Clocking out

the clock

Ringing in the New Year at MoMA With Christian Marclay’s The Clock

Time passes, which is the point of Christian Marclay’s much-talked-about installation The Clock. The work, a 24-hour cinematic loop composed of sequences appropriated from the last century of film, chronicles this passing in real time, as they say. An alarm clock sounds, a movie star eats breakfast; a wristwatch ticks, actors wait for a train. Some reviewers were surprised that watching time pass could be so captivating, although they might not have been if they’d thought back to any old New Year’s Eve, when the world’s citizens fixate on their clocks. Read More

Art

christian-marclay

MFA Boston Rolls Back Premiere Fees For The Clock

The Museum of Fine Arts Boston has abandoned its original plan to charge $200 for its debut viewing of Christian Marclay’s The Clock, following outrage from Bostonians and a displeased statement from Mr. Marclay himself. Instead, the 24-hour video installation will now be shown a day earlier for free — with admission when the museum is Read More

Art

A still from Christian Marclay's "The Clock" (2010) (White Cube and Paula Cooper Gallery)

MFA Boston Plans $200 ‘Clock’-Watching Party

After drawing large crowds at the White Cube gallery in London, the Paula Cooper Gallery in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Venice Biennale, Christian Marclay’s 24-hour film The Clock, which is comprised of thousands of short clips from a variety of movies that show time passing in real time, will go on view at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, on Sept. 17., at the opening of its contemporary art wing. Read More