They shoot horses

they shoot horses (still)
2004
synchronised two-channel video projection
courtesy of the artist and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York

PHIL COLLINS United Kingdom
Auckland Art Gallery - NEW Gallery

It all started I suppose with my writing to Jack Persekian. Jack is the director of the al-Ma´mal Foundation in Jerusalem. But still, I didn't know whether he'd be interested in my idea - to organise, execute and film a disco dance marathon in Ramallah, which would afterwards be exhibited as a real-time video artwork. In fact, I thought he'd hate it. Something so dumb and frivolous which spoke precisely about exhaustion, collapse and heroism but in a palette of Pop Idol colours. When we think about Palestine it never seems to be in reference to modernity, or culture; in fact it's relentlessly positioned as uncivilised. The disco dance marathon would instead be a way of looking at beauty under duress, entertainment in a place of routine indignities.

Ten days later and I'm standing in a community centre over the road from the local mosque with Iman Hammouri, the director of the Popular Art Centre, holding auditions where I play Beyoncé and Joy Division over and over. And the dancers - they're heart-stoppingly beautiful. They take your breath away - shy and awkward but when they rock, they really flip out. I choose nine and I film two groups over successive days dancing to the same soundtrack, from northern soul to acid house, from Love Hangover to Xanadu, from 10am to 6pm without breaks.

Or so I thought. I take the role of cheerleader, DJ, cameraman, bouncer. I'm like a one-man band but with more to do. Have you ever tried to dance for eight hours? It's a killer. There's a kind of madness or cabin fever which slowly descends upon a group. It's insane. In the finished film they do aerobics to hi-NRG hits, they do folk dancing to Gina X. Someone starts dry-retching at Aretha Franklin. They do belly dancing to The Smiths. Later on, some fall asleep to Fame. They've almost had it, stumbling about like drunks, bags under their eyes as Irene Cara rattles on in the background. It's halfway through a Bananarama song in the second hour when we hear the first call to prayer which punctuates the video as we turn the music off and wait until it's appropriate to put Primal Scream back on.

I'd also not counted on the power cuts. On the second day, the whole of Ramallah goes down. We're left sitting in a shuttered room with everybody telling me how this is completely normal, and would I like a piece of fruit? Except that I'm getting back on the plane the next day and I know that half the dancers have to get through checkpoints which close at nine. Of course I did have the piece of fruit and also a silent nervous breakdown.

The end of each day had me in tears. The dancers showed such fortitude, resilience, grace and, most importantly, had better, sharper moves than any I'd ever seen. I wanted everyone who saw it to fall in love with them, to admire their perseverance, and to wonder why it should seem odd to us if they knew the words to Donna and Althea's Uptown Top Ranking.

The last track they dance to is quite rightly Olivia Newton John's Xanadu. For me there really is a heroism to live in a place it's impossible to leave, to be split from families, imprisoned by a Berlin wall and, maybe worst of all, to be forgotten by a world which refuses to understand you.

- Phil Collins, originally published as "The Loveliness of the long-distance dancer", The Independent On Sunday, 16 June 2004

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Background

Born in Runcorn, England in 1970, Phil Collins is currently based in Glasgow. Solo exhibitions include real society, Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast, 2003; el mundo no escuchará, Espacio La Rebeca, Bogotá, 2004; phil collins: they shoot horses, Wexner Centre for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio, 2005; Phil Collins, Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Gent, 2006; erreala denaren itzulera / el retorno de lo real, sala rekalde, Bilbao, 2006; they shoot horses, Tate Britain, London, 2006-7; and New Work: Phil Collins, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 2006-7. In 2005, his work was the subject of an exhibition and publication yeah.....you, baby you, Milton Keynes Gallery, for which he was nominated for the Turner Prize 2006. He was also one of four artists short-listed for the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize 2006, The Photographer's Gallery, London. Other recent group exhibitions include Universal Experience: Art, Life, and the Tourist's Eye, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago and Hayward Gallery, London, 2005; Istanbul: 9th International Istanbul Biennial, 2005; Populism, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt, and Centre for Contemporary Art, Vilnius, 2005; and British Art Show 6, Hayward Gallery Touring Exhibition, 2005-6. In 2007, Collins will hold solo exhibitions at the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh and Dallas Museum of Art.

Supported by

Supported by the British Council

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