As Katerina Gregos states in her essay “On the
Pitfalls of History: Four Films by Lene Berg,” “The work of Lene Berg
probes questions about the difference between truth and falsehood,
between reality and fantasy, between veracity and mendacity. Berg crafts
short, witty, incisive, and often humorous filmic stories, using lo-fi
means such as drawing, photocopies, collage, and her own as well as
found footage, to interrogate the question of history and
historiography.” These themes, among others, are explored in Berg's
latest film, Kopfkino (2012), which was filmed over the
course of two days in Berlin and focuses on eight women as they exchange
stories about their line of work—the fulfillment of sexual fantasies.
The scripted conversation evolves in front of the camera while the women
use their own words and experiences. Real experiences and actual stories
come together in a universe of illusions, fictions, and fantasies.
These parallel worlds are analyzed in this publication, which features
essays by Sabeth Buchmann, who looks into the tensions of Kopfkino;
Katerina Gregos, whose essay examines four of Berg's earlier films; and
Dieter Roelstraete, who provides an analysis of Berg's
ever-controversial work, Stalin by Picasso or Portrait of a Woman
with Moustache (2008), among others.
Published on the occasion of Lene Berg's exhibition at Henie-Onstad Kunstsenter, Høvikodden, in 2012-2013.
Born in Oslo, Lene Berg studied film at Dramatiska Institutet in
Stockholm. She has directed two feature films En Kvinnas Huvud
(1997) and Kopfkino (2012) as well as more than fifteen
video-projections and shorter films. Working as an artist, Berg integrates
text, film and photography in her work. She explores relationships between
contemporary images and inherited ideas. Her work has been shown at
Whitechapel Gallery (London), Art in General (New York) and Midway
Contemporary Art (Minneapolis). Berg has also participated in the Biennale
of Sydney, Contour Mechelen and Manifesta 8.