Experimenting extensively with photography, film and  video, Tracey Moffatt’s work is a prime example of the way contemporary  artists range across media to explore ideas, themes and concepts. In 1983, after graduating with a Diploma of Visual Communication at Queensland College of Art, Moffatt moved to Sydney to work as an independent filmmaker.
Her  early film Nice Coloured Girls (1987) is a narrative that tells  two stories simultaneously – the images depicting the contemporary  story of three Aboriginal women meeting a white man in a bar, getting  him drunk and stealing his money, while on the soundtrack, a voiceover  reads journal entries written by a white settler recalling Aboriginal  women in colonial Sydney. This tension between layers of narrative has  been the basis of much of the artist’s subsequent output, Moffatt often  foregrounding the construction of a concept as a way to question the  validity of stereotypical modes of representation. 
During the 1980s Moffatt made frequent visits to New York for travel and group exhibitions, eventually basing herself in the city. She is arguably one of Australia’s most acclaimed and well-known artists, with work represented in the Guggenheim and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Tate Gallery in London.
Heaven (1997)  was Moffatt’s first foray into video art proper after an extensive  career in documentaries, shorts, feature films and music videos. Using a  low-end domestic camcorder Heaven consisted of surreptitiously  recorded shots of male surfers showering and changing at beach-side car  parks. As the piece progresses, Moffatt’s camera moves closer to her  subjects, changing what had begun as a piece of voyeurism into an  interaction between the unseen director and her subjects. 
The  majority of Moffatt’s subsequent work in video has been in  collaboration with Gary Hillberg and has eschewed further experiments in  documentary for a series of hectic montages. The first work in the  series Lip (1999) collated clips from dozens of feature films  that featured black servants talking back to their bosses, or giving  them “lip”, with a soundtrack of soul classics such as Chain of Fools. Artist (2001) and Love (2003)  repeated the formula of dense montage and ironic musical accompaniment  for, respectively, a look at the way artists had been represented in  cinema, and a thematically grouped series of scenes tracing a love  affair from first sight to ultimate destruction. Moffatt and Hillberg’s follow up Doomed (2007) is a dense collage of delirious scenes of destruction from films  depicting the end of the world, car crashes, explosions and volcanic  eruptions.
This suite of video works, collectively known as “Montages”, represents a decade-long labor of love in which Moffattt and Hillberg have crafted “hymns to cinema” by mining Hollywood films in order to invent new narratives relevant to Moffattt’s themes. These works were included in an important retrospective of Moffatt’s films and videos at New York’s MoMA in 2012, which offered a comprehensive look at her moving-image oeuvre.
  
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- Andrew Frost
      
    
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