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Commissioned by the Kimbell, Philip Haas’s film installations interpret and elaborate upon selected works in the Museum’s permanent collection. Though based on deep research into the original artists and cultures, Haas’s films are poetic and sensuous in approach rather than factual like a documentary. Between seven and twenty minutes in length and running continuously, they are projected on screens of various unconventional formats and configurations. All are accompanied by original music, and several appear in elaborate architectural and sculptural sets, further immersing the viewer in the experience.

The installations complement a full display of the Kimbell’s permanent collection, each occupying a space near the work to which it relates.

On View: July 18 - October 25, 2009

Skeletons Warming Themselves

In this piece Haas takes us inside the experiences, memories, and obsessive imagination of the Belgian painter James Ensor, author of the Kimbell’s macabre painting of the same title. The scene shifts from the artist lying dead in his studio to episodes in which he appears as an old man, as a young man, as a boy, and as a baby in the care of his heavy-drinking father. In a memory that stayed with him throughout his life, Ensor recalled an ominous bird flying into his room when he was still in the cradle. The family lived in the bleak seaside town of Ostend, where they ran a shop selling curios, bric-a-brac, and carnival masks. Haas shows Ensor at the carnival as a boy––with his grandmother—then later as a young man, each time encountering his father in a drunken state. In tableau vivant fashion, the carnival revelers enact scenes familiar from his paintings, with their grim repertoire of masks, skulls, and skeletons––all captured vividly thanks to the theatrical designer Julian Crouch, with whom Haas worked on the masks and sets. We also see the young Ensor setting up and painting Skeletons Warming Themselves in his studio. The film features some distinguished veterans of the British acting world, Bernard Horsfall as the old Ensor, Clive Russell as the father, and Paola Dionisotti as the grandmother. In the installation, it unfolds on four screens within a giant skull, suggesting the idea that we are entering into the very mind of the artist.

Cast
Old EnsorBernard Horsfall
Young EnsorMark Grimmer
Boy EnsorJames Crouch
Infant EnsorAlfie Brown
GrandmotherPaola Dionisotti
FatherClive Russell
 
Writer, Director, and ProducerPhilip Haas
Co-ProducerHannah Ireland
Director of PhotographySean Bobbitt BSC
EditorJodi Gibson
Production DesignerJulian Crouch
Costume, Hair, and Makeup DesignerEmma Williams
ChoreographerLucy Burge
MusicAlexander Balanescu
Visual Effects SupervisorThomas J. Smith
Casting DirectorLucy Jenkins CDG
Sound RecordistGraham Ross
Sound Design and MixingRichard King