John Bock
Rodney Graham
Wilfredo Prieto
Timm Ulrichs
Fischli/Weiss
Bruce Nauman
Francis Alysl
Charlie Chaplin
Buster Keaton
Harold Lloyd
Laurel & Hardy
Alys, Bock, Chaplin, Hein, Laurel & Hardy, Keaton, Matta-Clark etc. The exhibition humorously places works by contemporary artists in the context of silent slapstick movies from the early days of the history of cinema, tracing in the process the characteristics of slapstick to the art of the present day.
The exhibition in the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg humorously places works by contemporary
artists in the context of silent slapstick movies from the early days of the history of cinema,
tracing in the process the characteristics of slapstick to the art of the present day. Objects,
installations, photographs and films by such artists as John Bock, Rodney Graham, Wilfredo Prieto, Timm Ulrichs, Fischli/Weiss, Bruce Nauman and Francis Alÿs are combined in
an informal exhibition parcours with selected key sequences from famed silent movie classics
by Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd and Laurel & Hardy.
The pitfalls of banana peels, pie fights, brawls and wild chases, but also the small vagaries of
everyday life and the battle between mankind and the machine are famed slapstick stunts.
Contemporary artists are hot on the heels of the great comic masters, regularly taking up
slapstick’s cultural codes, quoting them, translating them into their own modes of expression
and borrowing motifs and concepts.
Even now, a century after his first film, the sight of Charlie Chaplin scurrying down a street
dressed as “The Little Tramp” in his world-famous oversized shoes, bowler hat and cane still
brings a smile to the faces of all ages. Likewise unforgettable is the consistently stoic, deadpan expression of Buster Keaton, “The Human Mop,” Harold Lloyd hanging in daredevil fa-
shion from the hands of a clock high above the street as well as the never-ending quarrels
between Laurel & Hardy. With their art of humorous failure, these pioneers of slapstick from
the days of silent movies and the early “talkies” created a kind of self-ironic comedy whose
devices are just as current today as they were then.
The slapstick is a simple theatrical prop, a club-like object that makes a loud smacking sound,
and the name for a whole genre developed from it. The exhibition not only reveals such characteristics of slapstick as physical comedy, the loss of balance and control, chain reactions
and repetitive motifs but also exposes them as methods of contemporary artistic practice.
The history of slapstick can thus be traced from sixteenth-century Commedia dell’arte to
vaudeville and the early slapstick movies from the twentieth century, when American production companies attained the services of former vaudeville actors for their films. Chaplin, Keaton and Laurel themselves come from this theatrical tradition, already appearing on the stage
as children. The physical comedy and quick rhythms already typical of Commedia dell’arte
and vaudeville were thus linked up with the technical possibilities inherent in the editing and
projection of the new medium of film. The heightened comic effect was widely disseminated
through this new medium, fulfilling one of slapstick’s most important prerequisites: a wide
range of signs and actions familiar to a broad audience due to constant repetition. Slapstick
comedy makes use of these visual empirical values and plays with the construction of expectation, deliberate disillusionment and delayed punch lines.
There is thus a method to the supposed chaos. A banana peel lays on a bar of soap that is
in turn embedded in fat: There is surely no more unambiguous symbol for one of slapstick
comedy’s major themes than Wilfredo Prieto’s Grasa, Jabón y Plátano (2006), namely slipping and falling. When Alexej Koschkarow organizes a pie fight with 800 kilos of custard
pies and 30 guests at the Malkasten‘ in Düsseldorf (2003), one is automatically reminded of
the great pie fights of the slapstick era, for example Laurel & Hardy’s Battle of the Century
(1927). When Gordon Matta-Clark hangs from the hands of the clock of the Clocktower Building in Tribeca, New York, and brushes his teeth in his piece Clockshower (1973), he is unmistakably quoting the iconic scene from Harold Lloyd’s movie Safety Last (1923), and
when Steve McQueen stands uninjured in the window opening of a collapsed house wall
(1997), the scene has obviously been modeled after the same situation in Buster Keaton’s
Steamboat Bill Jr. (1928). Fischli/Weiss encounter the famous assembly line scene from
Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times (1936) with a seemingly unending chain reaction in their film
The Way Things Go (1987). In the meantime Charlie Chaplin desperately but relishfully eats
his shoe as if it were a steak and a plate of spaghettis in Gold Rush (1925) while John Bock
for example very grotesquely empties a can of ravioli with a spoon attached to the leg of a
wing chair (2006). The physical comedy of a Buster Keaton finds correspondences in the
photographic and filmic experiments by such artists as Bruce McLean (1971–2011), John
Wood and Paul Harrison (2001) and Bruce Nauman (1968/69). Almost simultaneously with
Nauman, Charlie Chaplin wrote in his 1967 essay “The Roots of My Comedy”: “The basic
element of all comedy is founded on somebody having to act in a ridiculous and embarrassing situation.” Entirely in this sense, Jeppe Hein’s Modified Social Benches (2006–2008)
and Szymon Kobylarz’s Nose Punch Machine (2007) provides the visitor the opportunity of
having his own slapstick-like experience. It is probably better not to try to use The First Sitting Chair by Timm Ulrichs (1970); tired from standing for such a long time, it is now itself
sitting down to rest!
Image: Francis Alÿs, Paradox of Praxis 1 (Sometimes Making Something Leads to Nothing)
Media Conference: Thursday, July 18 at 11.15 a.m. Registration: nschuetze@kunstmuseum-wolfsburg.de
Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg
Hollerplatz 1 - 38440 Wolfsburg
Tuesday - Sunday 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Monday closed
Admission: EUR 8,-
Concessions: EUR 5,-
family ticket: EUR 12,-
annual ticket: EUR 30,-
groups of 12 persons or more: EUR 5,- per person
school parties: several offers by arrangement
guided tours in English and French:
phone +49 (0) 5361 266920