Tacita Dean: FILM brings one of the most important works in recent moving-image art to the Marciano Art Foundation in its first U.S. presentation. On view from September 18, 2026 to January 2, 2027, the installation centers on Dean’s 2011 35mm work
FILM, a large-scale tribute to photochemical cinema and a clear statement of her commitment to analog film.
Dean has spent more than three decades working across film, drawing, photography and printmaking, but film remains central to her practice. In
FILM, she treats the medium itself as the subject. The 11-minute silent installation uses a vertical screen and a monumental strip of 35mm film that rises from the floor, making the projector’s material logic visible rather than hidden. Sprocket holes appear along the edges of the image, while waterfall, mountain, tree, clock, smokestack and other fragments move through a sequence that feels both precise and open-ended.
Originally made for Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall, the work was created at a moment when analog film seemed increasingly vulnerable. Dean responded by using older techniques such as glass matte painting, gate masking and in-camera superimposition, building a work that depends on process as much as image. The result is cinematic, but it also reads like a meditation on how film holds light, time and attention in ways digital formats do not.
Dean, born in Canterbury in 1965 and now based in Berlin and Los Angeles, has received major international recognition, including the Hugo Boss Prize and the Benesse Prize. Her exhibitions have appeared at leading museums across Europe and the United States, and
FILM has come to stand as one of her defining works. At Marciano Art Foundation, the installation gives Los Angeles audiences a close view of a piece that treats film not as nostalgia, but as a living medium with its own physical force.
Image:
© Tacita Dean