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AN ANIMATED DOG READS JOHN BERGER, HARAWAY, AND KAFKA

Matthew Lax

2024 00:05:41 United StatesEnglishColorStereo16:9Video

Description

Created with Caleb Craig. A 3D animated dog based on a motion capture of the filmmaker, demonstrates various actions while reciting a monologue composed from John Berger’s Why Look at Animals?, Donna Haraway’s Companion Species Manifesto, and Franz Kafka’s Investigations of a Dog

Image of art work installed in gallery space. A flat screen monitor is placed flat on the floor with a video of an animated collie dog on it.  A dog cage is placed over the monitor.

This piece is originally and properly exhibited as a video installed on a 43” flatscreen lying face-up inside a 42 x 28 x 28” black wire dog crate.

About Matthew Lax

Matthew Lax is an artist-filmmaker and writer working between New Jersey, New York, and Los Angeles. Lax often collaborates with animals, non-actors, and the “everyday ensembles” found within families, lovers, hobby clubs, and kink communities. Working between documentary and narrative, his films extrapolate from the participants' real-life relationships and Lax’s own autobiography to explore group behavior, power dynamics, language, critical exchange, and labor production.

Lax’s films and video installations have screened and been exhibited at venues including Viennale (Austria), IHME Contemporary (Helsinki), Rencontres Internationales (Paris/Berlin), MIX New York, MIX Brasil (São Paulo), table (Chicago), Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (LAMAG), Human Resources (Los Angeles), Los Angeles Contemporary Archive (LACA), Everson Museum of Art (Syracuse, NY), REDCAT, LA Film Forum, Winnipeg Underground Film Festival, and CROSSROADS (San Francisco), among others. In 2025, he was the subject of a survey presentation at the 54th International Film Festival Rotterdam.

Lax received a BFA from Syracuse University and an MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Lax’s writing has appeared in publications including BOMB Magazine, MARCH Journal, Texte Zur Kunst, Los Angeles Review of Books (LARB), and Millennium Film Journal. He is a recipient of a 2024 Lightning Fund Grant from Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions and the Andy Warhol Foundation.