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Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Véréna Paravel, and Sensory Ethnography Lab

Lucien Castaing-Taylor (b. 1966) and Véréna Paravel (b. 1971), still from Leviathan, 2012. Single-channel video, color, sound, 87 minutes. Courtesy Cinema Guild

Lucien Castaing-Taylor (b. 1966) and Véréna Paravel (b. 1971), still from Leviathan, 2012. Single-channel video, color, sound, 87 minutes. Courtesy Cinema Guild

On View

Second Floor

Work by Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Véréna Paravel, and Sensory Ethnography Lab is on view in the Museum’s second floor galleries. Screenings will take place in the second floor Film & Video Gallery, March 10–23. View the calendar for more information.

Sensory Ethnography Lab

Artists

Diana Allan
Ilisa Barbash
Libbie Cohn
Aryo Danusiri
Ernst Karel
Toby Kim Lee
Helen Mirra

Xu Ruotao
J.P. Sniadecki
Stephanie Spray
Katherine Tygielski
Pacho Velez
Pawel Wojtasik
Huang Xiang


Castaing-Taylor
Born 1966 in Liverpool, UK

Paravel
Born 1971 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland

Live and work in Boston, MA, and Paris, France

Sensory Ethnography Lab
founded by Castaing-Taylor
in 2006

Produced in Harvard University’s Sensory Ethnography Lab (founded in 2006 to promote innovative combinations of aesthetics and ethnography), Leviathan (2012) was shot off the coast of New Bedford, Massachusetts, the former whaling capital of the world and the mythic port of departure in Herman Melville’s Moby Dick. The film provides an unprecedented view of the world of industrial fishing—one by turns cosmic and corporeal, and which appears to be as much from the perspective of the fish, the boat, and the sea as from that of the fishermen or the filmmakers themselves. Miniature waterproof cameras attached to the fishermen’s bodies or cast into the ocean allow the “eye” of the camera to rove and flow dynamically with the subjects of the film. This shifting point of view marks a radical departure in cinema, a mode of vision that seems unmoored from the human gaze.

Leviathan is the first of four works in Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel’s ongoing project Canst Thou Draw Out Leviathan with a Hook? (2012– ) that explores how humanity is haunted by the sea. Working with digital video, sound, and still imagery, the project offers various portraits of our relationship to the oceanic world and the mythology of the Deep, from the metaphysical to the viscerally physical.

Screenings

In collaboration with the Film Society of Lincoln Center, the Whitney presents a series of screenings featuring the work of Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Véréna Paravel, and Sensory Ethnography Lab. Read descriptions of the films and sound works below.

For screening times, please visit the calendar:

March 12–16
March 19–23
March 26–30

About the films and Sound Works