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original novel set in Paris and Marseilles. Other ele-
ments add to this layered doubling to emphasize
the theme of migration: colonial imagery from a 1936
French film, North African music on the soundtrack.
As the multi-threaded videos suggest, even while
walking the streets the real and the imagined are hope-
lessly confounded by past experiences of other cities,
memories of other times, snippets of literary, histor-
ical, and filmic representations, and our own idiosyn-
cratic needs and wants. For Burgin, the object of our
gaze, much as the object of our love, is never what
we think it is; we never see something purely but al-
ways filtered through a network of prior recollect-
ions and desires. This explains in part the complexity
of Burgin’s video work: the open-ended narratives,
the repetitions and patterns that provide structural
support in lieu of a singular storyline, the tendency to
appropriate other films and other artworks into his
imagery, the shifting authorial voice of its speakers.
As in his writings, Burgin quotes many other artists
and authors in his artwork: Edward Hopper’sOffice
at Night, Edouard Manet’sOlympia, Johann Wolf-
gang von Goethe’sElective Affinities, Freud’s case
histories, E.T.A. Hoffman’s Gradiva, Hitchcock’s
films, the personal letters of Friedrich Nietzsche and
Lou Salome, the correspondences between Freud
and his collaborator Sandor Ferenzi. By putting his
images in a complex stream of other images, culled
together through the peculiarities of his own imagina-
tion, Burgin defeats the single point of view of the
isolated photograph. He allows photography to
work around its own limits, or rather, its material,
analogue basis, to begin to represent the harder-to-
show subjective side of meaning.
In artists’ books and exhibition catalogues such
asBetween(1986),Some Cities(1996), andVictor
Burgin(2001) from his retrospective in Barcelona,
Burgin has generously shared a detailed view of his
motivating preoccupations. While such articulation
should not be taken as narrowly definitive of the
work—the work itself being more robust than what
the artist has to say about it—it gives a rare chance
to understand in depth one artist’s relationship to
his chosen profession. Those who love photography
are fortunate to have such a record at our disposal.


JANEstep

Seealso:Artists Books; Barthes, Roland; Concep-
tual Photography; Interpretation; Photographic
‘‘Truth’’; Postmodernism; Representation; Semiotics


Biography


Born in Sheffield, England, 1941. Attended Royal College of
Art, London, A.R.C.A (1st Class), 1965; Yale Univer-


sity, New Haven, M.F.A., 1967; Professor Emeritus of
History of Consciousness, University of California,
Santa Cruz; Millard Professor of Fine Art, Goldsmiths
College, University of London. US/UK Bicentennial
Arts Exchange Fellowship, Berlin, 1976–1977; Deutscher
Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) Fellowship,
Berlin, 1978–1979. Allocation de recherche ́et de se ́jour,
Ministe`re de la Culture et de la Communication, De ́le ́ga-
tion aux Arts Plastiques (vide ́o et nouvelles technologies
de l’image), Paris, 1991. Living in London and Paris.

Individual Exhibitions
1977 Victor Burgin; Stedelijk van Abbemuseum, Eindho-
ven, Netherlands
1979 Zoo; DAAD Gallery, Berlin, Germany
1986 Office at Night; Renaissance Society at the University
of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
1986 Danaı ̈des/Dames; Massachusetts Institute of Technol-
ogy, Albert and Vera List Visual Arts Center, Cam-
bridge, Massachusetts
1986 Between; Institute of Contemporary Arts, London,
England
1991 Passages; Muse ́e d’art moderne Villeneuve d’Ascq,
Villeneuve d’Ascq, France
1993 Family Romance; Center for Research in Contempor-
ary Art, University of Texas at Arlington, Texas
1997 Szerelmes Levelek/Love Letters;Mu ̈csarnok Museum,
Budapest, Hungary
1998 Case History; Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San
Francisco, California
1999 Lichtung; Weimar 99 Cultural Festival, Weimar, Ger-
many
2000 Nietzsche’s Paris; Architectural Association Gallery,
London, England
2001 Victor Burgin; Fundacio ́ Antoni Ta`pies, Barcelona,
Spain
2002 Listen to Britain; Arnolfini, Bristol, England
2003 Victor Burgin; LisboaPhoto 2003 Festival, Cordoaria
Nacional, Torrea ̃o Nascente, Lisbon, Portugal

Group Exhibitions
1969 When Attitudes Become Form; Institute of Contempor-
ary Art, London, England
1970 Information; Museum of Modern Art, New York,
New York
1971 Guggenheim International Exhibition; Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, New York, New York
1972 Documenta 5; Museum Fredericianum and Neue Gal-
erie, Kassel, Germany
1972 36 Biennale de Venezia; Venice, Italy
1980 The Third Biennale of Sydney; The Art Gallery of New
South Wales, Sydney, Australia
1987 Difference: On Sexuality and Representation; The New
Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, New York;
The Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago,
Chicago, Illinois; Institute of Contemporary Arts, Lon-
don, England
1987 The Turner Prize; Tate Gallery, London, England
1989 On the Art of Fixing a Shadow: One Hundred and Fifty
Years of Photography; Art Institute of Chicago, Chi-
cago, Illinois; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.
C.; and traveling to Los Angeles County Art Museum,
Los Angeles, California

BURGIN, VICTOR
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