Michael Hamburger

Tacita Dean

Michael Hamburger

Continuing her recent collection of film portraits, Tacita Dean’s ‘Michael Hamburger’ is a moving portrayal of the poet and translator, a resident of Middleton in Suffolk and great friend of W.G. Sebald. It represented Dean’s first commission in Britain since 1999.

For its 28 minutes, the film quietly observes the poet in his study and among the apple trees in his garden. Sunlight dissolves the frames of the windows, the most insubstantial of thresholds between this home, only one-room-deep, and what lies outdoors; a rainbow marks its watery geometry in the sky; and the apples age upon the ground, shrunken, and yet somehow becoming more intensely themselves.

Although Hamburger is said to have despaired of reviews of his poetry which declared that he is ‘better known as a translator’, we might detect a similar deprecation of his self, by himself, in the film which shares his name. Unwilling, perhaps unable, to talk of his past and his migrations, most especially fleeing Nazism in 1933, he talks poignantly, instead, of his apple trees, of where they have come from, and of their careful cross-breeding. Purity is dismissed, and one senses with an awkward pathos that the poet is translating himself.

‘Michael Hamburger’ was commissioned as part of ‘Waterlog’.

‘Waterlog’ was conceived and developed by Film and Video Umbrella, with the collaboration of Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery; The Collection, Lincoln; and the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia.

Courtesy the artist, Frith Street Gallery, London and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York/Paris.

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Date commissioned
2007
Venues
3 February - 15 April 2007

Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery

15 September 2007 - 13 January 2008
The Collection, Lincoln

21 September – 26 October 2007
Frith Street Gallery, London
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