The Reel President

description

The Reel President

The Reel President was a public art event comprised of a large-scale video projection that illustrated the power of cinema and examined the tools used to create a presidential image. Artists Morgan Schwartz and Amy Sharp projected video on a wall adjacent to Stuyvesant Cove Park to explore the relationship between acting presidential and being presidential.

The Reel President took place on the evening of Sunday, August 29, the night before the Republican Convention opened at Madison Square Garden. The event offered New Yorkers an open-air cinema experience, with a unique take on the concept of convention. The White House has appropriated the notion of the “President” from Hollywood and employed Hollywood tactics to sell America a constructed image. Sharp and Schwartz used Hollywood films, televised debates and press coverage, to investigate the political climate and the role of still and moving images in the portrayal of the Presidency. Structured by dueling images, The Reel President looked at the relationship between staged identity and reality. The video and sound montage looped, allowing viewers to join at any point.

With help from the Community Environmental Center The Reel President was a sustainable production, power usage for the event stemmed from renewable solar electricity.

Click to view The Reel President

date

August 29, 2004

venue

Stuyvesant Cove Park

location

23rd Street and the East River, New York, NY

sponsor

The Community Environmental Center

Morgan Schwartz

Assistant Professor of Digital Media
Communication Arts Department
Marymount Manhattan College

office: Nugent 560, Room A
tel: 1-212-774-4865
email: mschwartz AT mmm DOT edu
web: http://sodacity.net/courses


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