Shop > Video

Out of Stock
#01454

Sabda - Reeves, Daniel

Artist
Daniel Reeves
Publisher
Art Metropole
Format
Video
Description

An experimental video poem inspired by the poetry of praise written by the North Indian poet Kabir and other Bhakti poets. The title refers to the ‘word’, the original sound of creation. All of the imagery and sound was gathered on an extended trip through India in 1983. The work illuminates the power, grace and compassion of the Bhakti, the ecstatic lovers of God, who see the divine in the world with truly existential clarity and embrace it all.

  1. Sabda - Reeves, Daniel
 

Related Items

  1. Jean-Christophe Ammann, Museum of Conceptual Art, Michael Asher, AA Bronson, Marcel Broodthaers, Benjamin Buchloh, Daniel Buren, Marcel Duchamp, Robert Filliou, Vera Frenkel, Peggy Gale, General Idea, Walter Grasskamp, Walter Grasskamp, Hans Haacke, Image Bank, and Donald Ju: Museums By Artists
  2. Daniel Olson: The Outline of History
  3. Iris Häussler: Joseph Wagenbach: Liebe macht machen überleben, Love makes making survive
  4. AA Bronson, Richard Prince, and Lawrence Weiner: Learn to Read Art
  5. Steve Reinke: My Rectum is Not a Grave (Notes to a Film Industry in Crisis)
  6. Steve Reinke: The Hundred Videos (DVD)
  7. POST-AUDIO_DVD
  8. David Askevold and Christina Ritchie: Activating the Archive 4: Double Agent
  9. Alan Belcher: Billboard: Kill Me
  10. Colin Campbell and Bruce ed. Ferguson: Activating the Archive 2: Otherwise Worldly
  11. Martin Creed: I Can’t Move
  12. Greg Curnoe: Blue Book no. 8
  13. Ian Hamilton Finlay: Poster for “Bicentennial Proposal: The French War: The War of the Letter“
  14. Robert Fones: Field Identification
  15. AA Bronson and Hamish Fulton: Ajawaan
  16. Jean Gagnon: Pornography in the Urban World
  17. Janice Gurney: Moveable Wounds
  18. Jenny Holzer: AM Catalogue no.13, 1989
  19. Garry Neill Kennedy: AM Catalogue no.19, 1997
  20. John Orentlicher and Lisa Steele: Activating the Archive 3: Finding the DIFFEREN(t)CE
  21. Tom Sherman: Activating the Archive 1: From a Resevoir of Predictions