Michele Bressan (b. 1980)
Michele Bressan is an artist based in Bucharest, known to the public for his photographic projects, for which he won the Essl Prize and was nominated for the Henkel Prize for Art in 2009. In recent years, the themes he explores have materialized, along with photography, into object and installation. Michele’s interest in visual perception and the ways in which the collective imaginarium is being built starts from the image taken as a matrix of social and historical consciousness. This search is doubled by the desire to cut out from everyday reality the poetic spaces, which arise spontaneously or accidentally.
Find Michele Bressan here:
https://michelebressan.ro/
https://www.instagram.com/michele_bressan/
Powerplay
Cinemas are made to be looked past them, stay unnoticed to the viewer while they reveal the spectacle. Like Marc Auge’s non places, they are containers, rhythmic and automated in form and activity. When lighten and empty, they expose their context and status, revealing the viewer a reality he isn’t familiar with. Using the time between two screenings to create a new scenario, the series regards the story of these transition spaces in their own transition as past traces and in the same time as present landmarks of the Romania’s visual identity.
Out of the 290 state cinema halls in Romania, only 29 function at present, the remaining have been sold, converted into bingo halls, clubs, parking spaces, commercial centers or left to decay. The cinemas which were subject to documentation, all property of the state, have lost the audience from their best times (before 2000) to alternative entertainment spaces or full-serviced mall cinemas. They are being avoided by spectators and are awaiting uncertain change in status, ownership or purpose.
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The few transformations they received over time, mostly reconditioning the original structure, preserved these space’s aesthetics (’70-’80s), therefore referring to the visual state of recent history. Behind the documentary approach the images became a study of form, in which rhythm or even simple repetition can make things appear more than they are. They can attract or distract attention, through convenient differences between coordinates. The structure of the halls, once lighten, appears more contemplative than its functionality allows it.
2020 edit: nowadays, none of the photographed cinemas is operational, they were all closed or transformed into new activities.