A 00:03:00:00’ excerpt
A 00:03:00:00’ excerpt

67 Bows




















The video entitled 67 bows has the look of an objective sociological study on the collective behavior of birds in response to sound stimuli. We see a group of flamingos filtering food from the water in an interior compound at a zoo. The peaceful scene is abruptly disturbed by the sounds of a gun being cocked and fired. The birds’ reaction, the sudden collective retraction of their heads, is captured from different camera perspectives as the film proceeds. The shots are heard at irregular intervals. During the quiet phases between discharges of the weapon, the birds go about their usual activities. After a while, the flamingos cease to respond to the shots but instead duck their heads as soon as they hear the announcing sound of the gun being cocked – even when no shots follow. The behavior is predictable, a perfect example of Pavlovian conditioning. A given action produces a calculable reaction. Read more...
On View at "Black Box" Hirshhorn Museum,Smithsonian Institution, Washington, USA. 2011
On View at “Remote Viewing”, Curated by Paul Young, at the Pacific design center, Los Angeles, USA. 2010
New York Times Stranded alone in Germany over a sullen white Christmas several years back, Nira Pereg, a video artist from Tel Aviv, decided to seek distraction at the Karlsruhe zoo...
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/23/science/23angier.html?_r=2
Washington post ‘67 Bows’ video by artist Nira Pereg presents pretty and disturbing metaphor for violence.
Smithsonian Museums and Beyond If flamingos were able to watch the new Hirshhorn “Black Box: Nira Pereg” presentation of the looped video 67 Bows (2006), no doubt they’d warn each other...
One Channel Video with Sound / Duration: 6 min 12 sec. loop > Edition of 5+2AP
4:3 PAL. 2 Ch Stereo / Installation dimensions variable
Selected Press