Centre
Horizons VR
June 30 → March 5, 2023
A special selection of award-winning VR works that will draw you into four distinct worlds sharing unique and powerful stories
Digital Innovation has progressed at an astounding rate over the last few years. We have witnessed a transformation in our societies and a revolution in communications. Always at the vanguard and trying to make sense of these changes while engaging with them artistically, Marco Brambilla's work creates a space for us to rethink how we integrate these technologies into our everyday lives.
How do we create meaning while filtering through all the content in a society saturated with information? This artist talk that took place at the PHI Centre is an opportunity to discover and learn more about an artist whose practice captures the ethos and explorations of our institution.
Known for his large-scale recontextualizations of popular and found imagery, Marco Brambilla is constantly pioneering new digital imaging technologies in video installation and art. Marco Brambilla's latest work, Heaven's Gate, was on display at the PHI Centre during the summer of 2022 alongside Horizons VR, an exhibition that explores how XR can be used to engage with contemporary social issues and tell human stories.
This talk was an intimate and revealing conversation between Brambilla and the Chief Creative Officer and Founder of PHI, Phoebe Greenberg. Deep dive into Brambilla’s critical perspectives, his experimental method of creating, and how his work resonates and questions our physical and spiritual life as we transition towards the virtual.
As the mission of the PHI Centre is to engage with social issues at the forefront of technology, contemporary art, and new media, this discussion showcases to participants an engaged artist at the vanguard as we transition towards a more interlaced digital paradigm.
"Digital Innovation has progressed at an astounding rate over the last few years. We have witnessed a transformation in our societies and a revolution in communications. Always at the vanguard and trying to make sense of these changes while engaging with them artistically, Marco Brambilla's work creates a space for us to rethink how we integrate these technologies into our everyday lives.
He's been active since the 1980s, constantly changing and evolving his output. He began his career in Hollywood as a filmmaker before expanding his vision toward contemporary art. His pieces experimented with multi channel video installation, while also creating works for augmented reality, virtual reality and transformed offers into hybrid digital performances.
Now he's exploring more and more the new creative possibilities of artificial intelligence. The themes underpinning his work include surveillance, pop culture, presence, the sense of inertia associated with modern development, the collective imagination, fact versus fiction, real versus unreal and speculation about our future. He approaches his subjects with a critical lens to reveal the hidden tensions at play. His approach always conveys a lyrical and playful tone, exploring how the revolution in communication might affect our lives and how we are influenced by new technological advancements.
He manages, however, to remove the negative aspects and reframe them in a way that pulls out our emotions, stimulates our sense of wonder, and creates a space for reflection. He's a film connoisseur and a big fan of science fiction."
—Phoebe Greenberg
Marco Brambilla is a video artist based in London. Brambilla’s work has been exhibited internationally and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, Guggenheim Museum (New York); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; ARCO Foundation (Madrid); and the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Washington D.C). Notable shows include New Museum, New York; Santa Monica Museum of Art (Retrospective); Seoul Biennial, Korea; Broad Art Museum; and Borusan Contemporary, Istanbul; Kunsthalle Bern, Switzerland.Â
Brambilla has worked with Creative Time and Art Production Fund in New York to present public art installations, and is a recipient of the Tiffany Comfort Foundation and Tiffany Colbert Foundation awards. His work has been featured at the Venice Film Festival and Sundance Film Festivals, as well as Fondation Beyeler in Basel, Switzerland.
Phoebe Greenberg has been a pioneer and cultural visionary in Montreal for over 20 years.
Passionate about contemporary art, Ms. Greenberg first founded the PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art (formerly DHC/ART) in 2007 dedicated to the dissemination of contemporary art both locally and internationally. In recent years, the PHI Foundation has presented the work of some of the world's most renowned contemporary artists: Marc Quinn, Sophie Calle, John Currin, Ryoji Ikeda, Joan Jonas, Jake & Dinos Chapman, Yoko Ono and many others.
In 2012, she established the PHI Centre, a multidisciplinary arts and cultural hub. The institution brings together visual arts, film, music, design, and technology to encourage encounters between disciplines and artists and the public. Through its innovative and inspiring programming, the public is invited to participate in a reflection on art in its new forms. The PHI Centre's programming is unique, unclassifiable, engaging, constantly evolving, and always relevant.
PHI has also been deploying its expertise in presenting cutting-edge works abroad, through initiatives such as the New York's Rockefeller Center, New York's Tribeca Festival, the programming and production of the Virtual Reality Pavilion at the Luxembourg City Film Festival as well as an ephemeral gallery during the 58th Venice Biennale. Additionally, in collaboration with Felix & Paul Studios, PHI launched THE INFINITE, the most ambitious project realized so far in the virtual and interactive reality industries.
Centre
A special selection of award-winning VR works that will draw you into four distinct worlds sharing unique and powerful stories
Centre
Two immersive Renaissance tableaux for our hyper-mediated digital era, these artworks by Marco Brambilla will engulf you in landscapes of pop-culture iconography
Centre
Exploring synthetic frontiers of utopia
Foundation
Gathering over forty recent works, DHC/ART’s inaugural exhibition by conceptual artist Marc Quinn is the largest ever mounted in North America and the artist’s first solo show in Canada
Foundation
Six artists present works that in some way critically re-stage films, media spectacles, popular culture and, in one case, private moments of daily life
Foundation
This poetic and often touching project speaks to us all about our relation to the loved one
Foundation
DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art is pleased to present the North American premiere of Christian Marclay’s Replay, a major exhibition gathering works in video by the internationally acclaimed artist
Foundation
DHC/ART is pleased to present Particles of Reality, the first solo exhibition in Canada of the celebrated Israeli artist Michal Rovner, who divides her time between New York City and a farm in Israel
Foundation
The inaugural DHC Session exhibition, Living Time, brings together selected documentation of renowned Taiwanese-American performance artist Tehching Hsieh’s One Year Performances and the films of young Dutch artist, Guido van der Werve
Foundation
Eija-Liisa Ahtila’s film installations experiment with narrative storytelling, creating extraordinary tales out of ordinary human experiences
Foundation
For more than thirty years, Jenny Holzer’s work has paired text and installation to examine personal and social realities