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Now

Detailed information about NOW including its conception, filming process and artistic significance.

Explore the groundbreaking work of Chantal Akerman, a pioneering Belgian filmmaker known for feminist & avant-garde cinema like 'Jeanne Dielman.' Discover her influential films and legacy.

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Total Price

$ 263

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Now

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Quick Facts

  • Movement: Experimental Film
  • Artist: Chantal Akerman
  • Influences:
    • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Michael Snow
  • Location: M+, Hong Kong
  • Notable elements or techniques: Multiple projections; Sound design; Desert landscapes
  • Medium: Seven-channel HD digital video installation
  • Year: 2015

Art Quiz

There is only one correct answer for each question.

Question 1:
What is the primary artistic style of Chantal Akerman’s installation ‘Now’?
Question 2:
The video installation utilizes multiple projections to create what kind of sensory experience for the viewer?
Question 3:
Where were the images captured for ‘Now’?
Question 4:
What is a key thematic element explored by Akerman in her film 'Je, tu, il, elle'?
Question 5:
What influences did Jean-Luc Godard and Michael Snow have on Chantal Akerman’s artistic approach?

Artwork Description

Chantal AkermanBorn in Brussels, Belgium, in 1950.She lives and works in Paris, France.With her film D’Est (1995), probing life in Eastern Europe after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Belgian filmmaker and artist Chantal Akerman transitioned into the field of visual arts by transposing into the gallery space her experiments on time, the image, and the spectator’s perspective. In 2002, she pursued this encounter between image and fragmented narrative with the installation From the Other Side, a documentary work about the journey of Mexican migrants across the US border. After exploring topics of territory and identity through these two projects, for her second participation at the Biennale di Venezia since 2001, Akerman presents NOW, a new video installation she describes as “on the edge of fiction.” Through multiple projections, this work mixes images of desert and seaside with a layered soundtrack that becomes a distant sound of fury. NASA aerial shots are projected on the ground in a space of poetry, adventure, and myth, a sea bordered by the desert on one side and urban areas on the other. The setting is the stage of today’s geopolitical world, one she describes as “a tragic space.” With this installation, the visitor is thrust into a multisensory experience that maximizes the contrast between the fullness of the images and the omnipresence of the soundtrack. In the middle of the configuration, swallowed by a wave, the curves of a sand dune and the horizon line are an integral part of a landscape which is somewhere between abstraction and figuration, between the near and the distant. Using fiction, experimental film, and documentary, Chantal Ackerman has been committed to her particular approach to cinema and art, one that is inspired by the French–Swiss filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard and the Canadian artist Michael Snow. Navigating freely between these disciplines, she has made more than forty films, documentaries, and video essays since 1968.

Artist Biography

The Architecture of the Mundane: The Cinematic Vision of Chantal Akerman

To watch a film by Chantal Akerman is to enter a space where time itself becomes a tangible, heavy presence. Born in Brussels in 1950 to a Polish-Jewish family, Akerman’s early life was shaped by the quiet, profound shadows of history. Her father, Jacques, had lived in hiding during the Second World War, and her mother, Natalia, was a survivor of Auschwitz. This ancestral weight—a legacy of absence and survival—did not manifest in her work through overt historical drama, but rather through a meticulous, observant gaze that found the profound within the repetitive and the overlooked. Akerman did not merely direct films; she constructed temporal landscapes where the simple act of peeling a potato or cleaning a room could carry the weight of existential solitude.

Her artistic journey was ignited by the radical energy of the French New Wave, specifically the works of Jean-Luc Godard. Yet, while Godard sought to disrupt narrative through stylistic flair, Akerman sought to dismantle it through duration. Influenced by the experimental rigor of Michael Snow, she embraced a technique that favored the long take and the static camera, forcing the viewer to inhabit the same rhythmic pulse as her characters. This approach transformed the screen into a site of meditation, where the boundaries between the domestic sphere and the psychological interior began to dissolve.

A Revolution in the Domestic Sphere

The zenith of Akerman’s contribution to the moving image arrived with the 1975 masterpiece, Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles. In this monumental work, she achieved what many critics now consider a feminist breakthrough in cinematic language. By documenting the rhythmic, almost ritualistic daily chores of a widowed mother with unrelenting precision, Akerman elevated domestic labor to the level of high drama. The film’s structure—a slow accumulation of minute actions that eventually leads to an inevitable rupture—challenged the traditional pacing of cinema and centered the female experience in a way that was both radical and deeply intimate.

Her filmography continued to explore these intersections of identity, memory, and displacement. Through works such as News from Home, she utilized the layering of voiceover and urban imagery to bridge the distance between her life in New York and her roots in Belgium, creating a poetic dialogue between presence and absence. Her ability to weave together themes of sexuality, loneliness, and the immigrant experience allowed her to transcend the label of "experimental filmmaker" and become a vital voice in the global contemporary art canon.

Legacy and the Eternal Gaze

Beyond the silver screen, Akerman’s influence extended into the realms of installation art and writing, proving that her "observant, steady gaze" was not limited by the frame of a movie theater. Her work has been celebrated in the world's most prestigious institutions, from the Centre Pompidou to MoMA, where retrospectives continue to reveal new layers of her complex oeuvre. She taught audiences how to look—not just at what is happening, but at the space between actions, and the profound significance of the moments we often choose to ignore.

The historical significance of Chantal Akerman lies in her refusal to look away. Her achievements can be summarized through several defining pillars of her career:

  • Innovation of Duration: The use of long, uninterrupted takes to create a visceral sense of lived time.
  • Feminist Re-centering: Redefining the cinematic gaze by focusing on domesticity, female autonomy, and the politics of the everyday.
  • Structural Radicalism: Breaking away from conventional storytelling to explore the textures of memory, sound, and space.
  • Cultural Resonance: Integrating personal Jewish heritage and the immigrant experience into a universal language of solitude and survival.

Though she passed away in Paris in 2015, Akerman’s cinematic architecture remains standing, inviting every new generation to find beauty and terror in the quietest corners of existence.

chantal anne akerman

chantal anne akerman

1950 - 2015 , Belgium

Quick Facts

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Avant-garde cinema
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist: ['Feminist cinema']
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist: ['Jean Luc Godard']
  • Date Of Birth: June 6, 1950
  • Date Of Death: October 5, 2015
  • Full Name: Chantal Anne Akerman
  • Nationality: Belgian
  • Notable Artworks:
    • Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
    • News from Home
    • I, You, He, She
  • Place Of Birth: Brussels, Belgium
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