The exhibition Panamarenko Revisited pushes forward the work of one of those visual artists who during the last 50 years appealed most to our imagination. In the sculpture Where is your alibi, Mr Motorway?, Kusai Fudakowski forces her works into a courtroom context.
Panamarenko Revisited
With the exhibition ‘Panamarenko Revisited’ Deweer Gallery pushes forward the work of one of those visual artists who during the last 50 years appealed most to our imagination. Panamarenko is a fixed value in Deweer Gallery’s program. The gallery presents the art of the Antwerp master, who was born in 1940, since 1981. Panamarenko’s first one-man show in Otegem goes back to 1983, today 30 years ago.
Although in 2005, at the occasion of his extensive retrospective exhibition at the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels, Panamarenko decided to stop making art, Deweer Gallery still owns a more than sufficient number of pieces to build a fascinating exhibition. ‘Panamarenko Revisited’ contains numerous unique and historical objects, such as the ‘V1 Barada Jet’(1991) and the ‘Arlikoop’(2004), some exceptionally large drawings, as well as the multiples Deweer Gallery has edited with Panamarenko in the course of the years past.
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Kasia Fudakowski - Where is your alibi, Mr. Motorway?
Kasia Fudakowski’s sculptural practice provides a totally independent view of artistic production in a social context. Both her sculptures, which often hover somewhere between figurative and abstract, and her sculptural practice-related performances and videos refer to her interest in the theory and philosophy of humour. Fudakowski focuses on the immediate, tense relationship between artist and audience, on patterns of expectation, representational ideals, theatricality, and the interpretation of objects as identities. Her fascination for the tremendous critical potential for humour as a comment on human failure, especially when it comes to social systems, is a crucial feature.
In ‘Where is your alibi, Mr Motorway?’, Fudakowski’s first solo show in Belgium, the artist forces her works into a courtroom context. In a statement referring to the new work, Fudakowski says: “…mixing modern international criminal justice and more medieval, village-orientated forms of assessment, the theatre of the courtroom drama is merged with the in-between-televised-boredom of international tribunals. One object is standing trial.
The sculpture, formally known as G.S.O.H. henceforth to be referred to as 'Mr Motorway', is the defendant. He is the only previously existing work to be brought into the space, and he spins upon a turning podium, his thin little arm, pathetically pointing to everything else around him. Amongst other things he points to the evidence cabinet, which hangs somewhere between wall and ceiling, displaying ‘evidence’ which seems decidedly homemade…
He points to the medieval-style line-up table. A wonky looking leggy construction with a collection of veneered faces, that warp anthropomorphically out of the knots and cuts in the wood. He points to the imposing courtroom architecture, the quickly assembled benches; boxlike, rigid and always wood. His arm sweeps on, above the salt-dough that hangs from the barriers, stuck together with fiddled fingers, and marked with traces of public boredom (names and curses scratched into the wood). And all the while he spins, the soundtrack/transcript of the show/trial seeps relentlessly out of the black room.
A film establishing the laws of the land using stumbling animation, fumbling audio and momentary flashes of visual evidence fills the screen. Here the horror emerges from the comic. A system of sentencing based on evidence moulded from salt dough, justice on the basis of sporadic knots in wood, a jury of extras picked from the gathering crowd, a legal system based only on local precedents, judgment as a public's ‘series finale’ gift to itself…. The danger is that the system might well fail the system itself.”
Kasia Fudakowski was born in London, UK, in 1985. She lives and works in Berlin, Germany. She has had solo presentations at Chert Gallery and Zak/Branicka Gallery, Berlin, at Artpol in Cracau, Poland, at Villa Tokyo in Japan and most recently at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin. She has taken part in group shows including the Zacheta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Johann König Gallery, Berlin, Isabella Bortolozzi Galerie, Berlin and Frieze art fair, London. She participated in “Based in Berlin’ curated by Kulturprojekte, Berlin, in “Petrosphere” at ReMap3 in Athens, in the “II Sculpture Biennale” in Warsaw, as well as in “Die Kleine Improvisation” at the Stadtgalerie in Kiel.
Vernissage 16 March 2013 / 15:00 - 18:00
Deweer Gallery
Tiegemstraat 6A
8553 Otegem Belgium
Hours: We., Thu., Fr. & Su., 14:00 - 18:00
Free Admission