Cinematheque19 at Lombard Freid January 9 - March 1, 2014

During January and February, Lombard Freid is excited to present Cinematheque19, a platform for presenting video and film by artists from our roster, dedicating the entire gallery space to individual works. With a rotating schedule, each week will focus on a different artist, showcasing the importance of film and video to their individual practices and the gallery's program at large.

Building on Lombard Freid's long tradition of exhibiting contemporary photography and video, Cinematheque19 features a range of work by Nina Yuen, Mounir Fatmi, Cao Fei, Tameka Norris, Haig Aivazian, and The Propeller Group. As many of the pieces have not been screened in New York before, Cinematheque19 presents a unique opportunity to view them in a gallery setting. Cinematheque19 additionally provides the rare occasion to view video works on a large-scale in a site-specific screening environment, designed by Stephan Freid Architecture Studio with lighting and sound consulting from Jim Conti.

Additional screenings, special events, and panel discussions will be announced at lombardfreid.com.

Opening Week: Thursday, January 9 - Saturday, Jan. 19 Nina Yuen Hermione, 2013 Andoe, 2013 Lea, 2013 Raymond, 2014

Nina Yuen (born 1981, Hawaii) mines past histories of anonymous and known characters and creates poetic narrative short film works, which captivate the viewer both visually and orally. Creating her voiceovers from a collage of false personal memories, literary texts, and pop culture sources, Yuen creates mysterious and beautiful narratives that often examine history, memory, and identity. Yuen has had recent exhibitions at the Chinese Arts Centre, Manchester, and the Stedelijk Museum and will have a solo show at the De Appel Arts Centre this year.

Week 2: Tuesday, January 21 - Saturday, Jan. 25 Mounir Fatmi History is Not Mine, 2013 The Silence of St. Peter the Martyr, 2011 Memorandum, 2009

Mounir Fatmi (b. 1970, ) currently lives and works between and . His work address contemporary socio-political issues through the construction, activation, and destruction of spaces and everyday objects. Fatmi’s work has been shown in solo exhibitions at the Migros Museum für Gegenwarskunst in Zürich, Switzerland, the Picasso Museum, the FRAC Alsace, and the Center Le Parvis. Additionally, he has participated in exhibitions at the Centre Pompidou, The Museum, The Museum of Art and Design, and Museum Kunst Palast in Düsseldorf, as well as the , and Biennials.

Week 3: Tuesday, January 28 - Saturday, February 1 Cao Fei (b. 1978, Guangzhou) is one of the most significant and innovative young artists to have emerged on the international scene from China. Her multi-media projects explore the lost dreams of the young Chinese generation and their strategies for overcoming and escaping reality, often blending socio-political critique with elements of digital and youth culture. Cao has exhibited extensively around the word, recently at the (New York), Pinchuk Art Center (Kiev), Mobile M+ (Hong Kong), Ashkal Alwan (Beirut), the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, and the 54th .

Week 4: Tuesday, February 4 - Saturday, February 8 Tameka Norris (b. 1979, Guam) is a New Orleans-based visual and performance artist whose practice investigates identity politics, arts education, and contemporary forms of communication and media. Norris’ brash and witty style draws attention to materials, process, and form, while addressing larger socio-cultural anxieties and concerns. Recent exhibitions include Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at The Studio Museum in Harlem and The Contemporary Art Museum, Houston and a solo exhibition at The Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans. Additionally, Norris will participate in this year's Prospect 3 Biennial, curated by Franklin Sirmans.

Week 5: Tuesday, February 11 - Saturday, February 15 Haig Aivazian Into Thin Air, Into the Ground, 2011-2013

Haig Aivazian (b. 1980, Beirut, Lebanon) is an artist, curator and writer. Using performance, video, drawing, installation and sculpture, his work weaves together personal and geo-political, micro and macro narratives in its search for ideological loopholes and short circuits. Refugee Olympics, part of the FUGERE project, was commissioned for Sharjah Biennial 9 (2009) Collapsing Foundations, an installation and video performance work, was showcased in a solo exhibition at Parisian Laundry’s bunker space, Montréal (2012). Aivazian’s video works have been included in several exhibitions and festivals including at Mercer Union, Toronto (2011), FIDMarseille (2012) and Videobrasil’s Southern Panoramas (2013). He is currently based in Beirut.

Week 6: Tuesday, February 18 - Saturday, February 22 The Propeller Group Television Commercial for Communism, 2011 Television Commercial for Communism Animatic, 2011 Fade In: Ext. Storage - Cu Chi - Day, 2010

The Propeller Group (formed by Matt Lucero, Tuan Andrew Nguyen, and Phunam in 2006, ) uses mass media as a platform to combine seemingly contradictory phenomena: advertising and politics, history and future, and public and private. TPG often pushes their work back into the public sphere, using commodities as a form of public art. As an integral part of their practice, TPG has cultivated the guise of an advertising agency—a public relations firm that confuses the brand and the brand message. Their work has recently been shown at the Guggenheim Museum, The New Museum Triennial, The Museum of Modern Art, The Hammer Museum, The Museum of Modern Art, the Guangzhou Triennial, and The Art Museum. In 2007, the group co-founded Sàn Art, an artist-initiated contemporary art platform in Vietnam.