The glass veil
Enclosed in glass and then again in glass vitrines, the specimen for the scientist
stabs brutally at objectivity. In a zone of ambiguity, bodies and parts float
anonymously as relics retelling historical time. In an ocular joust, the observer
dons a pose, as details of the gaze come into focus. Thoughts of definition enter
and exit the observer's consciousness until some determination of meaning is arrived
at. What questions are provoked by this once living matter? To go behind a veil is
to transgress a hidden boundary. At the same time the veil becomes a mirror of our
hidden selves, as we try to peek behind the curtain of unknowable worlds.
The Glass Veil, an installation by Suzanne Anker, in the Ruine des
Rudolf-Virchow-Hörsaals of the Berliner Medizinhistorisches Museum pays homage to
medicine's historical past. Destroyed toward the end of WWII by bombing, after the
war, the building was refitted with a roof and windows. Since the middle of the
1990s the "preserved" Ruine has been used for art exhibitions, conferences and
scientific exchange.
For The Glass Veil, Anker has installed twenty four upside down parachutes that
float within the aerial space of this Ruine. Accompanied by both large and small
scale photographs of specimens from the museum's collection: a brain, a fetus, a
stomach and other human remains enclosed in glass, Anker employs these specimens to
question the viewer's somatic gaze. What emotions, fleeting or otherwise are invoked
by gazing at preserved flesh? What are the differences between a clinical
appreciation of these artifacts and an inter-subjective one?
Suzanne Anker's exhibition opens in conjunction with the international conference
Habitus in Habitat: Emotion and Motion (organized by Sabine Flach) at the Berliner
Medizinhistorisches Museum der Charité, in co-operation with the Zentrum für
Literatur-und Kulturforschung Berlin and the Berlin School of Mind and Brain.
Suzanne Anker is a New York based artist working at the intersection of
visual art and the biological sciences. Other recent projects include The Hothouse
Archives at the Institute for Cultural Inquiry in Berlin, Corpus Extremus+ at Exit
Art in NYC and sculptural project for the upcoming INSIDE [art and science], all in
2009.
Press contact
Inga Franke +49 (0)30 450536132 inga.franke@charite.de
Exhibition Opening: 19:00, July 9th
Ruine des Rudolf-Virchow-Hörsaals
Berliner Medizinhistorisches Museum der Charité, Charitéplatz 1, D-10117 Berlin
Tues-sun 10:00 am - 5:00 pm, sat 10:00 am - 7:00 pm, wed 10:00 am - 7:00 pm
Admission: 5 euro