A show of two video works; Dog, 2001 and Poliisi, 2002. Every image in Annika Larsson's videos is explicit and sharp as is the specific choice of actors, costumes, music (Tobias Bernstrup composed the music for both videos), and props. There appears to be a sense of overt obsession and clarity. There are no accidents. Larsson shoots, directs and edits all of her videos personally and her interest in small details, such as movement, gesture and gaze is very clear, as is the awareness of purpose and consequence.
We are very excited to announce Annika Larsson's first solo exhibition in the United
States: a show of two video works; Dog, 2001 and POLIISI, 2002. Every image in
Annika Larsson's videos is explicit and sharp as is the specific choice of actors,
costumes, music (Tobias Bernstrup composed the music for both videos), and props.
There appears to be a sense of overt obsession and clarity. There are no accidents.
Larsson shoots, directs and edits all of her videos personally and her interest in
small details, such as movement, gesture and gaze is very clear, as is the
awareness of purpose and consequence.
Dog depicts an act of loyalty and commitment taking place between two male
subjects/counterparts yet they seemingly lack a specific goal. This emptiness, or
vacuum, stands in contrast to the heroic signs created by the music and casting.
These "heroes of nothing" move in a void. Seduction is strongly present throughout
the work and the dog, reduced to an object, serves to channel the emotions between
the two men. Props and costumes such as the heavy chain and substantial collar on
the dog and the men's well-pressed business suits reinforce the very serious and
measured precision in the video. This excessive tension serves to make the erotic
undertones even more perverse.
POLIISI, shot at night in the monumental surroundings of the Senate Square in
Helsinki, the background, a large cathedral, in some images a glimpse of the statue
of Alexander II. This video revolves around four characters; three men dressed as
riot policemen wearing helmets, protection vests, shin-guards and batons, and a
jockey-like character dressed in riding boots, a yellow bomber-jacket and knee-pads.
The impetus for the video was Larsson's observation of the huge shin guards worn
by the Paris riot police and she found herself beginning to seek out source material
that contained news images of riot fights. What started as an obsession with the
material component became altered through the lens of social consciousness and
our heightened public psyche while simultaneously mutating as fetish. A lone and
primarily unconscious victim characterizes the "demonstration" or "crowd" and
because of his singularity and passivity, in stature, state, and attire, the
confrontation of the protest is removed.
Recently on the cover of Tema Celeste, Larsson was also included in ArtForum
(January 2002) and she will be featured in the March issue of Parkett. Additionally,
this winter marks Larsson's solo exhibition at the Institute for Contemporary Art in
London. Larsson was also the recipient of the 2001 Baloise Art Prize and was
included in the 49th Venice Biennale. Although not yet seen in New York, over the
past two years Annika's work stands out as decisive, unique and totally intentional in
its formality and oblique narrative.
Annika Larsson was born in 1972 in Stockholm and graduated from the Royal
Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm in 2000. She currently lives and works in Berlin
and Stockholm.
Andrea Rosen Gallery
525 West 24 Street New York, NY 10011
T 212 627 6000 F 212 627 5450