unconventional tactics and to make them aware that they are under the media’s gaze.

 

The work ”Melt Away Before You“ or ”I Can’t Believe It’s Not Battle,“ is the second part of Pereg’s ”Redemption“ trilogy, a body of work that deals with the heritage of ideology—the religious/political/economic representations. As the artist has explained, ”I think of the exhibition space at a ‘total institution’ (to quote sociologist Erving Goffman), incorporating different scenes and elements from ‘real’ and ‘staged’ events, and blurring the boundaries between the two. In this work, we see a performance staged in a realistic mock-up of a generic Middle Eastern village, with real soldiers depicting civilians; real Iraqi-American immigrants depicting real Iraqi citizens; shipping containers depicting Middle Eastern bazaar streets; and finally, real soldiers firing fake ammunition. For me, it was a rare opportunity to peer through a performative crack into the army’s ideological structure, masquerading as entertainment at Fort Irwin.

 

For more information, click here.

NEWSLETTER

VISIT

Sunday

Monday

Tue – Thu

Friday

Saturday

Closed

By appointment only

11:00 – 18:00

11:00 – 14:00

11:00 – 14:00

CONTACT

CREDITS

Design by The-Studio

Code By Haker Design

Contact

Visit

Sunday

Monday

Tue – Thu

Friday

Saturday

Closed

By appointment only

11:00 – 16:00

11:00 – 14:00

Closed