Frist Center for the Visual Arts

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Mike Hoolboom
Imitations of Life
February 13–June 7, 2009

Toronto-based fringe filmmaker Mike Hoolboom (b. 1959) has gained international acclaim for works that explore themes of desire, memory, and history as they are embedded in the medium of film. Hoolboom’s ten-part Imitations of Life (2003) combines his own footage with segments excised from films representing a variety of genres: scientific, propaganda, documentary, musical, and science fiction.

In the three chapters of Imitations of Life on view in this exhibition, Hoolboom has rearranged these cinematic fragments, shaping a meta-narrative in which the psychological history of the twentieth century—its dreams, nightmares, mass delusions, and visions for the future—is played back to us in a mix-tape of personal and cultural memories. The artificiality of Hoolboom’s montages reminds us that films are not really about life, but about its imitation in a medium that is often mistaken for reality because it perpetuates so many of the same illusions.

Organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts.

Download the Imitations of Life Gallery Guide.

2009 Gordon Contemporary Artists Project Gallery Exhibition Sponsor:
Welling LaGrone and Morgan Keegan


Location: Gordon Contempoary Artists Project Gallery

Image: Mike Hoolboom. Still from Imitations of Life, 2003. Video, 21:00. Courtesy of the artist