Detained. In this show, the artist exhibits new works including a series of paintings and a large Led configuration. Each oil on linen painting depicts a handprint of an American soldier accused of crimes in Iraq, including detainee abuse and assault. Since 2004, Holzer has made the study of declassified US government documents the content for her context-based practice.
Monika Spruth Philomene Magers is pleased to present DETAINED, an installation
by Jenny Holzer. Beginning with her 2004 exhibition at the Kunsthaus Bregenz in
Austria, Holzer has made the study of declassified US government documents the
content for her context-based practice. Incorporating memos, sworn statements,
emails, directives, judgments, and other government materials regarding the
situation in the Middle East into paintings, large scale light projections, and
electronic signs, Holzer has harnessed a variety of approaches to make sensate the
accounting of war and torture. From documentation to material and situational
renderings of bureaucracy's operations, Holzer's presentations of, among
others, Department of Defense, White House, CIA, and FBI documents commingle the
need to "get the word out" with the urgency to translate those words to
a physical register. By activating the senses of the viewer, Holzer recasts the
anonymity and indirection of
government and administrative language as affecting and wounding objects. Holzer
makes material Hannah Arendt's claim that, "Nothing we use or hear or
touch can be expressed in words that equal what we are given by the senses."
In DETAINED, Holzer exhibits new works including a series of paintings and a large
LED configuration. Each oil on linen painting depicts a handprint of an American
soldier accused of crimes in Iraq, including detainee abuse and assault. Culled from
documents made public through the Freedom of Information Act, Holzer's
paintings refuse to be read from the fixity of any one ideology. Hanging the hands
of the charged next to those of the wrongly accused and those whose culpability has
been lost, the artist represents the fog of war. In her LED artwork, Holzer stacks
ten semi-circular signs to animate the front gallery wall. The piece, entitled
Torso, displays in red, blue, white, and purple light the statements, investigation
reports, and emails from the case files of the accused soldiers. Providing these
voices, part damning, contradictory, sympathetic, banal, anecdotal, and evidentiary,
Holzer layers accounts of abuse and blame. The installation lays bare that it is the
individual who suffers and confronts the mechanics of politics and war. DETAINED
makes substantial Wislawa Szymborska's lament and statement in her poem
"Tortures" that "the body is and is and is and has nowhere to
go."
A gallery in the Italian Pavilion of the 2007 Venice Biennale was devoted to
Holzer's continuing series of declassified document paintings. A large-scale
traveling exhibition of the artist's work, focusing on her output from 1990 to
the present, will first open at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago in October
2008.
Jenny Holzer has presented her ideas, arguments, and sorrows in public places and
international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale, the Reichstag,
London's City Hall, and the Guggenheim Museums in New York and Bilbao, since
the late seventies. Her medium, whether formulated as a T-shirt, as a plaque, or as
an LED sign, is writing, and the public dimension is integral to the delivery of her
work. Starting with the New York City posters, and up to her recent light
projections and paintings based on declassified government documents, her practice
has rivaled ignorance and violence with humor, kindness, and moral courage. Holzer
received the Leone d'Oro at the Venice Biennale in 1990. She lives and works
in New York.
For further information please contact Nina Overli at no@spruethmagers.com or on 020 74081613.
Opening: Thursday 31 January, 6-8 pm
Monika Spruth Philomene Magers London
7/A Grafton Street - London
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm and by appointment
Free admission