Rites of Passage. The video explores the seductive coercion of influential political figures, and the attraction power exercises on young male interns working in the government offices of Washington DC.
Rites of Passage is the title of the brand new video by New York/
Amsterdam artist Julika Rudelius (*1968, Cologne) that opens at the
Galerie Reinhard Hauff on October 17th. The video explores the
seductive coercion of influential political figures, and the
attraction power exercises on young male interns working in the
government offices of Washington DC. The launching of the film -
presented as a double projection in the gallery rooms - coincides
exactly with the bitter end-phase of the US election campaign and the
turmoil on Wall Street, thus touching on the dynamics of current
events on the socio-political scene. „Rites of Passage“ is also
featured in Heartland which recently opened at the Van Abbemuseum in
Eindhoven.
In the film, Julika Rudelius intersperses staged, fictional sequences
combined with documentation on conversations and interactions between
high-ranking representatives of American politics and young interns at
the very beginning of their professional careers. The interns come
from America’s elite universities, i.e. from a culture driven by
competition, motivation, aggression and achievement. They are bred the
self-assurance that comes with identifying with and belonging to „the
select few“. The way these young men behave towards their superiors
and mentors is characterized by admiration, opportunism and awe.
Rudelius confronts the raw ambition of the career driven young men
with the natural superiority of experienced politicians flaunting
their power as charismatic leaders and professional seducers. The
ambivalent relationship between politician and intern, master and
pupil, is observed by Rudelius as an almost homoerotic game where the
distinctive sex appeal of power is a natural consequence and
ingredient of „charismatic leadership”.
In Rites of Passage, just as in Rudelius’ previous films
Adrift (2007) and Forever (2006), the film’s atmospheric pictures
purposely lend themselves to open-ended interpretation. Rudelius zooms
in on the predominance of non-verbal communication of authority,
submission and obedience. In the sequence of scenes, shot in wood-
panelled offices, the setting, clothing, gestures and looks are played
out with aggressive erotic overtones, which convey the authority of
the dominator, while the deferential and attentively compliant body
language characterize the behaviour of the interns. In this film, as
well as in earlier films portraying managers, immigrants, millionaires
and socialites shown in institutions such as the Brooklyn Museum in
New York, the Tate Modern in London, the Cologne Kunstverein and the
Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, Julika Rudelius subtly exposes the
diverse manifestations of codes and behavioural dynamics which govern
systems of hierarchy in specific groups and various social environments.
Opening Friday, 17.10.2008, 7 - 9 pm
Galerie Reinhard Hauff
Paulinenstr. 47 - Stuttgart
Free admission