5 March 2014

Curators: Álvaro Rodríguez Fominaya
Dates: March 6–May 18, 2014
Film & Video Gallery (103)
The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao is pleased to present Christian Marclay: The Clock, inaugurating a program dedicated to video and the moving image. This new Film and Video gallery will exhibit works from the Guggenheim museums and other collections, with a special focus on contemporary video creations.
Christian Marclay (b. 1955, San Rafael, California) inaugurates the Film & Video gallery with his iconic work The Clock. In this work, Marclay samples thousands of film excerpts indicating the passage of time. Spanning the range of timepieces, from clock towers to wristwatches and from buzzing alarm clocks to the occasional cuckoo, The Clock draws attention to time as a multifaceted protagonist of cinematic narrative. With virtuosic skill, the artist has excerpted each of these moments from their original contexts and edited them together to form a 24-hour montage, which unfolds in real time. While constructed from a dizzying variety of periods, contexts and film genres whose storylines seem to have shattered in a multitude of narrative shards, The Clock uncannily proceeds at a unified pace as if re-ordered by the latent narrative of time itself. Because it is synchronized with the local time of the exhibition space, the work conflates cinematic and actual time, revealing each passing minute as a repository of alternately suspenseful, tragic or romantic narrative possibilities.
Just send an email to media@guggenheim-bilbao.eus, indicating your request.
Make sure you include the following information: type of video; date, time, and length; what to film (the building, the exhibitions, etc.); interview requests; special information requests.
If your request is approved, you must send a list of all team members before the day of the shooting.
The use of Museum images in videos and other audio-visual productions may be subject to a fee. Our Images Committee reviews every request individually. Since this may take three working days to two full weeks, we suggest you plan your video shooting ahead of time.
Just follow this link and download the images you need. For urgent requests, please contact us by email or phone.
All images must be properly attributed, without being altered, cropped, or overwritten. Reproductions other than the aforementioned require approval in writing from the Museum.
You will find all the relevant information about the exhibitions in the Press Room of our website. Once there, go to PRESS RELEASES > EXHIBITIONS.
Just show your press card at the admission desk for free admission. Please bear in mind that journalists are granted free admission to the Museum in exchange for promotion of the Museum’s exhibitions, activities, and events.
Just send an email to media@guggenheim-bilbao.eus, including all the relevant information about your work as a journalist and the media you work for.