Absalon
Samuel Beckett
Pierre Bismuth
Maze de Boer
Tania Bruguera
Jasper Coppes
León Ferrari
Sara van der Heide
Jenny Holzer
Geert Jan Jansen
Luciana Lamothe
Monika Sosnowska
Marie Frampier
Natasha Ginwala
Jacob Korczynski
Javier Villa
Rieke Vos
Vivian Ziherl
The exhibition explores the materiality of paranoia through art works that draw upon vocabularies of aggression and potentiality - playing upon the suspicions of visitors. Internal struggles are made present by way of labyrinths that disorient and proceed to build an inescapable void. Acts of obsession and sabotage become means of resistance in a time of societal impasse. A project by the Curatorial Programme 10/11 de Appel Jongensschool.
Fluiten in het Donker - project by the Curatorial Programme 10/11 de Appel Jongensschool
You whistle – and ask, am I alone in here?
A whistle emanates from the gut, proceeding to circulate beyond the body, as an absent presence that is felt rather than seen. Whistling in the dark — a nonchalant gesture set within an anxious environment; to summon your courage in the face of projected danger. In the Netherlands, we find ourselves placed at a critical juncture. Much has been said on the rise of nationalist sentiments and populism, the economic down-turn, Islamophobia and an entrenched identity crisis. Yet the mental impact of this social upheaval remains concealed beneath a rationalist impulse.
We seem to be moving from a post-9/11 culture of fear toward an ambit of collective paranoia. As the known grows unfamiliar, allegations and accusations masquerade as reason. Anxieties give way to perpetual vigilance. Unlike fear, paranoia becomes a destructive plot that turns against itself. It remains diffused, conflated and replicated - under the skin.
We talk compulsively to hide uneasy silences, we whistle to posture ourselves whilst facing an all-encompassing darkness – an everyday that is a minefield of paradoxes. Fluiten in het Donker sets out to confront these phantoms of uncertainty, to give bodies to the voices in our heads – a Beckettian struggle - to see the inability to see.
Fluiten in het Donker is an exhibition ‘out of sync.’ Rather than creating a narrative trajectory, de Appel Boys School emerges as a total occupation – disturbed and disturbing. The exhibition explores the materiality of paranoia through art works that draw upon vocabularies of aggression and potentiality - playing upon the suspicions of visitors. Internal struggles are made present by way of labyrinths that disorient and proceed to build an inescapable void. Acts of obsession and sabotage become means of resistance in a time of societal impasse.
Artists: Absalon, Samuel Beckett, Pierre Bismuth, Maze de Boer, Tania Bruguera, Jasper Coppes, León Ferrari, Sara van der Heide, Jenny Holzer, Geert Jan Jansen, Luciana Lamothe, Monika Sosnowska
Curators: de Appel Curatorial Programme 2010/11: Marie Frampier, Natasha Ginwala, Jacob Korczynski, Javier Villa, Rieke Vos, Vivian Ziherl
Events
13 May 2011, 8:30-9:30 PM, DNA Spray Demonstration by SDNA at Trouw/de Verdieping, Wibautstraat 27, Amsterdam, as part of an evening of events on the occasion of Art in Amsterdam (Entry: 7.50 Euro)
14 May 2011, 5-8 PM, Prelude - Fluiten in het Donker at de Appel Boys’ School
26 June 2011, Sunday School & Book Launch at de Appel Boys’ School
(Additional events will be announced on the website and on Facebook)
To place orders for our exhibition publication in advance please contact bookshop@deappel.nl
For press enquiries please contact: Natasha Ginwala (nginwala[at]gmail.com) or Rieke Vos (riekevos[at]gmail.com)/ Become friends with ‘Fluiten-in het Donker’ on Facebook
The project Fluiten in het Donker by de Appel Curatorial Programme 2010/2011, is supported by SKOR| Foundation for Art and Public Domain in the framework of the institutional alliance between SKOR and de Appel. Made possible with the generous support of the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts (AFK).
Opening: Friday 20 May, 6–9 pm
De Appel Boys' School
Eerste Jacob van Campenstraat, 59 - Amsterdam
HOURS: Tue–Sun from 11 am to 6 pm