Let's Make the Water Turn Black. His artistic practice integrates forms of collecting and scholarship employed by cultural historians, and draws on a diverse repertoire. Between 7 and 21 May the public is invited to observe the run-throughs and rehearsals to learn more about the content and technical aspects of the emerging installation.
Curated by Heike Munder, Director, Migros Museum of Contemporary Art
The artistic practice of Geoffrey Farmer (b. Vancouver, 1967; lives and works in Vancouver)
integrates forms of collecting and scholarship employed by cultural historians, and draws
on a diverse repertoire. After extensive research, the artist builds collections that unite aspects of visual art, literature, music, politics, history, and sociology, and crystallize in sprawling theatrical installations. Echoing a 1968 composition by Frank Zappa, from which it also
borrows the title, Farmer’s Let’s Make the Water Turn Black—produced especially for the
Migros Museum of Contemporary Art—presents an improvised chronology of the American
musician. Choreographed sculptures on a stage coalesce into a multifaceted and atmospheric work that unfolds over the course of the day.
Between 7 and 21 May, in the context of Production on Display, the Migros Museum of
Contemporary Art is allowing visitors to have a glimpse of a work in production. During the
opening hours the public is invited to observe the run-throughs and rehearsals to learn
more about the content and technical aspects of the emerging installation.
Farmer’s first Swiss solo exhibition at the Migros Museum of Contemporary Art presents the sculptureplay Let’s Make the Water Turn Black, which is based on the chronology of the American musician
and composer Frank Zappa; the title quotes a piece written by Zappa in 1968. The mechanical performance—an ensemble of computer-controlled sculptures installed on a low platform—interprets and
revisits selected scenes from Zappa’s chronology in a sequence coordinated with the time of day and
the museum’s opening hours. The work journeys Zappa’s life over the course of a day, reaching its
conclusion, his death, with the closing of the museum each day. The individual kinetic objects that make
up the installation simultaneously function as acoustic modules in the overall composition; sound recordings represent individual periods and events in Zappa’s life. Farmer approaches the biography of
his subject with a technique that echoes William S. Burroughs’s method of the cut-up as well as
Zappa’s own principles of avant-garde composition, of mixing and layering diverse acoustic levels
and arranging sonic spectra in kaleidoscope-like ensembles—and shares these artists’ delight in frequent disruptions.
For the sculpture, the artist draws on the influences of Musique concrète on Zappa’s work and
has created a sound library that functions chronologically over the course of the day. Composed of
selected clips, field recordings and archival material, it contributes to the atmosphere of a quasi-theatrical performative moment: an assemblage of “objets trouvés” on a low stage enacts a mechanically propelled choreography while also performing, as though it formed a single instrumental body,
an hours-long cyclical sound installation. However disconcertingly spectral, automaton-like, and
atmospheric this sculptural performance may seem in its invocation of Frank Zappa’s spirit, it rigorously hews to Farmer’s meticulously structured storyline.
In 2013, Geoffrey Farmer contributed his Leaves of Grass (2012) to Documenta 13; in 2011, he participated in the 12th Istanbul Biennial. His work has been on display in numerous solo shows at REDCAT, Los Angeles, the Casey Kaplan Gallery, New York (both 2011), and other venues, as well as the
Witte de With, Rotterdam, and the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal (both 2008). Geoffrey
Farmer’s art was first shown in Switzerland in 2011, when he contributed to the project The Garden of
Forking Paths, initiated by the Migros Museum of Contemporary Art.
Catalogue:
The exhibition will be
accompanied by a monograph
published by JRP|Ringier
in autumn 2013.
The exhibition has been
co-produced by the Migros
Museum of Contemporary Art,
Nottingham Contemporary and
Pérez Art Museum Miami.
Production on Display
May 7–21, 2013
The artistic practice of Geoffrey Farmer
Press contact:
René Müller, head of press and public relations: T +41 44 2772727 rene.mueller@mgb.ch
Opening: May 22, 2013, 6–8pm
Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst
Limmatstrasse 270 - 8005 Zürich
Opening hours
Tue, Wed, Fri 11 am – 6 pm
Thu 11 am – 8 pm
Sat, Sun 10 am – 5 pm
closed on Mondays
closed on December 24, 25 and 31 2012
December 26, 2012 10 am – 5 pm
Maundy Thursday 11 am – 8 pm
Good Friday until Easter Day 10 – 5 pm
Ascension Day, Whit Monday, May 1 10 – 5 pm
Admission
Adults: SFR 12
Reduced: SFR 8
Free admission for pupils and young people under 16 years.
Groups of 10 or more people
Guided tours:
SFR 160 + admission, during our opening hours
SFR 280 + admission, outside our opening hours
The Swiss Museum Pass is not valid at the Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst.