To navigate, in a genuine way, in the unknown...The exhibition spans over 16 years of his work and features 5 of the artist's film installations, several photographic series, and video-based works. With a research-intensive approach, Koester traces forgotten journeys and narratives, obscure phenomena, altered forms of consciousness, the history of occult movements, and the legacy of social experimentation.
curated by João Ribas
April, 2012 (Cambridge, MA)—The MIT List Visual Arts Center presents the first major U.S. museum
exhibition survey of Danish-born, New York-based artist Joachim Koester. Koester’s work explores history,
perception, consciousness, and the body through photography and film. The artist’s interest lies in the limits of
rationality and the area of “what can be told and what cannot be told.” With a research-intensive approach,
Koester traces forgotten journeys and narratives, obscure phenomena, altered forms of consciousness, the
history of occult movements, and the legacy of social experimentation. The exhibition spans over sixteen years
of Koester’s work and features five of the artist’s film installations, several photographic series, and video-
based works.
In Koester’s 16mm film Tarantism, 2008, a group of professional dancers enacts an ecstatic dance of
uncontrolled and compulsive movement that according to folklore, could ward off symptoms caused by the
poisonous tarantula’s bite. In Message from Andrée, 2005, Koester traces the journey of Salomon August
Andrée, a Swedish polar researcher and adventurer who perished in a failed attempt to reach the geographic
North Pole by hydrogen balloon. Several decades later, when the remains of the expedition were found, a
series of photographic negatives taken during the three-month journey through the ice were discovered, which
Koester re-photographed to create his film. For I myself am only a receiving apparatus, 2010, Koester staged
and filmed a performance in the reconstruction of Kurt Schwitters’s famed Merzbau, 1923-1937, the physical
movements of the performer suggested by the semi-abstract surfaces of the architecture. In To navigate, in a
genuine way, in the unknown necessitates an attitude of daring, but not one of recklessness (movements
generated from the Magical Passes of Carlos Castaneda), 2009, an actor performs the exercises described by
the anthropologist Carlos Castaneda in his 1989 book Magical Passes. According to Castaneda, these were
secret shamanic gestures meant to enhance one’s ability to navigate “the dark sea of awareness.” Koester’s
film work Variations of Incomplete Open Cubes, 2011, presents a choreography of Sol LeWitt’s eponymous
variations performed through gestures. For Numerous Incidents of Indefinite Outcome, 2011, the words of cult
horror writer H.P Lovecraft become source material for a computer based program that randomly generates
new word groupings and possible narratives.
The two-channel video One + One + One, 2006, visits a house in Cefalù, Sicily, that once served as a
communal home for the occultist Aleister Crowley and his group of followers known as the Abbey of Thelema.
The exhibition also features Koester’s series of photographs Morning of the Magicians, 2005, which depicts the
murals and interior of the crumbling, now abandoned villa.
Koester’s conceptual and experimental approach is further revealed in other photographic works that expand
conceptions of historical, narrative, and perceptual time. In The Kant Walks, 2005, Koester recreates the daily
stroll of philosopher Immanuel Kant through his native Königsberg in photographs and texts, while retelling
anecdotes of the nightmares that haunted the aging philosopher. Another historically based work, Magic Mirror
of John Dee, 2006, references 16th century scientist John Dee’s attempts to communicate with the dead, a
document of a time when science and magic were intertwined.
In his early series of twelve photographs Day for Night, Christiana, 1996, Koester uses the technique
cinematographers use to film night scenes in daylight, in order to present the Danish commune Christiania—a
17th century military base repurposed in the 1970s—through an artificial blue haze. Other photographic works
in the exhibition include a depiction of the Barker Ranch, the home of Charles Manson and his followers from
1968-69 until their arrest for the gruesome Tate LaBianca murders; and From the Secret Garden of Sleep,
2008, a depiction of several strains of home-grown cannabis, “consciousness, for better or worse, engraved in
the very flesh of the plant, as a consequence of desire, politics, and legislation.”
Joachim Koester: To navigate, in a genuine way, in the unknown...is curated by João Ribas, Curator, MIT List
Visual Arts Center.
Support for Joachim Koester: To navigate, in a genuine way, in the unknown... has been generously provided
by the Danish Arts Council Committee for International Visual Art; the Royal Danish Embassy; Greene Naftali
Gallery; the Consulate General of Denmark, New York; the Council for the Arts at MIT; the Massachusetts
Cultural Council; and the Office of the Associate Provost at MIT, with special thanks to the MIT List Visual Arts
Center Advisory Committee and the Friends of the List.
About the Artist
Joachim Koester was born in 1962 in Copenhagen, Denmark, and studied at the Royal Danish Academy of
Art. Koester has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions worldwide including at the Palais de Tokyo,
Paris; Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporaneo, Mexico City; The Power Plant, Toronto; Moderna Museet,
Stockholm; Extra City, Antwerp; Lund Kunsthall, Lund, Sweden; and Kunst-Werke, Berlin. His work has been
featured in numerous group exhibitions, including Altermodern, Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, London (2009)
Gwangju Biennale (1995), Manifesta 7 (2008) and Documenta X, Kassel (1997). Koester represented the
Danish Pavilion at the Venice Biennial in 2005. His work is included in various public collections, including the
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), Museum of Modern Art (New York), S.M.A.K (Ghent), The National
Gallery of Denmark (Copenhagen), and Moderna Museet (Stockholm).
About the MIT List Visual Arts Center
In 1950 MIT established the Hayden Gallery which was located in the Charles Hayden Memorial Library. The
gallery served as a venue for a program of changing exhibitions. In 1985 the Hayden Gallery was renamed the
List Visual Arts Center in recognition of a gift from Vera and Albert List that relocated the gallery to its current
location on the ground floor of the Wiesner Building.
Over the years the MIT List Visual Arts Center has become highly respected as one of the most significant
university art galleries in the country for its innovative, provocative, and scholarly exhibitions and publications.
Just as MIT pushes at the frontiers of scientific inquiry, it is the mission of the List Visual Arts Center to explore
challenging, intellectually inquisitive, contemporary art making in all media. In addition to presenting 4-6
exhibitions annually, the List Center presents a broad arrange of education programs in conjunction with its
exhibition programming. The Center maintains and adds to MIT’s permanent collection of 3,500 artworks that
includes dozens of publicly sited sculptures and hundreds of paintings, prints, photographs, drawings and
sculptures located throughout MIT’s campus. The List Center is also responsible for commissioning new works
for the MIT Public Art Collection through the MIT Percent-for-Art program, and organizing and administering
the Student Loan Art Program, which lends over 500 works of art annually to MIT undergraduate and graduate
students.
Image: Tarantism, 2008, 16mm b&w film loop, 6:31
Press Contact
Mark Linga - Public Relations Officer MIT List Visual Arts Center
617 452 3586 Telephone mlinga@mit.edu
Opening Reception: Wednesday, May 9, 6-8PM
Reception preceded by conversation with Joachim Koester and List Center curator João Ribas 5:30-6:30PM, Bartos Theatre
MIT List Visual Arts Center
20 Ames Street Building E15 - Cambridge, Massachusetts
Gallery Hours: Tues-Wed: 12-6PM; Fri-Sun: 12-6PM; Thurs: 12-8PM; closed Mondays and major holidays.
Admission free