The old world. Their project is both an elaborate film set and an exhibition in its own right. During the course of the show, a film will be shot using the exhibited sculptures as protagonists, around whom the action evolves.
Galerie Perrotin is pleased to present “THE OLD WORLD”, the first solo
exhibition by the artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset in Hong Kong. From
April 3 until May 3, visitors are invited to view “THE OLD WORLD”,
which is both an elaborate film set and an exhibition in its own right.
During the course of the exhibition, a film will be shot using the exhibited
sculptures as protagonists, around whom the action evolves.
In “THE OLD WORLD”, Elmgreen & Dragset revisit their interest in
the dilemma of European historical identity and cultural heritage in a
contemporary globalized world. What significance do European traditions
have within the new world order? In a humorous and surreal manner,
Elmgreen & Dragset’s sculptural works play with classic European
references in the context of Hong Kong, a former member of the British
Empire, which today is a major financial powerhouse. The artists subtly
transform the spatial features of the gallery’s main room into a stylized
domestic setting, darkened to obtain a faux gothic ambience. The space
shrinks into an otherworldly atmosphere with white sculptures tightly
lit against a black background, as if the entire room and every object
were taken out of a three dimensional black and white photograph.
One of the sculptures, “Unfinished Symphony” (2013), alludes to
Gustav Mahler, whose final composition “Symphony No. 10” remained
unfinished at the time of his death. An oversized and seemingly not yet
completed plaster bust pays homage to the grandeur of the composer
and classical music, but can also be read as a metaphor for the current
cultural crises in what is considered “The Old World”. Has time simplrun out for the epic visions of former times? A series of works presenting
an exaggerated number of antique looking fireplaces placed along the
walls, seems to indicate that the idea of a linear writing of history needs
to be reconsidered. Upon these neoclassical style mantelpieces, one
sees clocks whose hands are standing still. Upon one mantelpiece is
placed a dramatic pile of books that cannot be opened, as they are made
of carved wood and all painted ghostly white. Atop another one of the
fireplaces sits a white miniature of “Powerless Structures, Fig. 101”, the
artists’ Fourth Plinth Commission in London’s Trafalgar Square (2012 -
2013) – a boy astride a rocking horse – hinting at Europe’s vainglorious
equestrian sculpture tradition. Finally the old class system is apparent in
the work “White Maid” (2014), a life-size bronze sculpture painted matte
white and depicting a Caucasian maid, dressed in the classic black and
white maid uniform.
In the adjacent room the central object is “He”, a male counterpart to
Denmark’s national symbol “The Little Mermaid”. “He” (2013) is positioned
gazing out at the panoramic view of Hong Kong’s skyline through the
gallery’s 17th floor window as if this figurative, poetic sculpture longs to
be part of the busy city life happening outside. At the opposite end of
the room is
“
Heritage
”
(2014), a judicial wig, also known as a peruke or
periwig, a British colonial tradition still used in Hong Kong courthouses
today. The wig is displayed on a stand, limp and emptied of its symbolic
meaning when not worn by a judge; taken out of context, its old fashioned,
odd design further pinpoints the ever-changing meaning of power symbols.
All of the works in “THE OLD WORLD“ deal with the monolithic concept
of European history and culture, which the artists have previously examined
through their staging of twisted domestic interiors, most recently in their
exhibition “Tomorrow” at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, 2013
and in “The Collectors” at the 53rd Venice Biennale, 2009. Elmgreen
& Dragset often construct scenarios with a loose narrative thread to be
filled in and completed by the audience. As a visitor to one of Elmgreen
& Dragset’s shows, you often get the feeling that an activity has been
going on prior to your arrival or is just about to happen – and that you as
the audience will play a part in some sort of scripted, but as yet unknown,
performance.
Many of Elmgreen & Dragset’s exhibitions are reminiscent of film sets. With
their ongoing interest in extended and compressed time within different
modes of narratives, the artists will utilize the exhibition setting of “THE
OLD WORLD” to shoot a black and white short film. The film will show
how an exhibition truly comes to life only through its visitors. With the help
of professional actors from Hong Kong’s vital film industry, characters
such as an art critic, a collector, a student and a cleaner will appear in a
series of interconnected, small scenes. Filmed from the perspective of
the exhibition itself, giving the artworks the opportunity to tell the story
from their point of view, the film chronicles the “life of an exhibition”. Like
Mahler’s unfinished symphony, the entire exhibition can be conceived of
as an unfinished portrait, up to the audience to complete.
Michael Elmgreen was born in Copenhagen, Denmark; Ingar Dragset was born in Trondheim, Norway. They live and work in Berlin and London
For more information and press enquiries, please contact:
CdD. | Communications Incubator Stephanie Poon stephanie@cdd.com.hk / +852 6209 7957
Galerie Perrotin
Héloïse Le Carvennec, Head of Press & Communication heloise@perrotin.com / +33 1 42 16 91 80
Ashley Wu press.hk@perrotin.com / +852 3758 2184
A media preview will be taking place on Thursday April 3rd 2014 from 4pm to 6pm.
Opening cocktail on Thursday April 3rd 2014 from 6pm to 8pm
Galerie Perrotin
17/F, 50 Connaught Road, Central, Hong Kong
Opening hours: Tuesday - Saturday 11am - 7pm