Saâdane Afif
Jesse Ash
Nina Beier
Marie Lund
Francesco Pedraglio
Ruth Buchanan
Cabinet Gold van d'Vlies
Kajsa Dahlberg
Jacob Dahl Jurgensen
Ryan Gander
Alexander Gutke
Kitty Kraus
Karolin Meunier
Albrecht Schafer
Norbert Schwontkowski
Kathrin Sonntag
Mark Wallinger
Lawrence Weiner
Yvonne Bialek
Janneke de Vries
The exhibition presents contemporary artistic positions that are devoted in different ways to the interaction between language and visual appearance: positions that delve into the visual qualities of words or the descriptive level that opens up behind appearance. Works by Saadane Afif, Francesco Pedraglio, Lawrence Weiner, Ryan Gander and many more.
Curated by Yvonne Bialek and Janneke de Vries
Saâdane Afif, Jesse Ash, Nina Beier und Marie Lund und Francesco Pedraglio, Ruth Buchanan,
Cabinet Gold van d’Vlies, Kajsa Dahlberg, Jacob Dahl Jürgensen, Ryan Gander, Alexander Gutke,
Kitty Kraus, Karolin Meunier, Albrecht Schäfer, Norbert Schwontkowski, Kathrin Sonntag, Mark
Wallinger, Lawrence Weiner
The intersections of language and image determine our notion of the world. A fundamental means of
capturing the visual is to articulate it through words in speech and writing, in description and
analysis. Language, in turn, can have effects on the realm of the visual, by allowing latent images to
emerge which are put into form by artists. Accordingly, visual appearance and
designation/description influence each other reciprocally, have a fundamental effect on each other.
As outlined by Jacques Rancière in The Future of the Image, „the image is not exclusively an element
of the visible. (...) the commonest regime of the image is one that presents a relationship between the
sayable and the visible, a relationship which plays on both the analogy and the dissemblance
between them“. 1
Incorporating this, Beyond Words presents contemporary artistic positions that are devoted in
different ways to the interaction between language and visual appearance: positions that delve into
the visual qualities of words or the descriptive level that opens up behind appearance. Positions that
show what lies „beyond words“. Positions, too, that highlight the discrepancy which might emerge
between the two areas, the visible and that which is said/written – after all, „visual representations“
are characterised „by a merely incomplete or limited capacity of verbal description“. 2 One succinct
example of the artistic treatment of these connections is offered by American conceptual artist
Joseph Kosuth, who, in his One and three chairs from 1965, set up a chair as a real object, its
photographic reproduction and its description, fixed in writing, each beside the other on an equal
footing: a thing in different versions, but always itself.
Another american conceptual artist provides the historical reference in Beyond Words: Lawrence
Weiner, whose large inscription has dominated the appearance of the exterior of the GAK facing the
Weser since 1991: „HAVING BEEN BUILT ON SAND / WITH ANOTHER BASE (BASIS) IN FACT // AUF SAND
GEBAUT / TATSÄCHLICH (AUS) AUF ANDEREM GRUND.“ A sentence/image that refers in a lyrical way to
the fact that the GAK is build on a sandy ground and, at the same time, points out the mental
potential of art. Inside the institution a number of works are grouped together in which words have
given risen to images (Jesse Ash, Jacob Dahl Jürgensen, Ryan Gander, Albrecht Schäfer, Mark
Wallinger), or in which words form images and sculptures (Kajsa Dahlberg, Alexander Gutke, Kitty
Kraus, Karolin Meunier, Norbert Schwontkowski), while other merge words and images together into a
universal language (Saâdane Afif), trace the way how words can form reality (Kathrin Sonntag) or stage
a to-and-fro between the different levels of visual appearance and language (Ruth Buchanan, Nina
Beier and Marie Lund and Francesco Pedraglio, Cabinet Gold van d’Vlies). At times linguistic theories
are an important point of departure for several artists (Gander, Dahl Jürgensen, Meunier). Some works
were delevoped in close involvement with the GAK’s space and the theme of the exhibition (Ash,
Schwontkowski, Cabinet Gold van d’Vlies).
The exhibition will be accompanied by a multifaceted program of readings, performances, film
screenings and lectures.
Beyond Words is paralleled by the presentation of the ars-viva award winners on the topic of
„language“ at Weserburg I Museum für moderne Kunst. In this way, both neighbour institutions
simultaneously explore the interaction of art and language, figure and word.
1 Jacques Rancière, The Future of the Image, 2003, pp. 6-7.
2 Martina Heßler, Dieter Mersch, “Bildlogik oder Was heißt visuelles Denken?” in: ibid. (ed.), Logik des Bildlichen. Zur Kritik der ikonischen Vernunft, Bielefeld 2009, p. 8. Excerpt translated from the German.
Image: Albrecht Schäfer
IHRE ANORDNUNG
BESTIMMTE
DIESE BÄUME,
BEI LEBENSZEITEN
TOTHOLZ
ZU SCHAFFEN.
IHRE ANORDNUNG,
BEI LEBZEITEN
TOTHOLZ
ZU SCHAFFEN,
BESTIMMTE
DIESE BÄUME ...
2011
Kiefernholz, Faden
Maße variabel
Courtesy Joanna Kamm
For further information please get in touch with
Yvonne Bialek, presse@gak-bremen.de, T. +49 421-500897.
Press conference:Friday, 22 June, 11 a.m. (in conjunction with the press conference of ars-viva. Sprache at Weserburg I Museum für moderne Kunst at 12.30 a.m.)
Opening: Friday, 22 June, 7 p.m. (8 p.m.: opening of ars-viva. Sprache at Weserburg I Museum für moderne Kunst, 10 p.m.: Party of GAK and Museum at the Weserburg-Restaurant)
GAK Gesellschaft fur Aktuelle Kunst
Teerhof 21 - D-28199 Bremen
Tue - Sun 11 am- 6 pm
Thur to 9 pm