Exhibitions

Chase a Crooked Shadow: Film Noir as Contemporary Mirror

Film noir did not arrive with a manifesto. It emerged gradually in the years surrounding World War II, as filmmakers struggled to give form to a world marked by economic collapse, global conflict, and institutional failure. From the early 1940s through the late 1950s, noir crystallized not as a genre, but as a style and mood—an atmosphere shaped by moral instability and the growing realization that the promises of progress and the American Dream were deeply compromised. These films offered no reassurance and few happy endings. Instead, they asked audiences to identify with fractured protagonists—detectives, criminals, schemers, fallen heroes, and femmes fatales—whose actions were driven less by virtue than by survival.

Chase A Crooked Shadow: Film Noir as Contemporary Mirror approaches noir as a visual, psychological, and ethical framework that continues to resonate today. Shaped by hard-boiled crime fiction, German Expressionism, and wartime technological shifts that moved filmmaking out of the studio and onto the street, noir transformed constraint into expressive power. Fractured light, shadow, sound, and music function as narrative forces, while suggestion replaces spectacle—allowing violence, desire, and dread to remain unsettlingly incomplete.

This exhibition considers film noir as an enduring worldview rather than a historical style, tracing its relevance through contemporary art. The works are organized into thematic groupings that echo noir's recurring archetypes and undercurrents: the detective and antihero; the fatal and shifting power dynamic; criminals and the scene of the crime; noir landscapes and environments; violence and the abject body; and psychological states shaped by duplicity, ambiguity, obsession, and entrapment. Across these galleries, contemporary artworks echo noir's concerns—not by imitation, but by reactivating its questions. How do we navigate systems we cannot control? Where do ethics fracture under pressure? And what does it mean to live with clarity when the world itself is fundamentally unstable?

By placing film noir contexts and concepts in dialogue with artwork from the Rachofsky and the Hartland & Mackie / Labora collections, as well as loans from other institutions, this exhibition reveals noir not as a nostalgic curiosity, but as an ongoing lens—one that continues to illuminate the darker contours of modern life.