The Reflecting Pool: Collected Works

<p>For over thirty years, Bill Viola has created single-channel videos as well as sound and video installations that focus on spirituality and explore multiple levels of human consciousness. In constructing these works, the artist draws from his extensive study of Eastern and Western art, philosophy, and religion. He also consistently deploys cutting-edge technologies, investigating new ways to manipulate viewers’ percep-tion. Both the videos in <em>The Reflecting Pool</em> and the installation <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/122701"><em>Reasons for Knocking at an Empty House</em></a> are important early works that foreshadow Viola’s later creations, combining philosophic inquiry with captivating physical environments.<br><em>The Reflecting Pool</em> is a series comprising five individual videos, including <em>Moonblood</em>, that offer a collective meditation on the various stages in an individual life. The first work, also titled <em>The Reflecting Pool</em>, demonstrates the shift from stillness to motion as a fixed camera captures a man approaching a pool of water through trees and lush foliage. The only sounds are those of the branches rustling and the water rippling. The man momentarily stands before the pool before jumping into the air. As he reaches the crest of his jump, he is frozen in space while the water beneath him continues to undulate. There is a fleeting reflection of other people walking around the pool, although no one can be seen doing so. After a series of similar perceptual and temporal fragmentations, the man’s image fades, leaving only the pool. The final moments of the video are evocative of baptism, as a nude man emerges from the water and retreats into the woods.<br>In this series, Viola aims to deconstruct viewers’ concepts of time and memory, divorcing images from their subjective meaning and reconnecting them to universal truths. This process of fostering self-awareness is an undercurrent of the artist’s practice. He has remarked, “There’s another dimension that you just know is there, that can be a source of real knowledge, and the quest for connecting with that and identifying that is the whole impetus for me to cultivate these experiences and to make my work.”<br>In both <em>The Reflecting Pool</em> and <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/122701"><em>Reasons for Knocking at an Empty House</em></a>, the artist urges viewers to become active participants. Of his work, Viola stated, “You’re a part of it. It’s not something that’s just a fixed projection from the past.”</p>

Catalogue

Year
1977

Artist

Bill Viola
Bill Viola

Mixed Media

William John Viola Jr. was an American video artist whose artistic expression depended upon electronic, sound, and image technology in new media. His works focus on the ideas behind fundamental human experiences such as birth, death, and aspects of consciousness.

New York, NY, USA

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More by Bill Viola

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Catherine’s Room

Catherine’s Room

2001 · Video, 5 flat screens, colour

WW-2001-166229
Five Angels for the Millennium

Five Angels for the Millennium

2001 · Video, 5 projections, colour and sound (stereo)

WW-2001-227324
Four Hands

Four Hands

2001 · Video, 4 flat screens, black and white

WW-2001-166231
Nantes Triptych

Nantes Triptych

1992 · Video, 3 projections, colour and sound (stereo)

WW-1992-222805
Reasons for Knocking at an Empty House

Reasons for Knocking at an Empty House

1982 · Color video, sound (monitor), wood chair, headphones, spotlight, and pedestal

WW-1982-111071