Uriel Orlow is a visual artist working in London and Zurich.
Orlow’s practice is research-based, process-oriented and multi-disciplinary including film, photography, drawing and sound. He is known for single screen film works, lecture performances and modular, multi-media installations that focus on specific locations and micro-histories and bring different image-regimes and narrative modes into correspondence. His work is concerned with spatial manifestations of memory, blind spots of representation and forms of haunting.
Orlow has exhibited in museums, galleries, film festivals and biennials internationally including the 54th Venice Biennale, Manifesta 9, Mercosul Biennale, Tate Britain and Whitechapel Gallery London, Palais de Tokyo Paris, CIC Cairo and Jewish Museum New York. Last year he had a major solo show at Castello di Rivoli in Turin and in autumn 2016 he presents a new body of work at The Showroom, London. Uriel is also a visiting professor at the Royal College of Art in London, an associate professor at Westminster University London and a visiting artist at the University of the Arts Zurich.
http://www.urielorlow.net/
Kollaborateur_in in:
24.04.2017
2017 / 201704
Talk by Melanie Boehi: Multispecies histories of South African colonial formations
followed by a discussion between her and Uriel Orlow
Melanie Boehi, Uriel Orlow
31.03.2017 -
05.05.2017
2017 / 201704 / 201705 / Ausstellung
Uriel Orlow personal exhibition
Geraniums Are Never Red
Uriel Orlow
12.12.2015
2015 / 201512 / Artist Talk / Präsentation
The finest theories refuse to make sense;
It is said somewhere a lake has collapsed
Bénédicte Le Pimpec, Uriel Orlow, Riikka Tauriainen, Isaline Vuille
2017 / 201704
Talk by Melanie Boehi: Multispecies histories of South African colonial formations
followed by a discussion between her and Uriel Orlow
Melanie Boehi, Uriel Orlow
31.03.2017 -
05.05.2017
2017 / 201704 / 201705 / Ausstellung
Uriel Orlow personal exhibition
Geraniums Are Never Red
Uriel Orlow
12.12.2015
2015 / 201512 / Artist Talk / Präsentation
The finest theories refuse to make sense;
It is said somewhere a lake has collapsed
Bénédicte Le Pimpec, Uriel Orlow, Riikka Tauriainen, Isaline Vuille