Nov. 20, 2004 - Feb. 12, 2005
Untitled, 2004, photography and video installation
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Yaron Leshem explores the ways in which the camera is used by the army and the media, as well as the “new” role it plays in shaping the war: a camera that simulates and re-structures the enemy as a digital, communicative image, ready for broadcasting; a seeing yet unseen camera launched to the Third World to locate the enemy, eventually destroying it as part of a suicidal quest. The simulation renders the killing a “clean,” accurate, targeted act.
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The same camera transmits back to the viewer’s living room its progress towards the target, providing him/her with a remote virtual experience of participation in a war with no sacrifice on his/her part; a warless war.
The photographic simulation constitutes the necessary physical and mental distance essential for conducting a war, while allowing direct connection with the viewer, in real time, for the purpose of broadcasting the spectacular display of power.
Placed within a light box, the photographic work deals with simulation, a simulation that flattens and empties a village of its everyday life in order to transform it into a training facility. All the structures and objects in the village undergo a shift from a life-oriented to a death-oriented function.
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