Les Sirènes / The Sirens (vue d'installation
et détail), 2008, installation multimédia,
dimensions variables. Avec l’aimable
permission de l’artiste.



Échec / Failure (détail), 2009, installation
multimédia, dimensions variables.
Avec l’aimable permission de l’artiste.



Compte à rebours / Countdown (détail), 2009,
installation multimédia, dimensions variables.
Avec l’aimable permission de l’artiste.
NELSON HENRICKS

From Novembrer 7 to December 19, 2009. Opening November 7 at 4:00 pm.

EXHIBITION VIEWS | BIOGRAPHY



BY monique moumblow

I have never failed to be seduced by the images in Nelson Henrick’s videos. They are lush, often shot on film, and edited together in ways that are hypnotic and enticing. While watching the works that are going to be shown at VOX, it occurs to me that more than half of the shots are extreme close-ups of objects that fill the entire screen. Some of the items are mundane, like a cup, while others are more suggestive, like a knife. Many of these things seem pulled from another era and some of them make frequent re-appearances, like hands, guitars or turntables. Without really thinking about it, I compile a list, carefully writing down everything that makes an appearance in The Sirens, Failure and Countdown.

On August 31, 2009 Nelson and I sit down and do a sort of free-association on the list that I have compiled. I don’t know what I have in mind, but I feel inexplicably compelled to catalogue all these objects. When I arrive at Nelson’s house we go into the living room and sit down on the couch. We have a cup of tea, and he more or less follows my rules. As I read off the list of objects, he responds with one-word answers. He tries not to think about it too much and we don’t make any revisions.

EYES PIERRE
GLASSES ME
EARS HEARING
TORSO SEXY
TURNTABLE RECORD
RECORD NEEDLE GOUGING
BEARD FATHER
RAZOR MOTHER
CALVES SEXY
RUNNING SHOES WELL WORN
BLACK CURTAIN WHAT’S BEHIND
PHOTO LIGHTS POINTING
FACE OPENNESS
AMPLIFIER MUSIC
FORK STAB
SPEAKER MOUTH
SPOON NOURISH
MONITOR LIGHT
NEEDLES PIERCING
WINE GLASS SHATTER
FINGERS TAPPING
GUITAR CHORD
KNIFE CUT
TATTOO SKIN
FILM REEL SPINNING SPIRAL
CUP HALF FULL
MICROPHONE LIPS
PAPER CUT
THROAT ELONGATED
CLAPPER END
SLIDE PROJECTOR RATTLE
SWITCH OFF
JACK PLUG
VU MONITOR FLUCTUATE
RECORD SPIN
PROJECTOR LIGHT
BADGE POLICE
TAPE MEASURE PULL OPEN
BOOK PLEASURE OF TEXT
AGENDA HIDDEN
BIBLE BEFORE
OIL CONTAINER ROADSIDE BREAKDOWN
MOISTURIZER HANDS
CLOCK TIME
SCALE MEASURE
MAP LOCATION
VIDEOTAPE UNWINDING
POSTER WALL
CALCULATOR NUMERICAL
RULER MEASURE
MEASURING CUP COOKING
SUPER 8 FILM BOX EMPTY
UNIDENTIFIED OBJECT MYSTERIOUS
KEYBOARD PLAY
EGG CARTON FOOD
TEN-DOLLAR BILL MONEY
TELEPHONE CALL
SUPER 8 FILM CASSETTE POSSIBILITY
STEP LADDER CLIMB
PLAYING CARD GRANDMA
GARBAGE BAG TRASH
DICE GAME
CHILD’S BLOCK CHILDHOOD
3 SECONDS OF EMPTINESS WAITING

When we’re finished the list, we end up talking about the difficulty of writing. I mention another text I’m working on that I’m having difficulty with. With his usual dry humour, Nelson suggests adding enormous footnotes. I could tell everyone that it’s a post-modern strategy. Although really it would be a way to avoid having to go back and completely revise my text1.

We say goodnight, and I walk home. When I get home, I read through the list a few times. I like it. It seems like this secret, personal lexicon, or a series of pictograms, fully capable of leading a life of their own. But other than a few repeats, like the words “cut”, “light”, “measure” and “sexy”, I’m not sure how to incorporate it into a text about the work at VOX.

On September 18, 2009 I visit Nelson again. He makes coffee, and we sit in his kitchen chatting.

At one point, he mentions that an extreme close-up of a cup would be more interesting than a shot of a kitchen. At first this seems strange to me, but I can see how the object instantly becomes more tactile through this shift in scale. You can imagine touching the smooth, silver surface of the spoon, or holding the ten-dollar bill in your hands.

Objects are generators of memory. A turntable reminds you of the first record you ever bought. A map recalls a trip to Italy in 1993. A measuring cup is perhaps something that once belonged to an ex-lover and somehow found its way into your home. Most objects last longer than our memory of events do. The desire to collect them is insurance against forgetting. In this context, the list compiled from Nelson’s tapes seems incredibly efficient. An archive of familiar objects, streamlined into a kind of shorthand, to be recalled and used when needed.

In Failure there is a wide shot of a room with a big, black curtain. It’s destabilizing. Instead of the small spaces that we have become accustomed to, we suddenly find ourselves in an enormous room—a theatre perhaps, or a studio. Nelson, the artist/teacher, appears. His entire body, not severed pieces, like a leg, a face or a foot. He walks around for a second, trying to find his place. The music begins, and as it does, he does this odd, awkward shuffle from one side of the screen to the other. A cue card, “Impoverished Aesthetics,” interrupts the shot—its meaning open to multiple interpretations. The sequence is over in a matter of seconds. It’s a quick public performance—a brief little dance of failure and humiliation.

In the next shot, Nelson is lying on his bed, staring up at the ceiling. We are back home now. The previous sequence feels far away. We have been returned to a world of close-ups, intimate spaces, objects and memory.



1. That night I had a very strange dream. I’d purchased a word-processing program that was not only capable of correcting spelling, but also had this incredible filter that fixed bad writing. It would tell you if parts of your text were repetitive, if certain adjectives were poorly used, or if the writing lacked coherent structure. It even had this filter that could edit long sections and would underline parts that were boring. The program was so good that if you just dragged and dropped your file into it, it could automatically generate flawless prose.



Biographical Notice Born in Bow Island, Alberta. After studying at the Alberta College of Art and Design, he moved to Montreal in 1991 to study cinema. He has taught at various universities, notably Concordia University (1995-present), McGill University (2001-2003), as well as the Université du Québec à Montréal (1999, 2003) all the while pursuing a rich artistic career. A musician, writer, curator and artist, Henricks is best known for his videotapes, which have been exhibited worldwide. His work has been presented at Gallery 44, Toronto (2008), Articule, Montreal (2008), the Art Gallery of Calgary (2007), The New Gallery, Calgary (2005), the Montreal Musem of Fine Arts (2004), the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires (2001) and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, as part of the Video Viewpoints series (2000). His writings have been published in Fuse, Public and Coil magazines, and in the anthologies Caught in the Act (YYZ Press, 2004), Lux (YYZ Press, 2000) and So, To Speak (Artexte, 1999). With Steve Reinke, he co-edited an anthology of artists’ video scripts entitled By the Skin of Their Tongues (YYZ Press, 1997). Henricks was the recipient of the Bell Canada Award in Video Art (2002) and the Board of Govenors’ Alumni Award of Excellence from the Alberta College of Art and Design (2005).

www.nelsonhenricks.com












credit : Michel Brunelle