*1985
-
Movie Palaces Series. Community Theater, the Grand, Milwaukee, WI (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Community Theater, the Grand, Milwaukee, WI Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 58 x 38 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1346 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Streamers, Westlake, Los Angeles, CA (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Streamers, Westlake, Los Angeles, CA Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 58 x 38 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1348 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Archive of the Conrad Schmitt Studios, New Berlin, WI (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Archive of the Conrad Schmitt Studios, New Berlin, WI Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 38 x 58 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1337 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Auditorium, Modjeska, Milwaukee, WI (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Auditorium, Modjeska, Milwaukee, WI Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 58 x 87,6 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1354 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Skies, the State, Minneapolis, MN (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Skies, the State, Minneapolis, MN Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 58 x 87,6 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1353 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Cloud Machine, Patio, Chicago, IL (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Cloud Machine, Patio, Chicago, IL Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 38 x 58 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1335 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Women, the Orpheum, Madison, WI (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Women, the Orpheum, Madison, WI Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 58 x 38 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1352 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. One Chandelier, the Orpheum, Madison, WI (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. One Chandelier, the Orpheum, Madison, WI Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 38 x 58 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1330 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Balcony, Avalon, Chicago, IL (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Balcony, Avalon, Chicago, IL Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 38 x 58 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1345 Copyright: © John Skoog -
Movie Palaces Series. Arches, the Paramount, Austin, MN (with Nicholas Vargelis) (2010/2015) Movie Palaces Series. Arches, the Paramount, Austin, MN (with Nicholas Vargelis) Artist: John Skoog Dating: 2010/2015 Type: Photography Material: Pigment print on paper Measures: 38 x 58 cm Acces / purchase date: 2015 Inventory number: 1339 Copyright: © John Skoog
Swedish artist John Skoog was awared the Baloise Art Prize at Art Basel in 2014 for his film installation “Reduit (Redoubt)” of the same year. The jury was impressed by the “calm, cinematically composed images” of his 14-minute black and white film, which, in accordance with the defining trait of his oeuvre, focused on finding “traces of people and memories in ordinary places.”(1)
“Movie Palaces Series” (2010–15), acquired by the Baloise art collection, bears close affinities to the 16mm black and white film “Shadowland,” also made in 2014, which conveys a subtle reflection on the medium of film and its American success story. Skoog filmed in places around Los Angeles that had been used as locations by Hollywood studios for scenes that were meant to take place in Afghanistan, the Sahara, or the French Alps. This is “a subtle re-enactment of the topography and filmmaking in the American West. It lingers on the iconographic imagery and atmospheric resonance of places and their geographical meaning from earlier films.”(2)
With its atmospherically-charged color images, the 26-part “Movie Palaces Series” documents the architecture of the picture palaces where, for decades, the premiers of lavish Hollywood productions were celebrated. For the most part, however, the ostentatiously historical decor of these bombastic movie theaters has not stood the test of time. Today, many of these rundown buildings are used as casinos, churches, or flea markets. In this respect, Skoog’s “Movie Palaces Series” proves to be yet another piece in the mosaic of his quest to trace people and memories in everyday places.
“Movie Palaces Series” also identifies a shift in the way that the medium of film came to be perceived. In the first half of the 20th century, people flocked in their thousands to the glittering movie palaces to indulge in the latest elaborate film production. By the 1960s, the advent of television in private homes ushered in the demise of the big-screen extravaganza, not only in America.
Martin Schwander
(1) Jury report, Baloise Art Prize 2014.
(2) John Skoog: Slow Return, Värn, exh. cat., MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main; mumok – Museum moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, Vienna 2015, p. 188.