A Kassen
Philip Aguirre y Otegui
Kader Attia
Kenneth A. Balfelt
Olaf Breuning
Mie Morkeberg
Otobong Nkanga
George Osodi
Pascale Marthine Tayou
Wooloo
Charlotte Bagger Brandt
Koyo Kouoh
Part of My World Images
Artists: A Kassen, Philip Aguirre y Otegui, Kader Attia, Kenneth A. Balfelt, Olaf Breuning, Mie
Mørkeberg, Otobong Nkanga, George Osodi, Pascale Marthine Tayou and Wooloo
Curators: Charlotte Bagger Brandt and Koyo Kouoh
Part of My World IMAGES, a festival organised by the Danish Center for Culture and
Development (DCCD)
The exhibition Make Yourself at Home features ten artists and artists’ groups from around
the world, all of whom present works that address the notion of hospitality. The contemporary
world is characterised by the constant movement and displacement of people, but also by
the increased unwillingness of countries to welcome migrants. Make Yourself at Home looks
at how artists interpret the concepts of home and hospitality in a globalised world, and
includes works – many made especially for the occasion – that explore issues of hospitality
at the individual, institutional or national level, and which touch on themes of human
migration, colonial heritage and international conflict.
Denmark has always prided itself on its ideal of ‘hygge’ (‘cosy living’), but it also reflects the
changes in international relations in the wake of 9/11, which have undermined the perception
of the safety of the home, and have made countries less open to receive foreign guests. The
ambiguity and unease that can underlie the ideals of home and hospitality have long been
analysed by thinkers, and Derrida describes the expression ‘make yourself at home’ as a
self-limiting invitation: please feel at home, but remember that this is not your place and that
you should respect my rules. The complex and sometimes double-edged nature of hospitality
informs all of the works in Make Yourself at Home.
One of the most common gestures of hospitality is the act of sharing food with others, and
this is evoked in Endless Döner, a work by Danish artists’ group A Kassen. The piece is
situated in Runddelens Kebab, one of the many kebab shops that can be found in the
Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, and consists of a kebab loaf in the shape of Endless
Column, the celebrated Brancusi sculpture. The piece was inspired by Brancusi’s own
sources – Romanian folk art – and returns the modernist artist’s work to its popular roots. A
Kassen are also represented by a new piece which intervenes into the architecture of
Kunsthal Charlottenborg: the artists have removed some of the glass panels which normally
screen the attic from the galleries, thereby allowing the visitor to see parts of the house that
are normally hidden.
The Belgian artist Philip Aguirre y Otegui has always had an interest in migration. The artist
was born of a father who fled the Franco regime, and has himself travelled extensively in
Latin America and Africa. One of his works at Kunsthal Charlottenborg is Cambiamos el
Mundo (‘Let’s change the world’), a wall painting which shows a dinner party in full swing,
and which is both an homage to hospitality and a satire on evenings spent changing the
world over a bottle of wine. The artist is also represented by a number of sculptural pieces,
including three different works depicting life-size figures carrying a mattress, water jugs and
plates respectively. These works suggest the artist’s interest in basic human needs, as well
as in the mechanics of displacement and dislocation.
The piece Untitled (Ghardaia), by the French-Algerian artist Kader Attia, is an installation of
couscous moulded into the shape of a city. The architecture is reminiscent of a traditional
building type found in the Mzab valley in the Algerian desert, a style which had a major
influence on Le Corbusier, who visited the region in the 1930s and who was inspired by its
airy and hospitable buildings. The Swiss architect’s theories of social housing went on to
inform buildings around the world, including schemes built by the French in Algeria in the
years before independence. Attia’s reconstruction of this architecture using the North African
staple of couscous – a highly unstable material – is a subtle gesture of reappropriation.
The Danish artist Kenneth A. Balfelt creates what he calls ‘functional art’, works in which art
is used to develop new situations in society, and which have often involved people at the
social margins including the homeless and drug addicts. For this exhibition Balfelt has
worked on facilities for socially vulnerable people in Enghave plads, a square in the
Vesterbro district of Copenhagen. In collaboration with the 'beer drinkers' in the square - and
with the help of local organisations - he is creating a space which the former can share with
so-called ‘normal’ people. The work is an ongoing investigation, and will result in a public
space equipped with furniture and facilities that can be used 24/7.
Another approach to hospitality is visible in the video Home 2, in which the Swiss artist Olaf
Breuning depicts the world tour of a traveller from the West, taking in Japan, Papua New
Guinea and Ghana. The traveller makes absurd efforts to become the ‘other’ that he meets,
in a satire on the western romantic look at non-western societies. Breuning is also
represented in the exhibition by sculptural works, including The Humans, a group of six large
figurative sculptures in marble and bronze that are displayed in the courtyard, and which
represent a satirical account of evolution and primitive life. Breuning often uses a playful
perspective to portray his subjects, yet behind it lies a web of social analysis and multiple
narratives.
In the paintings of Danish artist Mie Mørkeberg the domestic sphere becomes a stage for
uncanny psychological experiences. Home is staged as a Biedermeier set, and evokes
feeling of uncertainty or fear. The starting-point for the new wall painting that the artist has
made at Kunsthal Charlottenborg is an ordinary living room with old-fashioned furniture and
bric-a-brac, but one which contains traces of other worlds. Any place acquires an identity
through performative actions, and in the case of Mørkeberg the imperative to escape
becomes the beginning of something new.
Notions of hospitality are usually associated with people, while material objects are left out,
but the Nigerian artist Otobong Nkanga has a sharp focus on the materiality of life. The
Taste of a Stone, which Nkanga has made for the exhibition, is a work in a number of
chapters. The first chapter centres on a curious stone, and operates as an introduction, while
also suggesting the particular hospitality of places of worship. The other chapters are
represented in five short videos which tell different stories connected with the stone: stories
of love, rejection, fear, submission and dependence. These videos are presented on
monitors scattered within an architectural installation made from wood, glass and marble, a
structure which functions like a brain – a container of memories.
Nigerian photographer George Osodi was invited to stay with three different families in
Denmark, who opened their doors as part of the hospitality network New Life Copenhagen.
The latter was created by the art collective Wooloo to host activists during the UN Climate
Summit in Copenhagen in 2009, and is now an ongoing project. During his stay Osodi made
a photo essay documenting the life of the families that housed him, a work that is realised as
three slide projections. It is still in question whether the artist himself will be allowed to enter
the country a second time for the installation of his work at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, due to
new restrict visa rules implied on people with African background.
The Cameroonian artist Pascale Marthine Tayou has created a new piece for the exhibition,
entitled Home Sweet Home. The work is made up bird houses tied together, and sits on
wooden columns like a fisherman’s home. On the ground the artist has placed a large group
of readymade statues from West African, depicting black figures in the dress of ‘modern’
types such as lawyers and businessman. These statues colons (‘coloniser statues’) go back
to the early C20th, when the most common figure was a white colonial agent in pith helmet.
The installation is a sound piece in disguise, as the birdcages give out the calls of a variety of
local and exotic birds – which the artist describes as the sounds of freedom.
OFF-SITE WORKS
Endless Döner by A Kassen can be seen at Runddelens Kebab, Nørrebrogade 108, 2200
København N, on Saturday 18 September and Saturday 16 October between, 12.00 – 17.00.
A Place for All by Kenneth A. Balfelt is situated on Enghave Plads, 1670 Vesterbro, entrance
from Enghavevej. Open for the public from 3 September. The work will remain at the square
fort he next 7 years.
EVENTS
Make Yourself at Home is accompanied by a range of special events. The programme
includes a variety of films screenings and performances that coincide with the My World
Images festival (3 - 12 September), including a film programme in the Mezzanine curated by
CPH:DOX. Other events include a discussion on the themes of the exhibition, on 8
September, organised by Raaderum – Office for Contemporary Art. Kunsthal Charlottenborg
is also hosting a number of other events this Autumn, including concerts as part of Music &
Art Around (6-31 October); and is participating in Night of Culture (15 October). See separate
press release.
CATALOGUE
Texts by Charlotte Bagger Brandt, Koyo Kouoh, Jacob Alsted, Oumar Ndao and Wambui
Mwangi. 144 pages. Price 100 DKK. Designed by Rasmus Koch Studio.
SUPPORTERS
The exhibition has been generously supported by the Danish Center for Culture and
Development (DCCD), and by the Danish International Visiting Artists Exchange Programme
(DIVA), Culturesfrance, Institut francais, Sølyst Artist in Residency Centre (SAIR) and Pro
Helvetia.
Image: Kader Attia, Conversations Relocated as Reappropriation of the Public Space, 2010. Installation, beer cans, platic bottles, old shoes and wood. Photo credit: Anders Sune Berg
PRESS CONTACT
For further press information contact Helle Bøgelund (Tel 33 36 90 42, Cell 28 15 95 43,
Email helleh@kunsthalcharlottenborg.dk)
PRESS PREVIEW Friday 3 September 11am-2pm
Kunsthal Charlottenborg
Nyhavn 2 DK-1051 København K Denmark
HOURS
Open Tuesday to Friday 12.00 -20.00, Saturday and Sunday 12.00 - 17.00.
Special late night opening on October 15, until 24.00 (Night of Culture).
ADMISSION
Adults: 60 DKK.
Students / seniors: 40 DKK.
Children / youths: free.