 AUDIO,
VIDEO, DISCO
24 JANUARY – 26 APRIL 2009
Kunsthalle Zurich is pleased to present «Audio, video,
disco», an international group exhibition featuring artists Nina
Beier and Marie Lund, Claire Fontaine, Luca Frei, Sharon Hayes, Sturtevant,
and Cerith Wyn Evans, curated by David Bussel.
By looking at various formations of revolutionary dissent – social
movements, identity politics – the artists in the exhibition reflect
on the grammar of history as a series of soft configurations of acts,
events, and correspondences in counterpoint to today. This act of negotiation,
the analysis of revolutionary history as an unending process, freighted
with a sense of mistrust and doubt, is the thematic departure of the
exhibition.
Although they engage with different manifestations of the past and the
discourses that produced them, the works in the exhibition interrogate
the very positions they seek to occupy as art objects, excavating and
re-inscribing symbols and codes, engendering further narratives about
narratives. Embedded in these historical folds, however, are repressions
and erasures around meetings of aesthetic and political acts, where the
artist in effect has option to "betray" his or her object of
inquiry, pervert or undermine its ostensible origins and authenticity,
in an effort to rethink it. Histories – both personal and collective – are
interrogated, inscribed with a sense of occlusion at the centre, and
then presented as a disassembled formation of yet another evanescent
moment in time. By reimagining histories of protest in linguistic and
visual form, the artists engender ways of rethinking the past through
a double détournement, a repetition or redistribution of the already
recoded, without returning it to an originary "Primal Scene" in
time or space.
The Archives (World Peace) (2008), is a suite of framed vintage protest
posters from the 1960s and 1970s by Nina Beier and Marie Lund. Each poster
is folded in half, concealing its content. However, some traces do seep
through, creating evidence of past acts and desires that are seen here
as elegiac messages from an altogether different time and place. Installed
horizontally in a line based on the level of their folds, the individual
works, though of slightly differing scale, become a blank horizon suggesting
a communal ground, an archive-crypt that mourns the past against nostalgia,
waiting for the next time ...another time and another place to be activated.
The collective Claire Fontaine presents a selection from its series Brickbats
(2007): sculptures made from ordinary bricks individually wrapped in
copies of book covers and secured by elastic bands. A "brickbat" is
both a brick used as weapon and a term of blunt verbal criticism. By
collapsing the two meanings, Claire Fontaine invokes the street battles
of revolutions past with a brutal condemnation of the poverty of collective
thought, where the history of and need for revolutionary acts and desires
are rendered virtually impotent by the weight of the culture industry
and the politics of consensus.
The subtitle of Luca Frei’s "Everything was to be done. All
the adventures are still there." (2007) – a citation from
writer and artist Kodwo Eshun – is a rallying call, an invitation
to intellectual and aesthetic experimentation superimposed upon a bleak
black-and-white image of Place Beaubourg in Paris, the site of the Centre
Pompidou before the museum was built. The photograph depicts the area
when it was still a vast car park, already severed from its historic
past, from above. Frei’s work is charged with a melancholy suggested
by a temporal slippage between image and text: It affirms and condemns
the bald optimism and ideological values of this cultural centre dialectically
both as an idea and as a reality.
In the Near Future, London (2008), is a three-part slide projection by
Sharon Hayes that investigates the history of political demonstration,
the way it is expressed and the forms those expressions take – their
verbal and visual appearance. Part of an ongoing series of performances,
produced in New York, Vienna, Warsaw, and, most recently, London, the
work employs national histories and languages to assess the political
power of acts of dissent in historical counterpoint. Hayes performs these
actions alone and in silence with hand-written placards that reiterate
familiar slogans of manifestations from past actions. By inserting ideologically
charged references into the present, the artist radically displaces and
ambiguously reactivates collective memories of civil and social antagonisms
that persist today.
For more than 40 years, Sturtevant has rigorously and unwaveringly explored
the possibilities of thought through object making. By "repeating" works
by other artists such as Duchamp, Warhol and Stella, she does not simply
appropriate or copy, produce likenesses or simulacra, but rather produces
something more than the original to dissect its very integrity, undermining
elemental categories of objecthood and the visual altogether. She asks
what discursive formations allow art to be and what does it mean to see
something for the very first time again? Beuys. La Rivoluzione siamo
noi (1988) is an image of the artist posed, dressed, and situated as
the artist Joseph Beuys himself was in his work of 1972. Here Sturtevant
asks us to think about what her repeat of "the revolution starts
with us" suggests about Beuys’ own practice, which equates
art and social politics, and how discourses on thought, difference, and
the body might disrupt it, only to better understand it.
Cerith Wyn Evans’ The Return of the Return of the Return of the
Durruti Column (2008) is like a mirror that only reflects itself, a finite
feedback loop that reuses an already reused image. The title refers to
a double appropriation of the anarchist unit from the Spanish Civil War,
the Durruti Column, by the Situationist International in a 1967 anonymous
poster – a re-inscribed American cowboy comic strip – further
re-inscribed by Wyn Evans. The work, a silkscreen on board, is made from
phosphorescent paint, making it illegible in the light and luminous in
the dark and, suggesting not only the transitory nature of concatenations
of art and revolution, but also the dangers of misrecognising history
as spectacle.
With a special contribution by Rosemarie Trockel.
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