Nova Spectrum Videoart
JCE European Biennial _ 2010
Nova Spectrum is a video art piece, the first directed by Bignotti. Officially, the video was conceived in 2004 but completed in 2010. At the time, Bignotti did not have access to a high-resolution camera, and as technology was beginning its frantic race toward HD, the video was initially designed on paper through preparatory storyboard studies, the design and creation of props, location scouting for filming, the creation of composite images, and musical composition.
The video employs a language composed of a mix of audiovisual media, influenced by the contrast between aesthetics and anti-aesthetics. Like all subsequent works of video art by Bignotti, Nova Spectrum inaugurates the fast-paced and engaging format typical of music videos.
The theme is that of social control and the cult of the image, topics that will also appear in later works, inaugurating a path of social critique at a time when social networks began to emerge—a phenomenon that would soon influence contemporary culture. Today, society places a particular value on the aesthetic image; “beauty” is seen as a visual stereotype to be utilized and exploited for commercial or professional purposes. The representation of “vulgar beauty” can be interpreted as “power,” but at the same time, it can critique a global society influenced by the imagery of advertising and cinema, which contributed to the rise of social networks and reality shows, creating a stage available to anyone. It’s a world within a world, increasingly resembling the state of Big Brother predicted by George Orwell, exploiting our need to appear and seizing our identities.
This type of conflicting dialogue arises from the need to express the subconscious, describing a surreal world fueled by reality and by how that same reality is perceived—by the author who manipulates it and by the spectator who experiences it from the outside. The theme conveys the artist’s concern about the phenomenon of the internet and the nascent social networks, highlighting a possible fear that future society will place excessive importance on images, creating contrasts between real life and virtual life, emphasizing the fear of a loss of identity and privacy.
The video is significantly influenced by the aesthetics of artists such as Chris Cunningham for the visual aspects and Aphex Twin for the musical elements—artists who have shaped Bignotti’s aesthetic since his youth in the early 1990s. He shares with them themes of the post-human condition as well as aesthetic and media language.
A short film by Cesare Bignotti, work commissioned by JCE – European Biennial 2011. Art Curator: Andrea Ponsini. Nova Spectrum was chosen as the first winner of the 2011/2013 JCE Grand Prize. It includes participation in a three-month residency in Montrouge and a group exhibition at the BeLa Editions Gallery in Brussels—the European Capital.
Directed and edited by Cesare Bignotti
Music by Useless Idea
All Props by Cesare Bignotti
Video Shoot by: Cesare Bignotti — Alessandro Arcidiacono
Actors: Actress — Bianca Tabaton
Polaroid Man — Matteo Marsano, Filippo Castelli, Francesco Cardarelli, Filippo Balestra
Location Manager — Cesare Bignotti, Emilio Pozzolini
Produced by Cesare Bignotti © EVES 2010.