In 'Signs & Wonders' Stevenson presents two-part sculptures, each consists of a mock cockpit with a freestanding screen placed in front. 'In the Company of Others' Forsythe examines the threshold between visual arts and choreography.
Kunsthal Charlottenborg kicks off its winter season with two exhibitions by highly acclaimed contemporary artists: A solo exhibition by the New Zealand artist Michael Stevenson, and a group exhibition curated around the practice of and including works by American choreographer and visual artist William Forsythe.
Michael Stevenson
Signs & Wonders
Kunsthal Charlottenborg is the first Scandinavian art institution to present a solo exhibition by the New Zealand artist Michael Stevenson (b. 1964). A comprehensive installation created especially for the kunsthalle's spectacular galleries, Signs & Wonders connects inner and outer journeys.
Six homebuilt flight simulators are placed in opposing pairs to create an approximate circle in the exhibition space; together, they form a curious mise-en-scène suggestive of an educational setting. As two-part sculptures, each consists of a mock cockpit with a freestanding screen placed in front. As a network, they form an interface capable of taking exhibition visitors on a series of silent, imaginary flights via physically constructed architecture and virtually constructed terrain. Using existing software, the flights shift the viewer to remote areas in the highlands of Papua New Guinea, where small aircraft play a vital role in navigating the difficult terrain. In this region, the aeroplane holds particular significance for both the local population and the Christian missionaries.
Connecting subjects such as aviation, religion, education, anthropology and globalisation, Signs & Wonders incites the viewer to consider the global distribution of ideas and beliefs. The exhibition is a continuation of Michael Stevenson's previous projects, whose characteristic experiential sculptural installations interlace anecdote, history writing and current affairs.
Signs & Wonders is curated by Henriette Bretton-Meyer and is produced in collaboration with Midway Contemporary Art in Minneapolis, where the exhibition will be presented in 2016.
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William Forsythe
In the Company of Others
William Forsythe (b. 1949) is a major figure in the world of dance and choreography. He is internationally acclaimed for his work with Ballet Frankfurt, as well as the dance company Forsythe Company. Over the last decade, Forsythe has made his mark on the international art scene with art installations and choreographic objects, as well as film and video works. The exhibition William Forsythe: In the Company of Others examines the threshold between visual arts and choreography and presents works that circulate around the concept of perturbation.
The installation Nowhere and Everywhere at the Same Time is a large array of pendulums that should not be disturbed—but might be—while the piece Towards the Diagnostic Gaze asks the user to develop strategies to effectively reduce their body's involuntary, insuppressible micro-tremblings, questioning whether these uncontrollable movements are the result of their body's health or physical decline.
The exhibition William Forsythe: In the Company of Others brings Forsythe's projects into play with works by a range of international contemporary artists: Manon de Boer, Gerard Byrne, Maria Meinild, Bruce Nauman, Rashaad Newsome, Magnus Pettersen, and Sturtevant.
The exhibition thus creates a temporary company of artists—a community to exist across time, genres and artistic methods, and a conversation between works dealing with the body's relationship to physical and mental space and the body's relationship to objects.
William Forsythe has exhibited internationally at prominent institutions such as Centre Pompidou in Paris,Tate Modern in London, the Venice Art Biennale and MMK Frankfurt, and has received numerous prices and awards.
The exhibition is curated by Mathias Kryger and is part of a three-year collaboration between Kunsthal Charlottenborg and Statens Scenekunstskole Efteruddannelsen.
Image: William Forsythe
For further information about the exhibitions, please contact the curators:
Henriette Bretton-Meyer: +45 33 74 46 80 / hbm@kunsthalcharlottenborg.dk (concerning Michael Stevenson) or Mathias Kryger+45 22 80 32 53 / mathiaskryger@gmail.com (concerning William Forsythe).
Press contact:
Helen Nishijo Andersen, Kunsthal Charlottenborg: +45 33 74 46 34 / hna@kunsthalcharlottenborg.dk
Opening: November 20, 7–10pm
Kunsthal Charlottenborg
Kgs Nytorv 1 - 1050 Copenhagen Denmark
Hours:
Tue–Sun 11am-5pm
Wednesday open to 8pm
Monday closed
Admission:
Adults 60 kr.
Students / seniors 40 kr.
Groups (minimum 10 people) 40 kr.
Children under 16 years free
Annual Card 150kr.
Wednesday free admission efter 5pm