World(k) in Progress? This retrospective exhibition consists of 3 parts and is on view in 3 locations: Brussels, Munich, and Bristol. TuerlinckX presents arrangements of sculptures, found objects, display cases, photographs and paper collages, newspaper clippings, and drawings.
Curated by Julienne Lorz
Joëlle Tuerlinckx
WORLD(K) IN PROGRESS?
This retrospective exhibition consists of three parts and is on view in
three locations: Brussels, Munich, and Bristol. Joëlle Tuerlinckx (born
in 1958 in Brussels) presents arrangements of sculptures, found objects,
display cases, photographs and paper collages, newspaper clippings, and
drawings. With them, she quotes the conventions we use to present our
archive material or general knowledge. She recalls, with stones, the
presentation of minerals in natural history museums; she uses compasses
to evoke maritime museums, and, with newspaper clippings, she creates the
impression that these constitute documentary material.
The almost excessive accumulation of material found in some portions of
the exhibition gives the impression of abundance. This occurs, for
example, when Tuerlinckx simultaneously uses different methods to present
her objects, such as plinths, "Petersburg hanging" (a style of hanging
many paintings close together, so that they nearly completely cover
walls), and various projections. Yet the arrangements do not result in an
encyclopedic, historical, or analytical whole. Combined with paper
circles, drawings, photographs, or individual cutout letters, the result
is, rather, a purely associative narrative about crossing through spaces
and exploring time intervals.
The retrospective has a different title at each venue: WOR(LD)K IN
PROGRESS? in Brussels, WORLD(K) IN PROGRESS? in Munich, and WOR(L)D(K) IN
PROGRESS? in Bristol. Each title expresses the show's specific focus at
that location: Progress regarding work, worldliness, and language, and
doubts about this progress. At Haus der Kunst, the emphasis is on the
work presented in her first exhibitions, including one at Witte de With
in 1994. Tuerlinckx reactivates earlier works and provides them with new
constellations. In the stairwell, for instance, she creates a mural out
of pencil hatchings first presented in 2004 in the Badischer Kunstverein,
Karlsruhe ("Espace barré").
The fact that the exhibition changes from venue to venue corresponds to
Tuerlinckx's concept. "When I am offered an exhibition space, it is as if
I have received a kind of parcel, a packet of air," says the artist,
describing her approach. Tuerlinckx's exhibitions are descriptions of how
an empty space changes when it houses her works and allow the viewers to
participate in this process. Comparable to a literary manuscript, in
which the author's handwriting and corrections gradually fill the blank
pages and provide information on the process of writing, Tuerlinckx fills
the empty space with her artistic vocabulary. She acknowledges that
exhibition spaces vary from institution to institution.
All attempts to make sense of something in a conventional way - through
the title of a series, the selection of newspaper clippings, the way an
object is presented - "only" lead the viewer into a void and shift his or
her perception to the basic conditions of seeing. The exhibition spaces
Tuerlinckx creates thus correspond to Concrete Poetry, in which poems no
longer are about thoughts, moods, events, or formal designs, but rather
depict the reality of the linguistic product itself. Just as the language
of Concrete Poetry represents itself, Tuerlinckx exhibits conventions of
exhibiting.
In an alphabetical glossary that accompanies the exhibition, the artist
explains terms that are centrally important to the show. Unlike those in
a dictionary, the definitions here do not aim for accuracy. Tuerlinckx
stretches, for example, the meaning of a keyword like "exposition /
exhibition" so far that it includes the condition of human existence: "an
exhibition is, first and foremost, an experience of space - space
composed, perhaps, of objects of space - that proposes action, or
reaction, as a means of reflection, of thinking our human condition." The
entry for "Rien / Nichts" (Nothing) is: "what there is when there is
nothing left. from a to a, including b, including what we imagine a to
be." Only concerning its alphabetical order does the "lexicon" do what we
expect a dictionary to do. The usual system of academic instrumentation
is not employed here. In its place is a poetic quality. This approach is
similar to that of pataphysics and its senseless parodies of scientific
methods. At the same time, it stands in the tradition of artists such as
Marcel Duchamp and Marcel Broodthaers, who also investigated the
mechanisms of looking at art.
Joëlle Tuerlinckx has exhibited her works internationally at the Reina
Sofia, Crystal Palace, Madrid (2009), MAMCO in Geneva (2007), The Drawing
Center, New York (2006), and The Power Plant, Toronto (2005), as well as
other venues. She gained recognition in Germany through her participation
in documenta 11 (2002).
Following its presentation in Haus der Kunst, the exhibition will be on
view in the Arnolfini in Bristol from 07.12.2013 to 09.02.2014. Curators
are Dirk Snauwaert (Wiels, Brussels), Julienne Lorz (Haus der Kunst), Tom
Trevor and Axel Wieder (Arnolfini). The catalogue is published by Walther
König and includes essays by Julienne Lorz, Catherine Mayeur, Dirk
Snauwaert, Tom Trevor, and Joëlle Tuerlinckx.
Press Viewing Friday, June 7, 2013, 11 am
Haus der Kunst
Prinzregentenstrasse 1, Munich
+ 49 8921127113
+ 49 8921127157
http://www.hausderkunst.de
mail@hausderkunst.de
Admission free