Birthe Piontek‘s portrait of husband-and-wife artists Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller is featured in the July 29 issue of The New York Times Magazine. The Canadian-born couple, whose installations, FOREST (for a thousand years…) and Alter Bahnhof Video Walk are currently on exhibit at dOCUMENTA 13 in Kassel, Germany, are best known for their work with sound and video.
Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller
Birthe Piontek for The New York Times. © The New York Times, 2012.
Cardiff and Miller, who live in Berlin, Germany and Grindrod, British Columbia, work both collaboratively as well as individually. Cardiff’s “The Forty-Part Motet”, is what many consider to be her masterpiece; 40 individual speakers placed on stands mounted at ear height on which Thomas Tallis’ Renaissance motet for eight choirs of five, Spem in Alium, is played.
The 2001 installation has been exhibited at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Rideau Chapel National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa and the Hamburger Banhhof in Berlin, is now on long-term display at MoMA PS1 in Long Island City.
Cardiff and Miller represented Canada at the 2001 Venice Biennale with their work, Paradise Institute. The couple was awarded La Biennale di Venezia Special Award for the piece, the first time the award was presented to a Canadian artist.
Piontek, who photographed the couple at their home in Grindrod, lives in Vancouver. This is the German-born artist’s fifth assignment for The New York Times.



























































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