De La Warr Pavilion is pleased to present E-Minor, a major new film commission by Bristol-based artist, Callum Hill (b. 1987, Montreal, Canada). Combining 35mm and 16mm film and archival footage, this 13-minute piece takes viewers on a psychedelic journey to explore the shadows of Western society. E-Minor is characteristic of Hill's approach to filmmaking, which moves between psychological enquiry, gender, politics, and poetry. Unpredictable and erratic in narrative, her films slip between documentary and fiction in their exploration of the human condition. The film will be presented in a site-specific installation in DLWP's First floor gallery, together with an extensive engagement programme throughout the exhibition's duration.
E-Minor's starting point is a linoleum tile depicting a clown's face that existed in the basement of Hill's grandparents' home on Staten Island, New York. The clown in question was Lou Jacobs, a German-born American who became the first living person to be placed on a US postage stamp with a cartoon-like rendition of his grinning expression. The iconography of the clown, together with the pervasive pop culture metaphor of the threatening basement space, become vehicles through which Hill explores the darker side of Western cultural life by asking what lies beneath its surface.
The location of the artist's grandparents' home in New York takes Hill back to the city that she comes from but has never lived in. This geographic fragmentation between the US and Europe becomes the impetus for E-Minor's weaving together of a kaleidoscopic visual essay that expands from the artist's family history to themes of grief, time, memory, and ghosts amidst the constrictive binds of capitalism in the Western world.
In addition to New York and its islands, E-Minor draws upon and includes footage captured in and around other island locales – the United Kingdom, Ireland, Sardinia– each of which represent Hill's personal journey through pattern recognition, exploring and making visible the realities of human experience within a landscape of encroaching division and nationalism. In this, the film builds upon her previous work, Crowtrap (2018), which centred upon the UK political climate and its imminent withdrawal from the EU.
Like the ubiquity of linoleum – the material in which Jacobs' face was embedded –E-Minor pulls up a veneer to reveal a series of uninhibited and potentially liberating truths. It is a film that dwells in the spaces of confusion, fragmentation and irrationality in order to reimagine the homogenous and toxic systems that characterise contemporary Western society.
E-Minor is commissioned by DLWP with production funding from Canada Council of the Arts.
A free exhibition guide is available, featuring a new text by Emily LaBarge on E-Minor, and an expanded list of references from the film.
Season (21 Sept 2024 - 19 Jan 2025) | ||
---|---|---|
Day | Times | |
Monday - Sunday | 10:00 | - 17:00 |
Spectacular modernist Grade 1 listed Pavilion on the promenade in Bexhill, hosting…
Bexhill's traditional seafront is punctuated by some fantastic pieces of modernist…
It’s curious, it’s quirky, it’s packed to the rafters with diverse objects with a…
Enjoy a game of tennis on one of the outdoor courts, try your hand at bowls or take a…
An exhibition space based at Bexhill's cultural hub, Beeching Road Studios, Flatlands is…
A ceramic studio based at Beeching Road Studios, Bexhill-on-Sea.
Bookbindery & print studio servicing the arts and local community at Beeching Road…
This picturesque area of Bexhill is home to some fine examples of Georgian architecture…
The Combe Valley Countryside Park covers approximately 2.3 square miles (about…
Promenade 272 metres out to sea on rebuilt and revamped pier, which won a RIBA award for…
A 10 minute walk from Hastings town centre, this Grade II Listed Victorian park is one of…
Take a step back in time and discover the fascinating history of Britain’s first Norman…
Hastings Adventure Golf is the UK home of Miniature Golf and features no less than 3,…