Press Release
National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea (MMCA) proudly presents Again, Again It All Comes Back to Me in Brief Glimpses, which celebrates the extraordinary life and work of Jonas Mekas, one of the true pillars of avant-
Exhibition November 08,2017 -
© ArtCatalyse International / Marika Prévosto 2017. All Rights Reserved
Curated by Eunhee Kim and Francesco Urbano Ragazzi, the retrospective will run from November 8, 2017 to March 4, 2018 at MMCA Seoul. Through a vast and diverse selection of artworks that comprehensively cover the 60-
Jonas Mekas’s oeuvre is an ode to the vitality of daily life. In his films and video-
Born in Semeniškiai, Lithuania in 1922, Jonas Mekas endured the tragedy of World War II while in his early twenties. In 1944, he and his brother Adolfas were taken by the Nazis and placed in the forced labor camp of Elmshorn, before later being transferred to the refugee camps of Wiesbaden and Kassel near the end of the war. This experience of subjection reverberates into Mekas’s second feature-
In 1949, just two months after emigrating to the U.S., Mekas bought his first Bolex camera and began making his first movies. Shortly thereafter, he founded Film Culture magazine and began writing his “Movie Journal” column in the Village Voice. He soon became the catalyst for an entire generation of filmmakers, not only through his films, but as the founder of important organizations and institutions such as the New American Cinema Group (1960), the Filmmakers’ Cooperative (1961) and the Anthology Film Archives (1970). Mekas’s profound influence in cinema history can be felt through 120 photographs that are included in the exhibition, which also highlight his connection to Andy Warhol’s Factory and the Fluxus movement founded by George Maciunas. Overall, the exhibition conveys Mekas’s status as a true citizen of the world who, well before the advent of globalization, lived a transformative and cosmopolitan life after being uprooted from his homeland. The same impulse can be felt from Travel Song (1981), a film that is here presented in the shape of a “quartet.”
Embodying the eternal spirit of the avant-
The substance of Mekas’s production is life itself, which continuously runs and revives at the rhythm of cinema. Hence, life becomes image, as occurs with the 768 film-
In conjunction with the exhibition, the Film and Video department of MMCA is also presenting an accompanying series of screenings of some of Mekas’s masterpieces, including Walden (1969), Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania (1972), Lost Lost Lost (1975), As I Was Moving Ahead I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty (2000), Sleepless Nights Stories (2011), and many more.
Jonas Mekas, Out-