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The matte paintings used to produce this illusion are presented along with the video to contrast the seemingly effortless realism of the moving pictures against the laborious process necessary to create them. The paintings work as a counterpoint to the video, negating the dreamlike state of this immersive medium and bringing the viewer’s attention back to the physical.
The title of the work comes from the Italian word used for a form of painting popularized in the 18th century in which contemporary scenes and characters were combined with ancient buildings or exotic locales in highly detailed renderings. Practitioners of this form included the painters Canaletto and Bellotto, whose capriccios stand in contrast to the detailed depictions of urban life for which they are better known. As present-day versions of the capriccio, movies embody the same desire to make the imaginary seem palpable and real, unencumbered by the logic of time and distance.
The post-modern condition, representing a turn away from modernism’s emphasis on reduction and synthesis and moving toward hybridism and juxtaposition, finds expression in the fabric of the city, where incongruity is commonplace and the aesthetic of the collage is a familiar one. A new notion of authenticity is at play here, one where architecture mines the past and the exotic for their aesthetic potential and film, mass media, and personal imagery refocus our grasp on the lived experience and physical surroundings, ultimately reshaping our sense of place.
PM
Capriccio
Video, Matte Paintings, drawings


