Roll cosies. After the Venice Biennale Yang now presents five cash register rolls, covered with neatly crocheted cosies. Everyday objects, mostly industrially fabricated items, often become a starting point for Yang to contemplate our immediate environment.
At the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009, Haegue Yang (born in Seoul in 1971) caused quite a stir with two
simultaneous, yet separate presentations. As part of the international exhibition, “Fare Mondi” by Daniel
Birnbaum, in the Arsenale, Yang showed seven sculptures constituting Series of Vulnerable Arrangements
– Domestics of Community – an installation comprising clothing and shoe racks draped with opulent
cascades of electric cables combined with various objects and light bulbs. Presented at the same time, in
the Korean Pavilion in the Giardini, were three new installations under the exhibition title Condensation,
including Voice and Wind, a large-scale installation consisting of Venetian blinds surrounded by eight
scent emitters and six fans, which subtly set the slats of the blinds in motion at different intervals, lending
the interior of the pavilion an atmosphere of sensorial abstraction.
Under the title of Roll Cosies at the Kunsthalle Marcel Duchamp, Yang now presents five cash register rolls,
covered with neatly crocheted cosies. Everyday objects, mostly industrially fabricated items, often become
a starting point for Yang to contemplate our immediate environment. However, the viewer’s subjective
perception of it in a specific space plays an equally important role. Making a handmade cosy for such an
ordinary consumer item is an unexpectedly affectionate gesture, like the tea cosies that grandmother used
to make. At the same time, it is an obscure gesture: Are the Roll Cosies supposed to keep the figures warm
that are yet to be burned on thermal paper? Would such figures refer simply to food supplies, or would
they reflect her own artistic success? But the warmly clad rolls of paper are still unused, entirely virginal,
in fact. Roll Cosies seems, instead, to deal with rather the pure, the unspoiled ‘skin’, which protects the
immaculate und the innocent against the vagaries of modern everyday life – against marking, lettering,
tattooing, against scratches and scrapes, against hard knocks and dents. The cosies keep the new new and
the untouched untouched. Lovingly crocheted in wool, these Roll Cosies represent a protective enclosure
of consumeristic products, which usually have a short and non-recyclable life, but which now maintain
their unusual potentiality and become profoundly inefficient.
Moreover, in the context of Marcel Duchamp – whose spirit forever pervades our institution – Roll Cosies
is a wonderful reference to his famous À bruit secret (With Hidden Noise) of 1916, a work comprising a
ball of twine pressed between two iron plates screwed together and containing, in the hollow space of the
ball of twine, an unknown object placed there by Duchamp’s friend Walter Arensberg. If one takes hold of
the work, one can hear the object but not see it! Haegue Yang’s Roll Cosies seem to enclose a similar bruit
secret, perhaps all the possible roles the work is supposed to perform. These are curious thoughts which
arise, when we gaze through the peepholes at the Roll Cosies in our Kunsthalle, the tiniest museum in the
world, as they tower against the impressive background of the Alps.
Kunsthalle Marcel Duchamp
Quai de l'Independance / Place d'Armes - Cully
opening times: 24/24 from mondays to sundays