Life

Caught on canvas: big screen artists

Young video artists Aura Satz and Yael Bartana.

August 7, 2008 23:00

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

4 min read

You are almost as likely to find a TV screen in an art gallery as a framed painting these days. Young video-artists Aura Satz and Yael Bartana are at the forefront of this new trend.


Film and video pieces are finding a huge following in the art world, with almost every gallery boasting its own big screen. Tate Modern in London has gone one further. It is currently featuring H BOX (so-called because it has been sponsored by the French luxury brand Hermès), a mobile screening room made of collapsible modules that can be transported between museums and galleries. One of the first of eight artists to be commissioned for H BOX is leading Israeli Yael Bartana.

Meanwhile, a couple of miles to the west in Knightsbridge David Gryn, (son of the late Rabbi Hugo Gryn) has expanded his successful Artprojx brand to a fixed gallery space. Up to now, Artprojx has led a nomadic existence, showing artists' films at various cinemas and museums. Gryn is currently highlighting a new film, Automamusic, by 33-year-old Jewish artist Aura Satz.

So just who are Satz and Bartana, the up-and-coming stars of the new video art scene?

Aura Satz

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173pr983mgrdtlj2q8u/Aura_0.jpg%3Ff%3Ddefault%26%24p%24f%3D995ebdc?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6Background: Satz was born in 1974 in Barcelona. She says: "My father is Argentinian, my mother Australian. My parents met in Jerusalem, but I was born in Spain. My mum travelled a lot with me when I was young and I spent time in India, Indonesia, Australia, Israel and Spain. I did my undergraduate studies in Bologna and came to London in 1998."

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