Political Advertisement 1952–2012:
Antoni Muntadas and Marshall Reese
Film
Screening & Discussion
Thursday,
November 1, 2012, 6:30–8:30pm
The
New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
55
West 13th Street, 2nd floor
New
York City
20
Years VLC => Free Admission
www.veralistcenter.org
"Sometime
in the early 1950s Madison Avenue's hucksters realized that they could sell
political candidates like any other product, a throat lozenge or facial
tissue."
–Steve
Seid, Fifty Years of Campaign Spots (Berkeley: Pacific Film Archive, 2000)
Five
days before the 2012 U.S. presidential election, artists Antoni Muntadas
and Marshall Reese present a new installment of their twenty-eight-year
project Political Advertisement. Launched in 1984—and in each edition updated
with new campaign advertisements—the project helps determine whether things
have actually changed since the early '50s when "guided by the cooing
come-ons of the thirty-second TV spot, campaigns were soon reduced to photo
ops, televised debates, and sound bites. Out was the whistle-stop tour and the
scrappy convention, in was the instant poll and the attack ad." (Steve
Seid)
Starting
with Eisenhower vs. Stevenson in 1952 and extending to Obama vs. McCain in 2008
and now Obama vs. Romney, taken together, the ads depict how the image of American
presidential candidates has evolved over thirteen elections, and how
advertising tactics such as negative ads, soft-sell techniques and emotionalism
fundamentally changed the country's electoral process. Political Advertisement
includes rare—some never before seen—footage from the artists' own archives,
updated during every election since 1984. Compiled and edited by Muntadas and
Reese, the stream of thirty-second TV spots runs without commentary for an
hour. In the discussion that follows, the artists and Professor of Media
Studies Carol Wilder will discuss how the development of televised media
and electoral politics have become increasingly inseparable.
Participants
Antoni
Muntadas, artist and Professor of the Practice, ACT/Department of Architecture,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Marshall
Reese, artist
Carol
Wilder, Professor of Media Studies and Film, The New School for Public
Engagement
Organized
by Vera List Center for Art and Politics.
VLC
= 20 Years. Join us for a 20th-anniversary year with free admission to all VLC
events. Stay tuned for more information.
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