Asdam’s work engages with life in today’s urban environment, its narratives, politics, sounds and images. He unveils the city’s unconscious, its underlying psychological structures that effect the individual’s personality.
Klemens Gasser and Tanja Grunert are pleased to announce the first
New York solo exhibition by New York based Norwegian artist Knut
Asdam.
Asdam’s work has recently been presented in solo exhibitions at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Oslo, Norway (2001), Kunsthaus
Glarus, Glarus, Switzerland (2001), and the Tate Britain, London
(2000). Large installations were also featured at the Nordic Pavilion
during the 1999 Venice Biennial and at the Norwegian Pavilion of the
International Biennial in Melbourne, Australia (1999). Upcoming
one-person exhibitions include Palazzo delle Papesse, Siena, Italy,
Gallery Tommy Lund, Copenhagen, Denmark, and Schirn Kunsthalle,
Frankfurt, Germany.
Asdam’s work engages with life in today’s urban environment, its
narratives, politics, sounds and images. He unveils the city’s
unconscious, its underlying psychological structures that effect the
individual’s personality.
This first solo exhibition in New York includes the following three
works:
The video installation Notes Towards a Dissipation of Desire (2001)
combines photographs, drawings and moving images of protesters, the
police and city architecture. The audio, a text narrated by the artist, is
the main structuring device. The work deals with the search for political
meaning or political desire while it hints at the limitations of political
expression and the breakdown of language and a condition of apathy.
In Cluster Praxis (2000), the second audio-video installation, the audio
is a narrative mix of voice and ambient soundscapes, dominated by a
poetic monologue that deals with assimilation and desire dissipating
into the city. The projection shows images of people dancing, colored
lights flaring into the camera, inter-cut with architectural stills, a city
street, music from passing cars and a building site.
Psychastenia 10 series 2, (2000-2001) is a silent architectural
projection installation with images of modern and postmodern
apartment buildings shot at night. The images are bleak and induce a
sense of fantasy and delirium while the social references remain clear.
The works are contained within two structures of soft architecture
made of curtain systems. This carries with it the sense of a set, but
also that of a changing room or a confessional space. From the
outside these spaces seem to conflict with the surrounding
architecture, however, the curtain walls are removable and can
disappear within minutes, with little or no trace.
Although Asdam’s work is deeply experiential, his use of the term
Psychastenia is significant to the work. Asdam uses the term as main
or subtitle for a body of work from 1996 to the present. The term refers
to the dissident surrealist Roger Caillois’ 1935 essay, "Mimicry and
Legendary Psychastenia," in which the author suggests that the
phenomenon of insect camouflage or mimicry should be compared to a
type of schizophrenia characterized as a "depersonalization by
assimilation to space. "This dynamic understanding of the boundaries
between subjectivity and space is something Ã…sdam sees as a cultural
background to his work. This affects his understanding of the body,
subjectivity, gender, sexuality, politics, and architecture.
Writing about the utopian qualities of Asdam’s work, based in
particular in his crucial video of 1995 Untitled: Pissing, which caused
quite a stir and was featured on the cover of Artforum (Feb. 2000),
George Baker coined the term "politics of the stain." He defines it as a
counter-movement to a conventional understanding of space and
community "as enclosure, as belonging, as the positively and
productivity of the group." He continues:
Asdam’s work joins then what we might call a full-blown politics of the
stain. And just as the space of the stain is hardly anything that we
could think of as a traditional space, this politics of the stain will be
impossible, it will not be, its lack of substance the very condition of its
present necessity.
George Baker. "The Space of the Stain." In: Knut Ã…sdam (cat.), Art
Now, Tate Britain, 11 July - 1 October, 2000, p. 41)
An extensive essay on Åsdam’s work is featured in the current issue of
Grey Room (MIT Press). The two catalogs, Knut Ã…sdam, Art Now, Tate
Britain, 2000, and Knut Ã…sdam: Notes Towards a Dissipation of Desire,
The National Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, and Kunsthaus
Glarus, Glarus, Switzerland, 2001, are available upon request.
The exhibition is supported by the Royal Norwegian Foreign Ministry
and Norway 2005.
Klemens & Grunert Inc. 524 West 19th Street New York, NY, 10011 tel: 212.807-9494 fax: 212.807-6594