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  1. The gaze directed towards the television meets the viewers directly. What show they are watching is not revealed. The artist produced a total of 44 of these portraits, for which he chose subjects ranging in age from 16 to 93 from the Boston area. The recordings were broadcast by the U.S. television station WGBH-TV as half-minute inserts in 1983 ...

  2. Das Video »Reverse TelevisionPortraits of Viewers« basiert auf einem Wechsel der Perspektive: Die Betrachter:innen des Videos nehmen die Position von Fernsehgeräten ein. Sie blicken in die Wohn- und Schlafzimmer und auf all die Menschen, die täglich stundenlang bewegungslos vor ihren Fernsehgeräten sitzen. Stumm starren die Menschen ...

  3. Reverse Television is a series of 44 video portraits made by American video artist Bill Viola in 1983, originally produced for broadcast television and later documented as a 15-minute video. These portraits depict people throughout Boston sitting in their living rooms, silently staring at the video camera as though it were a TV set. [1]

  4. Reverse TelevisionPortraits of Viewers (Compilation Tape) Bill Viola. Viola inverts the position and gaze of the television viewer in a series of forty-four portraits of individuals sitting at home in their living rooms, staring silently at the static camera as though it were a TV set.

  5. Reverse Television - Portraits of Viewers. 1983 - 1984. Bill Viola. (1951, États-Unis) Reverse Television - Portraits of Viewers. 1983 - 1984. On display: Museum, level 4, Film, video, sound, digital works area. Art vidéo. assis. canapé. fauteuil. homme. Show more. Unable to open [object Object]: HTTP 403 attempting to load TileSource. Credits.

  6. Reverse Television - Portraits of Viewers. Date de création 1983 - 1984. Domaine Nouveaux médias | Vidéo: Technique U-matic NTSC, couleur, son. Durée 15 minutes. Acquisition Achat, 1988. Secteur de collection Nouveaux medias. N° d'inventaire

  7. Documentary. Broadcast television project featuring forty four 30-second portraits of people - ranging in age from 16 to 93 years old - sitting in their homes and staring in silence at the camera, which aired in between programs as unannounced inserts. Creator. Bill Viola.