Arbeiter Verlassen ihren Arbeitsplatz (Workers Leaving their Workplace)

Harun Farocki

Nový Jicín, Czech Republic, 1944 - Berlin, Germany, 2014

Antje Ehmann

Gelsenkirchen, Germany, 1968
Collaborators
Alice Creischer - Gerolstein, Germany, 1960 (Pictograms to present each channel)
Andreas Siekmann - Hamm, Germany, 1961 (Pictograms to present each channel)
  • Date: 
    2011-2014
  • Edition/serial number: 
    Unlimited
  • Media description: 
    Sixteen video channels (black and white and colour, sound, 2 min. each video)0. Auguste Lumière, Louis Lumière: La sortie de l’usine Lumière à Lyon, 18951. Ana Rebordão: Workers Leaving the Chewing Cum Factory, Lisbon 20112. Prerna Bishop, Rusha Dhayarkar: Workers Leaving the Textile Factory, Bangalore 20123. Mélanie Badoud, Nallini Menamka, Zaq Chojecki: Workers Leaving the ILO, Geneva 20124. Orit Ishay: Just another Day, Tel Aviv 20125. Aline Bonvin: Workers Leaving the Factory for the Blind, Berlin 20126. Bahaa Talis: Workers Leaving their Workplace while Ignoring a Bicycle Man, Cairo 20127. Beny Wagner: Workers Leaving the Textile Factory, Rio de Janeiro 20128. Lucas Peñafort: Workers Leaving their Workplace, Buenos Aires 20129. Wojciech Domachowski: Workers Leaving the Mine, Lódz 201310. Tatiana Efrussi: Workers Leaving the Brewery, Moscow 201311. Pham Tra My: Workers Leaving their Workplace, Boston 201312. Olga Pikalova: Workers Leaving their Workplace, Boston 201313. Christian Manzutto: Workers Leaving the Juice Factory, Mexico City 201414. The Tourists: Workers Leaving the Intime Mall, Hangzhou 201415. Nhlanhla Mngadi: Workers Leaving the Factory, Johannesburg 2014
  • Category: 
    Video, Installation
  • Entry date: 
    2017
  • Register number: 
    AD07618
  • Donation of Antje Ehmann (Harun Farocki GbR), Berlin, 2017

The piece Workers Leaving their Workplace is part of Ehmann’s and Farocki’s project as well as part of the series of exhibitions resulting from it. „To use video as if it is film – we draw on the method of the earliest films made at the end of the 19th century (such as the Lumière brother’s Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory, Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat) in order to regain something of their decisiveness. These early films made in a single continuos shot seemed to demonstrate that every detail of the world in motion is worth considering and capturing. They were forced by the immobile camera to have a fixed point of view, whereas the films today often tend toward indecisive cascades of shots. The single-shot film, in contrast, combines predetermination and openness, concept and contingency.“ (Antje Ehmann, Harun Farocki)

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