Lucid Dreams. De Appel presents Zoo (2006), accompanied by the related photographic series Black Water (2004 - 2006). A retrospective of the work of Tykka with the films Power, the trilogy CAVE will be exhibited in museum Het Domein. Zoo is an evocative, lyrical exploration of the dynamic of 'seeing and being seen' and also probes the (power) relations between nature/culture, male/female and object/subject.
Lucid Dreams
IN: DE APPEL
June 24 - July 9, 2006
AND: HET DOMEIN
June 24 - August 20, 2006
Joint opening: Friday June 23, 2006 Sittard (5 - 7 pm) and Amsterdam (8 - 11 pm)
DE APPEL and museum HET DOMEIN present the first Dutch solo project and the first
comprehensive oeuvre catalogue of Finnish artist Salla Tykka (1973, Helsinki).
After her celebrated trilogy Cave (2000-2003), the Finnish artist has been working
on a new production for the last two years that will have its first screening in the
Netherlands. The film Zoo (2006), screened in both Amsterdam and Sittard is an
evocative, lyrical exploration of the dynamic of ‘seeing and being seen’ and also
probes the (power) relations between nature/culture, male/female and object/subject.
De Appel presents Zoo in a continuous screening, accompanied by the related
photographic series Black Water (2004 - 2006). The film and group of photographs
will be on show in Amsterdam from June 24 until July 9. A retrospective of the work
of Tykka with the films Power (1999), the trilogy CAVE (2000-2003) and the
previously mentioned photo series Black Water, and Zoo will be exhibited in museum
Het Domein, Sittard from June 24 until August 20.
In Zoo Tykka indirectly refers to the work of Alfred Hitchcock. In a suit and
high heels, Finnish actress Terhi Suorlahti could be a sort of hybrid of Hitchcocks’
favourite actresses Kim Novak and Tippi Hedren. The single-lens reflex camera over
her shoulder, the retro outfit, upswept hair topped off by the melodramatic music
and setting are reminiscent of and invite comparisons with a film like The Birds.
Zoo presents us with a young woman as she traverses an almost deserted animal park.
She pauses every now and then to take a photograph but, overtaken by sudden doubt,
keeps lowering the camera. The images the woman sees through the lens mobilize other
images buried in her memory. In these ‘flashbacks’ we see sequences from an
underwater rugby match.
The game could act as a sort of metaphor for the universal
human ‘struggle for survival’, the constant interplay of urges for self-preservation
and feelings of solidarity. As the film progresses the protagonist, initially
concerned with photographing the zoo’s residents, comes to realize that her role is
not only that of observer, but also of observed.
The camera seems to follow her and
she takes drastic steps in a bid to escape this reduction to ‘image’ or
‘representation’ by the eye of the camera. With this succession of psychological
references and iconographic associations, Tykka seems to be saying that our
perception is
largely determined by our everyday interaction with photographic and filmic images.
The duality of subject-object relations is a theme in Zoo, and Tykka’s earlier
work. In the film Power (1999) she related it to the psychological relations between
the sexes by staging a confrontational boxing match between herself, topless, and a
male opponent. Accompanied by the soundtrack to the film Rocky, with Power
Tykka disrupts the stereotypical and varied conventions surrounding this theme.
The well-known video installation CAVE, a trilogy of the films Lasso, Thriller and
Cave (2000-2003), follows moments in the lives of three women, in an exploration of
the crucial rites of passage from childhood to adulthood. Together, the three films
form a penetrating narrative of lust and aggression, fascination and gentleness,
distance and empathy. As the titles of the three films suggest, Tykka deploys
elements, motifs and music drawn from classic film genres like the Western and the
thriller. The situations described in the films are quite simple and mundane.
However, Tykka captures scenes with an ambiguity and mystery that the films
develop a breathtaking dynamism. “I was intrigued by the immaterial nature of film
and video and their ability to resemble reality and its elements, such as dreams and
memories", says the artist. Despite their photo-realistic setting, Tykka’s
films convey meaning through suggestion rather than an unambiguous narrative. The
ima
ges may have a razor-sharp clarity but possess the layered evanescence of dreams.
More precisely, lucid dreams.
Salla Tykka was born in Helsinki 1973. She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts
in Helsinki from 1995-1999, from where she also graduated with a Master of Fine Arts
degree in 2003. Tykka won international acclaim during the 2001 Venice Biennial
with her work Lasso. In autumn 2006 she had a solo exhibition at gallery Yvon
Lambert in New York. For more information: http://www.sallatykka.com
Catalogue:
A monograph on the work of Salla Tykka will be published to accompany the
exhibitions. With essays by Antti Alanen, Ann Demeester, Stijn Huijts and Eva
Wittocx; language: English; 192 pages, full colour. The monograph, a co-production
of De Appel, museum Het Domein and SMAK - the museum for contemporary art in Gent
(B), will be available from June 23 from the participating institutions. Copies can
also be ordered online via http://www.deappel.nl and http://www.hetdomein.nl
De Appel and museum Het Domein co-produced Zoo; the film will also be presented in
Palais de Tokyo in Paris (June 9 - August 27) and in SMAK in Gent (July 8 - October
1).
The exhibition is realized with the support of: Barry Covats; Galerie Yvon Lambert,
Paris; the Finnish Embassy, The Hague and FRAME, Helsinki.
Joint opening: Friday June 23, 2006 Sittard (5 - 7 pm) and Amsterdam (8 - 11 pm)
De Appel
Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 10 - Amsterdam
Opening hours: tue-sun 11-18
Admission: 4 euros
Museum Het Domein
Kapittelstraat 6 - Sittard
OPening hours: tue-sun 11-5
Admission: 4 euros/ 2