The Situation Envisaged II (Air Gallery London 1979)

‘Eight domestic TV receivers are placed side by side at eye level on a wall-to-wall support in a quarter-circle across the corner of a room. Each is facing into the enclosed space and away from the viewer, and each is tuned to a different TV channel from the next. The viewer hears a cacophony of sound, and sees only an ever-changing projected glow beyond and above the line of TV sets. On approaching the installation, …

Drift

‘Video Screenings’ (with Wendy Brown) programme, ICA, 1981. pdf here

‘Brian Hoey’ Film and Video Artists on tour card, 1985/86. pdf here

‘Brian Hoey’ Film and Video Artists on tour card, February 1980. pdf here

Funding Application for £2000 video bursary – Oct. 1979. pdf here

The Situation Envisaged (Video Art78)

‘Eight domestic TV receivers are placed side by side at eye level on a wall-to-wall support in a quarter-circle across the corner of a room. Each is facing into the enclosed space and away from the viewer, and each is tuned to a different TV channel from the next. The viewer hears a cacophony of sound, and sees only an ever-changing projected glow beyond and above the line of TV sets. On approaching the installation, …

Everything Must Go / Dichotomy

Exhibition Flyer for “Everything Must Go”, 2003. pdf here.

Exhibition Brochure for “Dichotomy”, part of the touring exhibition “Everything Must Go”, 2003.pdf here.

Exhibition Flyer for “Dichotomy”.pdf here.

“The Bonington Gallery” brochure, 2003.pdf here.

Description of Sinden’s work ‘Everything Must Go’ indicating date and site of the exhibition; entitled ‘Reception for the artist’.pdf here.

Display-Displaced (1981)

‘The installation was installed in a large display window at the Ikon. The colour receivers rested on a plinth tilted at approx 45 degrees. A pre-recorded tape replayed images of a woman’s legs, walking in the frame from left anmd then to the right continuously. The camera is also tilted at 45 degrees and tracks the movement of the woman, holding her legs in mid-frame and thus dissecting the screens. Every 2 minutes the colour changes as the legs’ …

You make me shout

You make me shout

Leaflet advertising a weekend of video events at Serpentine Gallery, London. Includes a screening of Steve Littman’s ‘You make me shout’.pdf here

Programme with information on works exhibited at ‘Cinematic Exploration – Expanding Screens 1960 – 1975’, January 25th – 30th 2004, Lumiere Cinema, including the work ‘You make me shout’.pdf here

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