Laura Bielau
Leigh Bowery
Cerith Wyn Evans
Dominik
Margit Emmrich
Lutz Förster
Till Gathmann
Douglas Gordon
David Hinton
Geumhyung Jeong
Gülsün Karamustafa
Auguste and Louis Lumière
Bruce McLean
Georges Méliès
Gérard Miller
Suzanne Hommel
Karen Mirza and Brad Butler
Banu Narciso
Tibor Szemzö
Vangelis Vlahos
Maja Vukoje
Marianne Wex
Anita Witek
Hans D. Christ
Iris Dressler
The exhibition approaches the subject of the human gesture from a philosophical, mediatic, and artistic perspective. At the same time, it investigates the paradoxes inherent to the gesture: the way it is situated between speaking and being silent, showing and hiding, the conscious and the unconscious, discipline and careening out of control, dancing and tumbling...
curated by Hans D. Christ, Iris Dressler
Laura Bielau, Leigh Bowery / Cerith Wyn Evans, Dominik, Margit Emmrich, Lutz Förster, Till
Gathmann, Douglas Gordon, David Hinton, Geumhyung Jeong, Gülsün Karamustafa,
Auguste and Louis Lumière, Bruce McLean, Georges Méliès, Gérard Miller / Suzanne
Hommel, Karen Mirza and Brad Butler, Banu Narciso, Tibor Szemzö, Vangelis Vlahos, Maja
Vukoje, Marianne Wex, Anita Witek
Introduction
Geste à peau
In a raw, whispered voice, Suzanne Hommel describes a session with the French
psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan in Gérard Miller’s documentary film Rendez-vous chez Lacan
(2012). After telling him that she wakes up every morning at 5 o’clock—the same hour that
the Gestapo came to get the Jews in their houses under National Socialism—Lacan jumped
up from his chair and caressed her cheek in an extraordinarily tender gesture. Still today she
can feel this touch, forty years later, and Hommel also claims that, though it did not diminish
her pain, it precipitated a decisive shift. She understood this touch as a gesture: a geste à
peau or “gesture of the skin,” with the word Gestapo turned into geste à peau—an “appeal to
humanity,” as she calls it.
Triggerd by a gesture, the unspeakable here was deferred through a linguistic game. The
inability to speak (about the horrifying), the blatant linguistic gap was not cured by this
gesture, but it was transformed into something different, in a game, a play on words, an
appeal to something.
It became a gag in the dual sense of the word: as something that according to the Italian
philosopher Giorgio Agamben “could be put in your mouth to hinder speech” but that
simultaneously references the “actor’s improvisation” through which he “compensate[s] a
loss of memory or an inability to speak.”
The gesture, as Agamben says, correlates with this overwriting of muteness. It showcases
both, the media character of corporal movements and at the same time language as a gappy
medium, a speech defect, a stuttering. Therefore, the gesture is “literally a definition of the
gag”. It is essentially always a gesture of “not being able to figure something out in
language”, that “what remains unexpressed in each expressive act.”
The Exhibition
The exhibition Gesture, that will be on view from May 24 until August 3, 2014 at the
Württembergischer Kunstverein approaches the subject of the human gesture from a
philosophical, mediatic, and artistic perspective.
It takes up the semiotic and performative character of the gesture, and its theatrical nature. It
sheds light on what is enacted and at the same time masked by it: a certain disability to
speak, a speech disorder, the inabilty of humans “to figure something out in language.” Thus,
the focus is not so much on the gesture’s potentials of expression, but on the linguistic
dilemma it references, on its character of being a gag in the double sense of the word.
At the same time, the exhibition investigates the paradoxes inherent to the gesture: the way it
is situated between speaking and being silent, showing and hiding, the conscious and the
unconscious, discipline and careening out of control, dancing and tumbling ...
The gesture always implies dynamism and immobility at once. It only ever appears in the
interruption of a movement to which it simultaneously points. Inscribed in the gesture in a
special way, therefore, are the technical dispositifs of photography and film—interrupting
movements, mincing such motion into isolated gestures, and reassembling them. Thus
special attention is granted to these dispositifs in the exhibition. Indeed, it was photography
(since Marey and Muybridge) and film that started making visible certain ranges of motion as
sequences of individual gestures—not to mention the pathos formulas and convulsions, the
poses and buffooneries, which we have inherited from photography and early cinema.
A further aspect of the exhibition revolves around the question to what extent the regimes of
class and gender, as well as the regimes of scientific fields like medicine and their
apparatuses, are inscribed in the gesture. What could and would be the politics of the
gesture?
Far from aiming to put forward a conclusive theory of the gesture, the exhibition seizes upon
a series of theoretical and aesthetic approaches to the gesture that approximate this subject
in ways that are more divergent and excursive than straightforward. Tying into the project
Acts of Voicing (2012), which dealt with the political and aesthetic dimensions of the voice,
the pursuit in the present exhibition is to fathom the poetics and the politics of the gesture, as
well as its performativity on various levels.
Apart from works by contemporary artists from the fields of visual arts, dance, and
performance, the exhibition also presents a series of historical documents, references, and
artworks, such as films from the early history of film.
Supported by
Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst des Landes Baden-Württemberg
Kulturamt der Stadt Stuttgart
Stiftung Landesbank Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart
Péter Horváth Stiftung, Stuttgart
ProLab, Stuttgart
Image: Geumhyung Jeong, Record Stop Play, 2011. Performance video, 8 min.
Press contact
Iris Dressler Fon: +49 (0)711 22 33 711 dressler@wkv-stuttgart.de
Press conference: Friday, May 23, 11 a.m.
Opening: Friday, May 23, 7 p.m.
Artists’s tour, lectures, and performances
Saturday, May 24, 2014
Language: English
2 p.m.: Artists’s tour
6:30 p.m.: Lectures + lecture performances by Iris Dessler, Till Gathmann and others
7 p.m.: Performance by Geumhyung Jeong
Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart
Schlossplatz 2 - D-70173 Stuttgart
Opening Hours
Tue, Thur–Sun: 11 a.m.–6 p.m., Wed: 11 a.m.–8 p.m.
Entrance fees
5 Euro (3 Euro reduced)
Member of WKV: free of charge