Lady/God/Gift. In situ production-action for the fourth phase of Cannibal Domino. With his works, Kendell Geers explores the geographic, linguistic, political, sexual and psychological limits and borders of man. His work connects with the revolutionary spirit of socio-political protests from the late 1960s and is plagued with provocative borrowings of symbols from popular culture like the skull, images culled from porn mags, etc.
With his works, Kendell Geers explores the geographic, linguistic, political, sexual and psychological
limits and borders of man. His work connects with the revolutionary spirit of socio-political protests
from the late 1960s and is plagued with provocative borrowings of symbols from popular culture like
the skull, images culled from porn mags, etc.
He frequently dissects the violence and hypocrisy of the white middle class South African in works
denouncing the apartheid system in South Africa. Despite having experienced it himself first hand,
his installations invite us to adapt our own position to racism, offering choice options and inviting us
to reflect on the decisions adopted, which are later extended to other social conflicts today.
The balance between attraction and repulsion comes with the choice of ethical themes and an
attempt to speak to the sensibility, a feature which, to his way of thinking, has been lost in art today,
which does not raise its sights beyond the material.
The artist takes violence and sexuality and brings them to an extreme point in order to challenge the
spectator. This provocative attitude confronts the public with a series of routine visual codes and
exhibits them with a radicalness that touches the spectator’s nerve of moral principles.
Kendell Geers
May 1968, Johannesburg, South Africa. Lives and works in Brussels
Selected Exhibitions
2009 Kendell Geers Irrespektiv, MART, Museo de Arte Moderno y Contemporáneo de Trento y
Rovereto, Italy
2008 Irrespektiv, MOCA, Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon, France
Irrespektiv, DA2 Domus Artium 2002, Salamanca, Spain
PostPunkPaganPop, Pury & Luxembourg Gallery, Zürich
2007 Kannibale, Galerie Yvon Lambert, Paris
Irrespektiv, BALTIC, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK & Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.),
Gent, Belgium
Auto da fé, BPS22, Charleroi, France
2006 The Word Made Flesh, Stephen Friedman Gallery, London
2005 The Fall, Sorry we’re closed, Brussels
Hung, Drawn and Quartered, Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, USA & Contemporary Art Center,
Cincinnati, USA
2004 Sexus, Cimaise et Portique, Albi, France
The Forest of Suicides, MACRO, Rome, Italy
2003 Kitakyushu Project Gallery, Japan
Terrorealismus, Migros Museum, Zurich
The Prodigal Son, Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
ABOUT PAC 2010
The chosen curator for this edition is Cuauhtémoc Medina. Taking a completely different
tack to Bourriaud, Medina is working with another exhibition format, using one single venue
over a period of 12 months. In it, successive artists will address their individual work based
on the work by the preceding artist at the same venue.
Explaining the implications of this way of working, Medina says “the idea behind the project
has to do with positing an alternative model for an art festival, different from biennials,
museums and site-specific interventions, placing it in a territory of practical continuities and
discontinuities between artists and creative displacements.”
“My starting point is the operation of the game of domino, which is a very widespread
transcultural point of production. Based on games of Chinese dice, it was then taken to
Italy, from where it spread to the new world with the Spanish and Portuguese colonisations,
becoming very popular in Latin America. From a historical viewpoint, it reflects the
migratory route of the game from Cathay to the Caribbean, passing through the European
routes of early capitalism; it is a map of the historical process that led to the modern world.
Furthermore, the ideological use of the so-called “domino effect” brings to mind the terrors
of the Cold War and beyond”.
Speaking about the exhibition DOMINÓ CANÍBAL to be held at Sala Verónicas in Murcia
from January through December 2010, Medina explains that “the domino effect refers to the
chain of historical and argumental moments that define the links between colonisation,
post-colonialism and capitalist globalisation. Following the multicultural debate of the 1980s
and 90s and with the expanded art globalisation, global flows and differences in cultural and
economic integration were defined.” All these implications are explored in the forms of
artistic participation and interaction, more than in terms of any particular thematic directives.
Maintaining the integrity of individual interventions, the format suggested by the curator
advocates a working method in which each artist acts on what has already been made by
the preceding artist, either destroying it, appropriating it or reworking it, setting into motion a
series of dynamics more closely associated with collective practices while underscoring the
idea of process.
PAC MURCIA 2010, organised by the Dept of Culture & Tourism of the Region of Murcia,
will be rounded off by OFF PAC, the programme organised by local art institutions, a
seminar organised in conjunction with CENDEAC and artist-in-residence scholarships in
Berlin and in Mexico City for artists from Murcia.
For further info and other press requests related with this project contact:
Urroz Proyectos
Serrano 162 · 28002 Madrid
Tel. + 34 915648856 info@urrozproyectos.com
http://www.pacmurcia.es/
Conversation 7 July 2010, h 8 pm
CENDEAC
Opening 8 July 2010, h 8 pm Sala Veronicas
Sala Veronicas
Calle Verónicas S/n.
Murcia, 30001
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday 10 am - 2 pm & 5 - 9 pm
Sunday & public holidays 10 am - 2 pm