logo
A Film Alchemist Lights Up MoMA With Her Love of Cinema

A Film Alchemist Lights Up MoMA With Her Love of Cinema

New York Times26-04-2025

Rosa Barba makes artworks with film. But you wouldn't call them movies.
Sometimes she shoots them with 35-millimeter cameras and beams them onto screens. Other times, she turns celluloid and projectors into whirring sculptures, or choreographs musical performances with flickering light.
'Film is kind of the key word,' Barba, 52, said recently. 'But, in the end, maybe you can't say they are films anymore: It's a film about film, or it's about the idea of a film.'
Film might be her medium, material or subject, but there are many other ideas in Barba's works, too — about ecology, landscape, science and the nature of knowledge. All her signature obsessions come together at the Museum of Modern Art in New York from May 3, where an installation of her work, called 'The Ocean of One's Pause,' runs through July 6 in the museum's Kravis Studio, a space devoted to experimentation.
The presentation brings together 12 works from the last 16 years, with performances on six dates throughout the run, that add up to a statement on her expanded understanding of cinema
'Cinema, for me, is the moment when you start a kind of embarkation,' Barba said in an interview at her Berlin studio. It wasn't just light, sound, or movement, she said; it was 'a chemical reaction' when those elements come together and trigger or unveil something for the viewer — Holland Cotter of The New York Times once described this as an ability 'to knock the pins out from under tyrant logic and clear a space where difference can thrive.'
Barba, who was born in Sicily but grew up mostly in Germany, has been working with film since the beginning of her career — and liberating it from its original use. As a teenager interested in photography, she was traveling yearly by train to visit relatives in the south. 'I was basically just looking out of the windows for two days and also taking pictures,' she said.
The shifting landscape, and the difference between the teeming chaos of Sicily and her organized German hometown left an indelible mark on her work, in which precisely controlled machines create exuberant effects. Her studio suggested a similar push and pull, with its clutter of sculptures in progress and a neat archive of film reels against one wall.
'Looking at those contrasts, they were so formative for my work,' she said of her childhood trips. 'There was a lot of material that came from going back and forth.'
When she was getting started, in the '90s, most movies and art films were shot on celluloid. As digital technology began taking over in the early 2000s, Barba stuck with analog. She still sometimes shoots on a 16-millimeter camera she has owned since her early 20s, and her sculptures often repurpose the mechanical devices of film-era cinema.
A work in the MoMA show, for instance, called 'Composition in Field,' is a light box overlaid with a lattice of text-printed celluloid strips, cracking as they turn on motorized reels. Another sculptural installation, 'Spacelength Thought,' has a typewriter tapping out a poem onto a length of blank film, so that the letters shine onto a wall when the strip runs through a projector.
'It's not so much about being obsessed with equipment, or nostalgic for film,' Barba said. 'It's just that I think I can't really be so playful with the new technologies. There are just a lot of things that you can set free — in your mind or in the space — when you play around with these objects and machines.'
'I don't think I'm super nerdy about it,' she said, laughing. 'Though maybe that's what it feels like.'
When Barba embarks on a major project, the first step is a long period of research. For her installation 'Aggregate State of Matters' — which is downstairs in MoMA's permanent collection — she spent weeks living and traveling with Indigenous Quechua people in Peru across a rugged landscape that was changing as a nearby glacier melted.
The group welcomed her, Barba said, and though she does not speak the Quechua language, she was able to communicate through a member who spoke Spanish. (Barba spoke to her in Italian, and somehow they muddled through.) 'There was also a lot of body language and just going with the flow,' she said.
This part of the process was, in some ways, similar to the method of a documentary filmmaker, Barba said, though it was also like a scientist's: 'You have absolutely no clue if anything useful comes out of it.'
The result of her experiment in Peru, however, is nothing like a documentary.
Back in her studio, Barba edited the material from the field trip into a 21-minute film that is beamed from a customized projection system. There are no talking heads, just a succession of fleeting landscape images, overlaid with chattering voices and text, set to a thrumming soundtrack.
As the stories of the Quechua people float layered over the visuals, the film draws something ineffable and sublime from the landscape in a way that would be out of scope for straight reportage. As an artist, Barba said, she can bring 'different elements into play.'
That alchemy is also a feature of her 26-minute film 'Charge,' which MoMA commissioned with the Vega Foundation, a Toronto-based nonprofit, as a focal point for 'The Ocean of One's Pause.'
The piece began with immersive research as Barba and her camera roamed a space observatory in Nançay, central France, where scientists use radio waves to build a picture of the universe. She had many long conversations with Philippe Zarka, the observatory's deputy director, to spark her work.
'She is not a scientist, of course,' Zarka said, but as an artist, she had a different job: 'to transform this interest into something that can generate emotions.'
'Charge' has a moody, mysterious tone, and there is a melancholy note when Barba's camera lingers on the observatory's weathered 1960s satellite dishes. There is awe, too, when she zooms out wide on one of the radio telescope's central contraptions, which chugs along a track in front of a huge white surface that looks like a movie theater screen.
Barba sent a recording of that machine's sound to the jazz percussionist Chad Taylor, a frequent collaborator, and asked him to drum along with it for the soundtrack. The audio also features droning sounds, played by the artist herself on cello.
For the performances in 'The Ocean of One's Pause,' Barba and Taylor will reunite with their instruments in the Kravis Studio, joined by the singer Alicia Hall Moran. Using software that Barba developed, the performers' sounds will activate projectors and set sculptures in the gallery in motion, filling the room with light and movement.
This, in turn, creates a spirited interplay between the musicians and the visuals, Taylor explained by phone from his home in Chicago. 'The frequency triggers a projector, and that beams light,' he said. 'I'm also seeing that light, and that's going to determine what I'm playing next. So in a way, it's an improvisation with this art installation.'
Stuart Comer, the MoMA curator overseeing the show, said the result would be 'thrilling for visitors, because you see the entire thing being activated and animated in this extremely dynamic way.'
'It's not just an image that carries a recording and sound together,' Comer said. 'It's all in dialogue, and it's all happening simultaneously.'
Several art forms have been intersecting in Barba's life since her childhood near Stuttgart, in southern Germany, where she took classes in dance, flute and guitar before settling on cello. At 14, she got interested in photography and started taking portraits and landscape shots, which she developed in a school dark room or at home in the bathroom.
'I really loved this kind of alchemy,' she recalled, 'making the image come out, and also manipulating it.'
She was also watching a lot of movies back then, and was drawn to the work of Italian auteurs like Pier Paolo Pasolini and Federico Fellini, who thought of his own films like paintings. When she received a Super 8 camera as a gift, she began to experiment with making her own moving images.
She studied at the forward-thinking Academy of Media Arts in Cologne, Germany — 'one of the first schools where you could basically study film and art in the same space,' Barba said — and her teachers there included the experimental filmmaker Harun Farocki and the Austrian performance artist Valie Export.
Postgraduate studies then took her to the prestigious Rijksakademie in Amsterdam and to the Malmö Art Academy in Sweden, which awarded her a Ph.D. for a dissertation, 'On the Anarchic Organization of Cinematic Spaces,' which ranges across astronomy, art history, color theory and the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze.
These days, she spends a lot of time on the move. Though she has lived in Berlin since 2009, Barba estimated that she was traveling for about six months each year: researching projects, filming, or installing shows. Berlin was 'a good place to think and to work,' she said, 'but on the other hand, I guess I get most of the mental work done being on the road.'
When Barba is away, she always makes time for the cinema. In New York, she loves going to Light Industry, the experimental film theater in Brooklyn, she said, and on a recent visit to the city, she caught 'The Brutalist' on a 35-millimeter print at the Roxy in downtown Manhattan. The idea of the movie's 15-minute intermission had excited her conceptually, she said.
She carried a whole cosmos of theory with her into the theater. 'It is not always completely in the forefront, but it does mean I watch a film differently,' Barba said. 'But then, yes, also,' she added, 'sometimes I am just chilling out.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brooklyn Beckham 'tells his family he wants no contact' as feud intensifies
Brooklyn Beckham 'tells his family he wants no contact' as feud intensifies

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Brooklyn Beckham 'tells his family he wants no contact' as feud intensifies

Brooklyn Beckham's relationship with his family is said to have become so strained that he now reportedly "wants no contact" with them. The aspiring chef, 26, and his wife Nicola Peltz, 30, have long been at the centre of a highly publicised feud with David and Victoria Beckham. That rift now appears to extend to his siblings Romeo, Cruz, and Harper — with whom he was once very close. David Beckham, 50, is expected to be knighted by King Charles this Friday. While a source claims Brooklyn is "thrilled" for his father, saying the honour has been a long time coming, they allege he only learned of the news via media reports — not directly from his family. A source close to the Beckhams told Page Six: 'Brooklyn told his family he wants no contact and he's not responding to those that try to connect.' However, a source representing Brooklyn denied this narrative, saying: 'Everyone's focus should be David Beckham's great honour.' The Standard has contacted representatives for David, Victoria and Brooklyn Beckham for comment. Brooklyn and Peltz married in April 2022, and tensions between Peltz and Victoria have reportedly simmered ever since. The pair were notably absent from David's 50th birthday celebrations last month. They fuelled speculation after appearing together on the cover of the German edition of Glamour magazine last week. In the shoot, Brooklyn posed shirtless, and eagle-eyed fans noticed that he had altered a tattoo once dedicated to his mother. The original ink, reading "mama's boy" over his heart, now appears to be covered by a large floral design, believed to represent Peltz's wedding bouquet. Brooklyn is said to have around 100 tattoos — with approximately 70 of them dedicated to Nicola and her family. Victoria Beckham is reportedly experiencing sleepless nights and has described the situation as her "worst nightmare". An insider told the Daily Mail: 'Victoria dislikes Nicola intensely and it's been war behind the scenes pretty much ever since the wedding. It's always been a tug of war about Brooklyn, and Victoria has not wanted to let go.' They added: 'Victoria feels he has been absorbed into the Peltzes and that his life is all about that family… Even when Nicola and Brooklyn went out to Paris for Victoria's fashion show, they stayed with her family because her mother likes to go to the couture shows.'

‘Harry Potter' Star, 66, Turns Heads in Optical Illusion Suit
‘Harry Potter' Star, 66, Turns Heads in Optical Illusion Suit

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Harry Potter' Star, 66, Turns Heads in Optical Illusion Suit

'Harry Potter' Star, 66, Turns Heads in Optical Illusion Suit originally appeared on Parade. Fiona Shaw turned heads at the European premiere of Echo Valley at BFI Southbank in London. The Harry Potter actress, 66, arrived on the red carpet on Tuesday, June 10, wearing a navy three-piece suit with a dizzying pattern. Shaw completed the look with a pair of platform sandals. Echo Valley is an Apple TV+ psychological thriller starring Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney. The film, written by Brad Ingelsby and directed by Michael Pearce features a supporting cast that includes Shaw, alongside Domhnall Gleeson and Kyle MacLachlan. Echo Valley debuted in select North American theaters on June 6, and will be available for streaming on Apple TV+ starting on June 13. While many may recognize Shaw from playing the stern Aunt Petunia Dursley in the Harry Potter film series, her career spans decades. Some of her other notable roles include Medea and Richard II on stage, Marnie Stonebrook in True Blood, Carolyn Martens in Killing Eve, and Grace Williams in Bad a 1989 interview with The New York Times, Shaw, who was 31 years old at the time, admitted she was fearful about the future of her career. 'All I know is that I awake every morning thinking the hourglass is running out,' she said. 'It's not that I feel old, but that I think there is something I must say, something I must do before I die.' Looking back on that interview in a 2024 conversation with Vanity Fair, Shaw said, 'Aren't you glad you're not meeting that woman now? Maybe at that time, the careers for men were so much better that I was so pleased to have one ... so I suspect the intensity came from that. That and: 'When you're being interviewed, you want to say very important things. I've stopped trying to do that.'" 'Harry Potter' Star, 66, Turns Heads in Optical Illusion Suit first appeared on Parade on Jun 10, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.

Justin Baldoni continuing legal fight against Blake Lively after dismissal
Justin Baldoni continuing legal fight against Blake Lively after dismissal

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Justin Baldoni continuing legal fight against Blake Lively after dismissal

(NewsNation) — Justin Baldoni's team says it isn't finished after a judge dismissed its case against Blake Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds. In a statement, Baldoni's attorney, Bryan Freedman, said that Lively and her team's 'predictable declaration of victory is false.' Freedman also said the court is allowing Baldoni and his team to amend four of the seven claims it made against his former 'It Ends With Us' co-star. Judge Lewis J. Liman also dropped Baldoni's $250 million lawsuit against The New York Times. The deadline for Baldoni's team to make those amendments is June 23. What is Simone Biles' net worth? Baldoni's attorney's full statement reads: 'Ms. Liveley and her team's predictable declaration of victory is false, so let us be clear about the latest ruling. While the Court dismissed the defamation related claims, the Court has invited us to amend four out of the seven claims against Ms. Lively, which will showcase additional evidence and refined allegations.' 'This case is about false accusations of sexual harassment and retaliation and a nonexistent smear campaign, which Ms. Lively's team conveniently describes as 'untraceable' because they cannot prove what never happened. Most importantly, Ms. Lively's own claims are no truer today than they were yesterday, and with the facts on our side, we march forward with the same confidence that we had when Ms. Lively and her cohorts initiated this battle and look forward to her forthcoming deposition, which I will be taking.' 'We are grateful for the organic show of support from the public and for the dedication of the internet sleuth community who continue to cover the case with discernment and integrity.' After the judge dismissed Baldoni's suits, Lively's legal team said it was 'a total victory and a complete vindication.' Lively's lawyers, Mike Gottlieb and Esra Hudson, told Us Weekly: 'As we have said from day one, this '$400 million' lawsuit was a sham, and the Court saw right through it. We look forward to the next round, which is seeking attorneys' fees, treble damages and punitive damages against Baldoni, Sarowitz, Nathan and the other Wayfarer Parties who perpetrated this abusive litigation.' Lively also made a statement, saying that she would continue to defend women's rights. In an Instagram story, she said, 'Like so many others, I've felt the pain of a retaliatory lawsuit, including the manufactured shame that tries to break us.' She also said the suit against her 'was defeated,' and there are some 'incredible organizations' that can help women in a situation similar to hers. 'With love and gratitude for the many who stood by me, many of you I know. Many of you I don't. But I will never stop appreciating or advocating for you,' she ended the post. Lively originally brought a lawsuit against Baldoni for alleged sexual harassment. One insider told NewsNation's Paula Froelich in February that Lively and Reynolds 'have no idea what's coming down the pike.' Lively claimed in her lawsuit that sales of her haircare brand, Blake Brown, plummeted by nearly 78% after what she calls a 'social manipulation campaign.' Billie Eilish's brother Finneas says he was tear-gassed during LA ICE protest A person close to Target, which sells Lively's haircare brand, told Puck that the brand is set to do 'less than $15 million' in sales in 2025. The source claimed that Blake Brown was previously a $100 million brand. Another source told Froelich that no one has wanted to work with Lively since the lawsuits. A trial for Lively's suit against Baldoni has been scheduled for March 2026. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store