The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

The power of music in a Europe scarred by war

- CHRIS MUGAN

He won the art world’s Turner Prize in 1996 and has filled cinemas with a unique film that simply showed football star Zinedine Zidane over the course of a game.

Now, one of Scotland’s most celebrated working artists finally receives a show in Dundee.

From tomorrow, Dundee Contempora­ry Arts is showing k.364, a multi– screen presentati­on of a work that dates back to 2010, yet finds uncomforta­ble echoes with current events in Eastern Europe. It is the creation of Douglas Gordon, perhaps best known for Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait, the 2006 film scored by Glaswegian alternativ­e rock band Mogwai that captured the movements of the French footballer for an entire match.

This work focuses on the train journey from Berlin to Poland of two Israeli musicians, viola player Avri Levitan and violinist Roi Shiloah, who both share Polish–Jewish heritage.

They stop off at Poznan, home of the celebrated Amadeus Chamber Orchestra, to rehearse Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertant­e in E Flat Major – its catalogue number provides the work’s title – before a performanc­e at the Warsaw Philharmon­ic concert hall.

It is the first time k.364 has been shown in a UK public institutio­n, a coup for the Dundee venue.

It also meets a long–term ambition of its director, Beth Bate, since she took on the role in 2016 — not least because it was originally scheduled to open in 2020.

“This is the fruit of a very long process working together and finding the right moment to open this show,” she says.

“It means a lot that we’re able to show this work to audiences in Dundee. We’re really excited to be working with one of the most influentia­l artists that the UK has produced.”

For Bate, Gordon was at the forefront of a celebrated generation of Scottish artists, including Christine Borland and Martin Boyce, who emerged in the ’80s and ’90s to become internatio­nally successful.

“Douglas’s work is beautiful, powerful, dark and joyful; it really contains a huge depth and richness of emotion and power,” she adds. “It connects with people immediatel­y, and k.364 will do that particular­ly.”

This work by the Glasgow-born and Berlin-based artist portrays on separate screens two contrastin­g journeys.

On one hand is the musical story that culminates in a triumphant orchestral rendition of Mozart’s elegant compositio­n.

Facing it, though, is Gordon’s intimate portrayal of the experience­s of the two protagonis­ts, who muse on a close long–term relationsh­ip, shared background­s and their own families’ memories of the Holocaust.

Born and raised in very different surroundin­gs, the dense, chilly woodlands they travel through are unfamiliar, yet passing sites of atrocities and great hardships makes a particular impact on the descendant­s of those who survived.

With both films shown together, Gordon explores wider ideas around the power of culture, folk traditions and music to cross man–made, often arbitrary, borders.

Alongside k.364, DCA is showing Dark Burnt Scores, a presentati­on of Gordon’s texts alongside the viola and violin scores played by Levitan and Shiloah.

These have been charred and sometimes wholly burnt, representi­ng the fragility of culture in the face of destructiv­e forces.

These are important historical themes, though Bate sees the work taking on extra resonance since its creation, through current affairs at home, wider political currents across the continent, and now a new wave of destructio­n and displaceme­nt on Poland’s border in Ukraine.

“It’s about the concept of modern Europe coming out of the Second World War,” she says. “This is the perfect film for us to think about shifts we’ve had over the last few years, particular­ly as a result of Brexit: how we think about nationhood, what it means to be European, having a shared culture and music being a huge part of that.

“It seems remarkable to me that it has gained meaning over the pandemic, a striking comment on how close we can be, our proximity to each other and watching live music together.

“More recently, because of Russia’s actions, we think of the impact of militarist­ic violence on nations and families, but at its heart it’s about the joy

of music and friendship.”

k.364 runs at the DCA, Dundee, from May 7 to August 7 2022.

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 ?? ?? COUP: This is the first time Turner Prize–winning Douglas Gordon’s k.364 has been exhibited in a UK public institutio­n.
COUP: This is the first time Turner Prize–winning Douglas Gordon’s k.364 has been exhibited in a UK public institutio­n.
 ?? ?? Gordon explores issues of nationhood and friendship.
Gordon explores issues of nationhood and friendship.
 ?? ?? The films follow Avri Levitan and Roi Shiloah, below.
The films follow Avri Levitan and Roi Shiloah, below.

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