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Margaret Salmon (b. 1975, New York, USA) creates filmic portraits that weave together poetry and documentary. Focusing on individuals in their everyday habitats, her slow-moving films capture the minutiae of daily life and infuse them with gentle grandeur to touch upon universal human themes. As she puts it “it is the ghost narrative in mundane tasks that I find interesting. Inspired by Soviet and US propaganda films from the 1940s onwards, Salmon portrays the common struggle of ordinary people. Music often plays a central role in her work and technically she draws on practices pioneered by cinematic movements such as Italian neorealism and Cinema Vérité. Salmon’s recent film Ninna Nanna (2006) is a study of motherhood, featuring three young Italian mothers. It reveals the discrepancies between the reality of their role and its idealization in art, politics and religion. Peggy (2003) is an elegant portrait of an elderly woman moving through her home whilst singing Amazing Grace. Her frail voice is at odds with her purposeful movements as she goes about her chores. The work evokes a sense of accepted loneliness also present in Salmon’s film Ramapo Central (2003). This follows the day-to-day life of an ‘average’ middle- aged American woman: at work as a telephone receptionist, taking an aerobics class or basking in the sun on her front porch. At times, the film verges on the tragicomic, but Salmon’s position is neither aggressive nor intrusive. Balancing intimacy with respectful distance, she creates laconic yet moving works that are at once sober and lyrical. Salmon studied at the School of Visual Arts, NYC, and at the Royal College of Art, London. She now lives in Whitstable, UK. In 2006, she was awarded the first MaxMara Art Prize and Le Prix Gilles Dusein. She is currently nominated for the Vincent Award. In early 2007, she had a solo exhibition at the Whitechapel (London) and her work will be shown in the Arsenale at this summer’s Venice Biennale. The exhibition is curated by Zoë Gray and Nicolaus Schafhausen, with support from The British Council. It is accompanied by a publication titled Margaret Salmon, featuring texts by André Bazin, Raymond Carver, Zoë Gray, Nicolaus Schafhausen, Bina von Stauffenberg. WdW Publishers. Price: 10 euro. ISBN:978-90-73362-75-8 EVENTS Wednesday 4 July, 8 p.m. Readings from American Realist fiction. Wednesday 25 July, 7 p.m. Italian films on motherhood: Una giornata particolare (1977), by Ettore Scola; Roma Città Aperta (1946), by Roberto Rossellini. Sunday 19 August, 5 p.m. Finissage with Soviet film: Soy Cuba (1964), by Mikhail Kalatozov. Rotterdam, April 2007 MARGARET SALMON EXHIBITION 20 May – 19 August 2007 Saturday 19 May 1 p.m. Opening 3 p.m. Artist’s talk: Margaret Salmon in conversation with Polly Staple (Frieze).

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Page 1: Margaret Salmon Press release ENG

Margaret Salmon (b. 1975, New York, USA) creates filmic portraits that weave together poetry and documentary. Focusing on individuals in their everyday habitats, her slow-moving films capture the minutiae of daily life and infuse them with gentle grandeur to touch upon universal human themes. As she puts it “it is the ghost narrative in mundane tasks that I find interesting.”

Inspired by Soviet and US propaganda films from the 1940s onwards, Salmon portrays the common struggle of ordinary people. Music often plays a central role in her work and technically she draws on practices pioneered by cinematic movements such as Italian neorealism and Cinema Vérité.

Salmon’s recent film Ninna Nanna (2006) is a study of motherhood, featuring three young Italian mothers. It reveals the discrepancies between the reality of their role and its idealization in art, politics and religion. Peggy (2003) is an elegant portrait of an elderly woman moving through her home whilst singing Amazing Grace. Her frail voice is at odds with her purposeful movements as she goes about her chores. The work evokes a sense of accepted loneliness also present in Salmon’s film Ramapo Central (2003). This follows the day-to-day life of an ‘average’ middle-aged American woman: at work as a telephone receptionist, taking an aerobics class or basking in the sun on her front porch. At times, the film verges on the tragicomic, but Salmon’s position is neither aggressive nor intrusive. Balancing intimacy with respectful distance, she creates laconic yet moving works that are at once sober and lyrical.

Salmon studied at the School of Visual Arts, NYC, and at the Royal College of Art, London. She now lives in Whitstable, UK. In 2006, she was awarded the first MaxMara Art Prize and Le Prix Gilles Dusein. She is currently nominated for the Vincent Award. In early 2007, she had a solo exhibition at the Whitechapel (London) and her work will be shown in the Arsenale at this summer’s Venice Biennale.

The exhibition is curated by Zoë Gray and Nicolaus Schafhausen, with support from The British Council.It is accompanied by a publication titled Margaret Salmon, featuring texts by André Bazin, Raymond Carver, Zoë Gray, Nicolaus Schafhausen, Bina von Stauffenberg. WdW Publishers. Price: 10 euro. ISBN:978-90-73362-75-8

EVENTSWednesday 4 July, 8 p.m.Readings from American Realist fiction.Wednesday 25 July, 7 p.m. Italian films on motherhood: Una giornata particolare (1977), by Ettore Scola; Roma Città Aperta (1946), by Roberto Rossellini.Sunday 19 August, 5 p.m.Finissage with Soviet film: Soy Cuba (1964), by Mikhail Kalatozov.

For more information or to request an interview with the artist, please contact Zoë Gray on [email protected]. Details and images are also available on: www.wdw.nl

Rotterdam, April 2007MARGARET SALMONEXHIBITION20 May – 19 August 2007

Saturday 19 May1 p.m. Opening3 p.m. Artist’s talk: Margaret Salmon in conversation

with Polly Staple (Frieze).

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