giovedì 11 aprile 2013

Tell Me Whom You Haunt: Marcel Duchamp and the Contemporary Readymade


Marcel Duchamp and the Contemporary Readymade. A group exhibition in which works by ten leading contemporary artists are placed in dialogue with the readymades of Marcel Duchamp.

comunicato stampa
The directors of Blain|Southern are delighted to present Tell Me Whom You Haunt: Marcel Duchamp and the Contemporary Readymade, a group exhibition in which works by ten leading contemporary artists are placed in dialogue with the readymades of Marcel Duchamp. The exhibition examines the ways in which artists today continue to respond to the activation of memory and the phenomenon of ‘haunting’ so present in the unique and progressive art of Duchamp during the early twentieth century.

Taken from an age-old French proverb, ‘Tell me whom you haunt and I will tell you who you are’, the show’s title refers to the idea that found or ‘readymade’ objects relinquish their previous signification and assume a shifting identity whenever recontextualised; they cease to be one thing in order to become another. In this sense, David Batchelor, Jota Castro, Jimmie Durham, Piero Golia, Martin Kersels, Robert Kusmirowski, Olaf Nicolai, Valentin Ruhry, Nasan Tur and Sislej Xhafa could all be seen, much like Duchamp, to be creating contexts for the ‘haunting’ of objects through their practice. Furthermore, their artworks take on the role of post-structuralist memory-objects, where meaning can extend beyond the personal significance of these objects for the artists, into a realm where the viewer’s own recollections or associations are triggered, positing the potential for a rich web of personal readings.

Mario Codognato, Head Curator and Director of Exhibitions at Blain|Southern states: “Objects often have a multiplicity of meanings, dependent upon each individual’s experience of them. This exhibition seeks to explore the alternative meaning(s) bestowed upon objects through their placement in the gallery space, within which seemingly ordinary objects can be redefined as art.”

Among the numerous Duchamp works on display, From or by Marcel Duchamp or Rrose Selavy (Box in a Valise) (1952) best encapsulates the central themes examined within the exhibition. The intricate layering of meaning, typical of Duchamp’s work, is manifest in the literal act of encasing a box within a valise. Contained within the suitcase are a variety of miniature replicas and colour reproductions of his earlier works; a display of memory that also highlights the continuity within his oeuvre. The title gives a nod to Duchamp’s female alter ego, Rrose Selavy, whose signature appears on a number of the reproductions, thus emphasising the mutable nature of identity.

Just as Duchamp was ‘haunted’ by his past works, which initiated constant revisions to the concept of the readymade, so Duchamp himself haunts the work of Olaf Nicolai, Apparition of a two dimensional object as a three dimensional shadow in chocolate (2013), as he presents Duchamp’s profile and silhouetted image in the form of a series of chocolate cakes – calling into question the ideas of transubstantiation and the consumption of knowledge. David Batchelor is haunted by the material remnants of previous projects, with his electrical flex balls originating from a surplus of this material left over from the artist’s disassembly of his lightboxes.

In Robert Kusmirowski’s Doorama (2009), the notion of history as a man-made construct informed by memory and imagination is presented. Four meticulously recreated advertisements for nineteenth century Swedish cosmoramas are exhibited alongside an ornately painted door, through which two eyeholes reveal a voyeuristic view of an artificially-created street scene in Lublin, Poland. Memory also pervades Sislej Xhafa’s work Rocket Ship (2011),in which the artist’s own childhood hopes and subsequent recollections are referenced within the context of travel and migration.

Nasan Tur’s Fortuna (2011) utilises the actual roulette ball from the famous Baden-Baden casino, imbued with thousands of histories of success and failure – the casino itself was immortalised through the writings of Fyodor Dostoevsky whose novel, The Gamblers (1867) was written while he compulsively played roulette at Baden-Baden. By comparison, the found objects in Martin Kersels’ Charms (USS Constitution) (2011) are highly kitsch, with a toy boat and spider’s web being brought together to create the image of the iconic Revolutionary War era frigate when illuminated.

Jota Castro and Jimmie Durham’s works both reference the nature of existence and the processes of life and death, with Castro’s Leche y Ceniza (2008) (which translates into milk and ashes) being comprised of a baby’s cradle, the bottom of which is lined with a mirror that reflects the viewer’s own image back at them. Durham’s sculpture Himmel und Erde müssen vergehen (2000) displays a monumental stone crushing a lightweight jacket, creating unnerving contrasts between weight, volume and material.

Valentin Ruhry will be presenting a site-specific installation that responds to this concept of the readymade and memory, as an old stepladder is wall-mounted and united with a single light bulb to continue the artist’s ongoing interest in the chandelier form. Piero Golia will also reference past works, in particular his sculpture Bus (untitled) (2008),where he crushed an entire bus and presented the mangled form at ART LA. Here, the artist will present the axle from this bus, which is in fact not crushable, cutting it into four pieces of varying length and signing these, thus reappropriating this piece of functional machinery and referencing the memory of a performative act.

Ultimately, every artist in the exhibition engages with the phenomena of ‘haunting’ and the manifestation of memory, or the renewed construction of narratives and their shifting significations. Each object is permeated with a personal and historical significance for each artist, and also, perhaps, for the viewer, demonstrating the interconnectedness of identity and remembrance, and the fluid or malleable nature of meaning.

About the artists:

David Batchelor is an artist and writer based in London. He was born in Dundee, Scotland in 1955. He studied Fine Art at Trent Polytechnic, Nottingham (1975-78), and Cultural Theory at Birmingham University (1978-80). He has exhibited widely in the UK, continental Europe, the Americas and, more recently, Asia. Recent exhibitions include Light Show, Hayward Gallery, London (2013); The Shape of Things to Come, Saatchi Gallery, London (2011); Chromophilia: 1995-2010, Paço Imperial, Rio de Janeiro (2010); Backlights, Galeria Leme, São Paulo (2008); Color Chart, Museum of Modern Art, New York (2008) and Tate Liverpool (2009); Unplugged, Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh (2007); Extreme Abstraction, Albright Knox Gallery, Buffalo, New York (2005); the Biennial de Santiago, Chile (2005); Shiny Dirty, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham (2004); the 26th Bienal De São Paulo (2004); Sodium and Asphalt, Museo Tamayo, Mexico City (2003); and Days Like These: Tate Britain Triennial of Contemporary Art, Tate Britain, London (2003).

Jota Castro was born in 1965 in Lima, Peru, and now lives and works in Brussels, Belgium. His work has been exhibited around the world, and he has participated in numerous biennales, including Venice and Kwangju. He won the Gwandju Biennale prize in Korea in 2004. Recent exhibitions include: Violent Frames, Gonzalez y Gonzalez Gallery, Santiago (2012); Memento mori, Umberto di Marino, Naples (2011); West End?, Museum on the Seam, Jerusalem (2011); Low Cost Tour – Second Stop, Y3K, Melbourne (2010); Low Cost Tour, Gonzalez y Gonzalez Gallery, Santiago (2010); Trasparenze, MARCO, Rome (2010); The Fear Society, Pabellon de la Urgencia, Murcia. 53rd International Art Exhibition, Biennale di Venezia (2009); Jota Castro, Galerie Barbara Thumm, Berlin (2009); Sleep tight, Elaine Levy Project, Brussels (2008); U-Turn, Quadrennial for Contemporary Art, Nicolaj CCAC, Copenhagen (2008); We are your future, 2nd Moscow Biennial of Contemporary Art, Moscow (2007); Rear Window, Kiasma Museum, Helsinki (2006); Introduction to Jota Castro, Uplands Gallery, Melbourne (2005); and 4th Kwangju Biennale, Korea (2004).

Jimmie Durham was born in 1940 in Washington, Arkansas, USA; lives and works in Berlin. From the early 1960’s, active in theatre, performance, literature and in the U.S. Civil Rights Movement. First solo art exhibition in Austin, Texas in 1965. Moved to Geneva, Switzerland in 1969, returned to the U.S. in 1973. Political organizer in the American Indian Movement, 1973-1980, Director of the International Indian Treaty Council and representative at the United Nations. Director of the Foundation for the Community of Artists (FCA) New York City, 1981-83. Moved to Mexico in 1987, left Mexico in 1994 and first moved to Tokyo to participate in a project co-ordinated by Art Front Gallery. From Japan, he moved to Dublin for a group show at the National Gallery. He left Ireland and stayed two months in Gent before his two-years-stay in Brussels. He left Brussels in 1997 for Marseilles (with a five-month residency in Stockholm). He was a recipient of a DAAD in Berlin 1998, and finally moved to Italy.

Piero Golia was born in Naples, Italy in 1974. Since 2002, he has lived and worked in Los Angeles, California. His work has been shown in a number of major exhibitions in the United States and Europe. Recent shows include: Double Tumble or the awesome twins, Stedeljik Museum, Amsterdam (2011); Concrete Cakes and Constellations Paintings, Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles (2011); Premio Italia Arte Contemporanea, Museo MAXXI, Rome (2010); California Biennial, Orange County Museum of Art (2010); Artist’s Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2010);Oh My God That’s So Awesome!, Bortolami, New York (2009); Knives, Galleria Fonti, Naples (2008); The Gold Standard, MoMA P.S.1, New York (2007); Vesuvius, Moderna Museet, Stockholm (2007); Piero Golia Piero Golia, Galleria Fonti, Naples (2005); The king is dead, Cosmic Galerie, Paris (2004). In 2004, his film Killer Shrimps was selected for the Venice Film Festival.

Martin Kersels is a sculptor and installation artist who lives and works in Los Angeles, California. Born in the city in 1960, Kersels received his B.A. and his M.F.A from UCLA. He began his career as a performance artist collaborating on works with the group SHRIMPS, traveling throughout the United States to New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco to perform. Recent exhibitions include: Charms and Devotionals, Elizabeth Leach Gallery, Portland (2012); Passionista, ACME., Los Angeles (2011); The Artist’s Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2010);Under Destruction, Tinguely Museum, Basel (2010); Second Nature, UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2009); California Video, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (2008); Accidents, Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois, Paris (2006); andIlluminous, Guido Costa Projects, Turin (2004).

Robert Kuśmirowski, born in 1973 in Łódź, is a Polish contemporary artist whose work includes sculpture, installations, perform­ance and photography. His work employs the reconstruction of historical artefacts and settings to examine and manipulate historical themes. Recent exhibitions include One on One, KW - Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Germany (2012); Aire de Lyon, Fun­dación PROA, Buenos Aires, Argentina (2012); Manifesta 9, Genk, Lumburg, Belgium (2012); HUMAN BOMBER, Warsztaty Kultury - Filia Centrum Kultury w Lublinie, Lubin, Poland (2011); P.A.P.O.P., Fondazione Galleria Civica, Trento, Italy (2011). MODA, Fondazione Morra Greco, Napoli, Italy (2011); Robert Kusmirowski 1939 - 2009, Polnisches Institut, Berlin, Germany (2009); Bunk, The Barbican Center, London, UK (2009); and After Nature, New Museum , New York, NY USA (2008).

Olaf Nicolai was born in 1962 in Germany. Since 1997 he has developed a wide variety of interdisciplinary projects through his examination of art, nature, music, the body, time and space. He has been awarded a number of prizes and grants, including the Villa Aurora Award (2009) and the Art Award Wolfsburg (2002). Recent exhibitions include: Busan Biennale, 2012; Escalier du Chant, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich (2011); Blink!, Denver Art Museum, Denver (2011); The New Décor, Hayward Gallery, London (2010); faites le travail qu’accomplit le soleil, Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover (2010); Journeys with no Return, Istanbul Biennal (2009); Samani. Some Proposals to Answer Important Questions, Royal Academy of Arts, London (2008); Destroy Athens, 1st Athens Biennial, Athens (2007); 51st Biennale di Venezia, Venice (2005); and 4th Gwangju Biennale, Korea (2002).

Valentin Ruhry was born in Austria in 1982. He perceives himself as a sculptor as well as a researcher or scientist, and his creations are often inspired by technological achievements. Recent exhibitions include: False Universalisms, Christine König Galerie, Vienna (2012); All Work No Play, Austrian Cultural Forum, London (2012); Gute Aussichten, Moscow Biennale, Moscow (2011); Bosch Young Talent Show, Stedelijk Museum, den Bosch (2011); Nothing is wrong if it feels good, Mike Potter Projects, Cologne (2010); Art Forum Berlin, Berlin (2009); Project(or), Project(or), Rotterdam (2008); and The Essence 2006, MAK, Vienna (2006). Ruhry lives and works in Vienna.

Nasan Tur was born in 1974, in Offenbach, Germany. He engages with the social and political ideologies encoded in everyday life, making use of various media including video, photography, performance, sculpture and installations. Tur has won a number of awards, most recently the Will Grohmann Artprize – Akademie der Kunste, Berlin (2012). Recent exhibitions include: Rethinking Modernity, Istanbul Modern Museum, Istanbul, Turkey, (2013);Farbe bekennen, MARTa Museum, Herford (2013); A Gathering, Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki (2012); Languages of Revolution, Kleine Humboldt Galerie, Berlin (2012); Nasan Tur, Kunsthalle Mannheim, Mannheim (2011); Cities and Thinks That Matter, Lombard Freid Projects, New York (2011); Berliner Zimmer, MNAC – National Museum of Contemporary Art Bucharest (2011); Bollwerk gegen den Osten, permanent installation in public space, Graz (2011); Frischzelle, Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, Stuttgart (2009); and Komunismus Soziallismus Kapietalismus, TANAS, Berlin (2008).

Sislej Xhafa was born in Peja, Kosova in 1970, and now lives and works in New York. Xhafa is known for his artistic investigations into the social, economical, and political realities associated with the various complexities of modern society. Recent exhibitions include: Sislej Xhafa NON Unplugged 2012, NON Istanbul (2012); Sislej Xhafa, from naples to Toronto, Museo MADRE, Naples (2011); oblique motionless, Christine Konig Galerie, Vienna (2011); The World Belongs to You, Palazzo Grassi, Pinault Foundation, Venice (2011); Indefinite Destinations, DEPO Istanbul (2010); Transmission Interrupted, Modern Art Oxford, Oxford (2009); Moulin Rouge, Magazzino d’Arte Moderna, Rome (2009); Gwangju Biennale, Korea (2008); and worlds on video, Palazzo Strozzi, Florence (2008).

Image:

Sislej Xhafa

Rocket Ship, 2011, Wheelbarrow, blue light strings 60 x 150 x 65 cm

Courtesy GALLERIA CONTINUA, San Gimignano/Beijing/Le Moulin

Private View: 10th April 6–8pm

Blain|Southern
4 Hanover Square London W1S 1BP
Hours:
Monday to Friday: 10.00 – 18.00
Saturday: 10.00 – 17.00
Admission free

Tell Me Whom You Haunt
dal 10/4/2013 al 18/5/2013

Fonte: www.undo.net

Segnala:
Amalia di Lanno