Program
Berlin
Invalidenstrasse 115
+49 3039509318
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Le Chamois de Messidor
dal 2/7/2008 al 15/8/2008

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2/7/2008

Le Chamois de Messidor

Program, Berlin

Group show. Manmade systems, like measurements, are fluid, and incomplete. Translating allows for misreading. Conversion factors call precision into question. The foundations of objective authority that stabilize our pillars of rationality loosen, become pliable and perhaps fail when we venture to take an alternate look.


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For the thirteen years between 1793 and 1805 of the French First Republic, months and days of the year were given new names. The period between October 22nd and November 20th became Brumaire, the month of fog. The fourth day of Floréal (April 20th – May 19th) was called Aubépine, the day of Hawthorn. In their attempt to systematize a relationship between the days of the year and the seasons, the politicians of the Revolution were unwittingly poetic – imbuing each day with a new lyrical richness. Le Chamois de Messidor, not only marks July 3rd (the opening of the exhibition), but also harkens the acrid sweet aromas of meadows and husbandry (chamois – or little goat), the pastoral images of tillage and harvest (messis).

Manmade systems, like measurements, are fluid, and incomplete. To translate, transpose or convert affords what French Philosopher Paul Ricoeur called linguistic hospitality – or the expression of a new poetics generated by these processes of change. Translating allows for misreading. Conversion factors call precision into question. The foundations of objective authority that stabilize our pillars of rationality loosen, become pliable and perhaps fail when we venture to take an alternate look.

Translations shake the trust we have in our assumptions. Philip Wiegard's Opticart (2006), a reconstructed shopping cart that appears 3-dimensional from afar becomes flat upon approach. Similarly, Hadley + Maxwell display the breakdown in meaning, if not ideology, with their continuing transpositions of Sol Lewitt's Open Cube. From object, to text, to drawing, to digital model back to object, the artists’ weaken modernism's supposed univocal conceit expressed by Lewitt's unbending logic: in the end, Hadley + Maxwell's cube looks bent, diminutive in size and unstable in form. Furthering a sense of ontological uncertainty, Larissa Fassler constructed a model of the Kottbusser Tor area in Berlin completely by eye; what appears to be an architect's model was built entirely from scalar estimations. One footstep, she decided, equals one centimeter on her model.

By unthinkably lengthening his camera's shutter speed upwards of 3 years, Michael Wesely shakes away the pretension that photographs capture any specific moment in time. Never in one place for long, people and cars disappear from the record; buildings erected during the exposure look like gauze; arcs of light in the sky trace the sun's changing path. Ultimately, there is a blurring of the ascribed value systems between the objective and subjective imaginations. Antonia Hirsch's Anthropometrics Vol. 1 (2004) sites the body as a source of 'colloquial' measurements – the performance of which results in idiosyncratic gestures that confuse our notions of standardized precision with traditional practices. Preston Scott Cohen's obsessive geometric projections and transformations embody a precision of form, yet the resulting spaces exude an abandoned, instinctive elegance.

Berlin's gargantuan Tempelhof Airport, once intended to be Hitler's gateway to Germania, is domesticated in Paul Ekaitz' wall installation. Organizing the plan of the airport into a decorative pattern, Ekaitz deflates the building's historical weight and incomprehensible size and transforms it into something quaint, like decorative wallpaper. A shift in meaning is as deft and casual as flipping a light switch. Darri Lorenzen, with a pair of sunglasses held in front of his camera lens, darkened a summer day, its heat, and its glare, into night.




Preston Scott Cohen's work is known for its synthesis of architectural typologies, descriptive geometry, and digital media. The work of his firm, Preston Scott Cohen, Inc., encompasses projects ranging in scale from residences to educational and cultural institutions.
Cohen received first prize in the international competitions for the Taiyuan Art Museum in Taiyuan, China (2007-2011), the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Amir Building (2003-2009) and the Robbins Elementary School in Trenton, NJ (2006). He is the recipient of numerous awards and honors including the Academy Award in Architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and three Progressive Architecture Awards. Cohen is the author of Contested Symmetries and Other Predicaments in Architecture. His work has been widely published and is in numerous collections. Cohen is Chair of the Department of Architecture at Harvard University Graduate School of Design. [www.pscohen.com]

Paul Ekaitz (b. 1977, Barcelona) lives and works in Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions include “Life Still”, Invaliden1, Berlin (2007), “Hinterhof”, Invaliden1, Berlin (2005), “Velvet & Crochet”, Espai E, H.A. Arts Contemporànies, Vic. Barcelona (2002). Selected group shows: Life still”, Nogueras Blanchard in Artnews, Berlin, “Drawings” Wir haben keine probleme, Museum Kunsthall Bergen, ART FORUM 07, Invaliden1, Berlin, “Hinterhof” ”Interiores” Berlinische Galerie Museum für moderne Kunst, Berlin, Mediterranee Carré d‘Art - Musée d‘art contemporain de Nîmes. France, ARCO 07, gallery Nogueras Blanchard, Madrid (2007). [www.paulekaitz.com]

Larissa Fassler (born 1975 in Vancouver) completed her MA in Fine Arts at Goldsmiths College, University of London in 2003 and BFA at Concordia University in 1999. She has lived and worked in Berlin since 1999. Notable exhibitions include: “WALK! – Spazierengehen als Kunstform”, Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien, Berlin (2007), “The Momental” Sparwasser HQ, Berlin (2006); “The 21. Kasseler Dokumentarfilm- & Videofest”, Kassel (2004); “ev+a 2003”, Limerick City Gallery of Art, Limerick, Ireland (2003). Her work is currently being shown in “World One Minutes”, Today Art Museum, Beijing, China and in “Urban Jealousy” - 1st International Roaming Biennial of Tehran, Iran. [artnews.info/larissafassler]

Hadley+Maxwell have been working together since 1997 when they met in Vancouver, Canada. Since then, their investigations into cultural history, contemporary philosophy, models of subjectivity, music, and aesthetics have taken the form of conceptually driven works in a variety of media including video, installation, photography, painting, and opera. Recent international exhibitions include the Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver), Cooley Memorial Gallery (Portland), Museu de Arte Contemporânea (São Paolo), Edith-Ruß-Haus für Medienkunst (Oldenburg, Germany), and the Künstlerhaus Bethanien (Berlin). Current projects include exhibitions at the Taipei Fine Art Museum, and Kunstraum München, and in the coming year they will participate in exhibitions at the Power Plant (Toronto), the National Gallery of Canada, and Montehermoso Cultural Centre (Spain), as well as designing an exhibition for a suitcase that will travel to galleries in Portland, Los Angeles and Paris. Hadley+Maxwell are currently based in Berlin and are represented by Jessica Bradley Art + Projects in Toronto.

Antonia Hirsch is a Vancouver-based artist who has participated in group exhibitions in Canada, Europe and Asia, including Altered States at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum (2006) and Concrete Language at the Contemporary Art Gallery in Vancouver (2006). Her work has been featured in solo exhibitions at Gallery 101, Ottawa (2007), the Charles H. Scott Gallery (2006) and Artspeak Gallery (2003) in Vancouver, the Kitchener Waterloo Art Gallery (2003) and Gallery 44 in Toronto (2001). In 2004, she was awarded the Canada Council Studio at the Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris. Her work can be found in public collections such as the Vancouver Art Gallery, the Canada Council Art Bank and the Sackner Archive of Concrete & Visual Poetry, Miami Beach. Hirsch has written for various publications including, most recently, The Fillip Review, C magazine, and artecontexto. Her current projects include a public art commission for the new campus of the Vancouver Community College, to be inaugurated in the fall of 2008. [www.antoniahirsch.com]

Darri Lorenzen (b. 1978, Reykjavik) makes adjustments to space with a strict economy of materials. In his photographs, sound works and installations, the artist alters the parameters of realtime environments, enhancing sensitivity to place. Recent exhibitions include Experiment Marathon, Reykjavik Art Museum, Reykjavik (2008); Dark Science, Curators Without Borders, Berlin (2008); Contours of Site, Project Gentili, Prato (2007); MIÐ, Menningarnótt (2007); Through Out, Kunsthalle Loppem, Bruge (2006); New Icelandic Art II, The National Gallery of Iceland, Reykjavic (2005). The artist lives and works in Berlin. [www.darrilorenzen.net]

Michael Wesely (b. 1963, Munich) lives and works in Berlin. Recent solo exhibition include “Men and Places”, Chandigarh (in cooperation with Lina Kim), Galeria Blanca Soto, Madrid, “Stillleben”, Gemeentemuseum, Den Haag (2007), “Encounter with Caspar David Friedrich”, Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin, “Open Shutter” Fahnemann Projects, Berlin, “Collected Landscape”, The Columns, Seoul (2006), “Die Erfindung des Unsichtbaren”, Guardini Galerie Berlin & Fotohof Salzburg, Arquivo Brasilia (in cooperation with Lina Kim), Teatro National, Brasilia (2005). Recent group shows include: “Reality Crossings” (in cooperation with Lina Kim), 2nd Fotofestival Mannheim (2007), “Spectacular City”, Netherlands Architecture Institute, Rotterdam, “Die Schönheit der Chance”, Institut für Moderne Kunst, Nuremberg, “Futebol - Desenho sobre Fundo Verde”, CCBB, Rio de Janeiro, “herzog & de meuron no. 250” Haus der Kunst, Munich, “Through the Looking Glass” (in cooperation with Lina Kim), Haus der Kunst, Munich (2006), “After the Facts”, Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, “Berliner Zimmer”, Nationalgalerie - Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin (2005). [www.fahnemannprojects.com/Michael-Wesely.24.0.html]

Philip Wiegard (1977) lives and works in Berlin. Recent exhibitions include solo shows at Freymond-Guth & Co., Zürich (2008), Laura Mars GRP., Berlin, Image Furini, Arezzo, (2007), Kunsthalle Vebikus, Schaffhausen (2006), “Augenblick”, Kunstverein Regenburg (2004), as well as group shows “Sammlung/Collection”, migros museum für gegenwartskunst, Zürich, “Mind the Gap”, Kunsthaus Glarus, “Walking on Thin Ice”, Artnews Projects, Berlin (2008), LISTE 06 Basel, with Freymond-Guth & Co, Basel, Club Transmediale, Maria am Ostbahnhof, Berlin (2006). Wiegard has been awarded a CIty of Berlin Residency and Grant at Cité des Beaux Arts, Paris (2006-07) as well as the Graduates Special Award of the University of Arts, Berlin (2003). [www.philipwiegard.com]

Kindly supported by the Canadian Embassy in Berlin and rapidobject.com

Image: Darri Lorenzen, The Unnamable Point of Being There, 2008

Program
Invalidenstrasse 115 - Berlin

IN ARCHIVIO [26]
Lynne Marsh
dal 26/10/2011 al 16/12/2011

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