Rudolf Bonvie
Heather Burnett
Volker Eichelmann
Roland Rus
Johannes Schweiger
Douglas Gordon
Ross Sinclair
Annis Joslin
Mike Marshall
Wolf Vostell
Jamie Wagg
Hans D. Christ
Iris Dressler
The exhibition presents art works that deal with forms of presentation and perception as well as the abstraction and repression of war, violence and fear in "western civilisation". They counteract the blind spots of short- and long-sightedness as well as the fading and fade-over of those images that are just as important for modern warfare as they are for modern mass media.
.. no one has a head
31. May - 14. July 2002
Opening: 31. Mai, 19pm
Tue - Fri: 4 - 10 pm, Sat + Sun: 1 - 10 pm
hartware medien kunst verein
Artists
Rudolf Bonvie, Heather Burnett, Volker Eichelmann / Roland Rust /
Johannes Schweiger, Douglas Gordon, Ross Sinclair, Annis Joslin, Mike
Marshall, Wolf Vostell, Jamie Wagg
Image:
Wolf Vostell, B - 52
© Courtesy Fine Art Rafael Vostell, Berlin
VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2002
"This is the Mighty B-52! Now you have experienced the terrible rain of
death and destruction its bombs have caused. These planes come
swiftly, strongly speaking as the voice of the government of Vietnam
proclaiming its determination to eliminate the VC threat to peace. Your
area will be struck again and again, but you will not know when or
where. The planes fly too high to be heard or seen. They will rain death
upon you again without warning..."
Text aus einem Flugblatt der psychologischen Kriegsführung der USA in Vietnam
Planet Claire has pink air
All the trees are red
No one ever dies there
No one has a head
Auszug aus dem "B-52's" Song "Planet Claire"
If you enter the term "B-52" in a search engine, you will get just as many
hits for fan pages for the 1980s band "The B-52's" as you will for pages
by enthusiasts of the legendary B-52 bombers.
The Boeing B-52 is the oldest aircraft in aviation history still in use today.
It was developed during the late 1940s and was first used in the early
1950s. Until today, the B-52, which can be used to transport atom bombs
and cruise missiles among others, represents the ideologies of the Cold
War and the United States' technological, military and economic
superiority.
In the 1980s the American band "The B-52's", which was not named
after the bomber but after an exaggerated (bomb-proof?)"bouffant
hairdosa", took up a retro-futuristic look - from their outfits to their album
covers - that imitated in an excessive way the pop and party culture of
the 1960s, which is known to be also a product of the Cold War.
The B-52's party cult, which is as affirmative as it is counteracting,
revolves around the glamour and glitter of extraterrestrial worlds. The
B-52 bomber "Stratofortress" (!) may not really be able to fly close to the
sun, but it can still reach a flying altitude of 15,000 meters.
The enormous flying altitude of the B-52 bomber, which is equipped with
electronic visual display units, has allowed a manner of warfare that no
longer has its targets in sight and which "collateral damages" reach us
only as abstract images. When viewed from the "high points" of modern
warfare, the victims of war are not only faceless, but they also apparently
no longer die. "No one ever dies there, no one has a head," sing the
B-52's in "Planet Claire".
The exhibition
The exhibition "No one ever dies there, no one has a head" presents art
works that deal with forms of presentation and perception as well as the
abstraction and repression of war, violence and fear in "western
civilisation." They counteract the blind spots of short- and
long-sightedness as well as the fading and fade-over of those images
that are just as important for modern warfare as they are for modern
mass media.
The artists make use of conceptual approaches and ironic distance as
well as strategies of emotional involvement and irritation of the viewer.
Instead of intending to create "dismay" or "enlighten", the exhibition
wants to focus on ambivalence: on our closeness and dissociation,
emotionality and apathy, obsession and diversion when dealing with war,
violence and fear.
Besides art works the exhibition also includes documentary material
concerning for
example, a commission programme of the "Imperial War Museum" in
London that sends contemporary artists to war sites in order to produce
paintings there.
On the 12th and 13th of July 2002, the exhibition will be accompanied by
a film and
lecture series.
The Artists
Jamie Wagg, B-52, 2001, http://www.iniva.org/xspaceprojects/wagg
The newer B-52 bombers are approximately 50 metres long, 12 metres
high and have a wingspan of 56 metres. Jamie Wagg, has for many
years, explored issues around
a critical practice with regard to "Hisory Painting", seen in the tradition of
Goya and Manet. He has installed a 1:1 scale representation of a B52 on
the Internet which takes the form of a monochrome "painting". All that the
viewer sees is a grey field or better: a "window to the world" through
which he can navigate endlessly over the
surface of the bomber. Wagg radically twists the essential point of the
legend of the B-52 bomber: its flying altitude, which does not allow the
"enemy" to see it. However the results are in a certain way the same. The
viewer now is so close to the bomber that it disappears also from his
view.
The blind spots of modern warfare, which not only leave behind
collateral damage but also blot out the violence and the death of the
individuals involved, are sharpen to a point - as is the "real time myth" of
the Internet, which is known to be coming from military industries.
Additionally, the work clearly uses the tropes of a formalist minimalism
and simultaneously makes reference to the 1:1 scale maps of Art &
Language, but has become laden with the history of Post WW2
American Imperialism, culturally, economically and militarily.
Wolf Vostell created a series of "object graphics" in 1968 that were
based on a prominent press photo of a B-52 bombing an invisible target:
a well-known picture that was published at that time in all newspapers to
demonstrate the U.S.'s supremacy over Vietnam. However Vostell's
B-52 bomber, which is a roughly pixelled enlargement of the press photo,
not only throws bombs, but also objects like for example a chain of yellow
lollipops. Vostell suggests that the soldiers should have thrown lollipops,
lipsticks and other similar items "instead of bombs" (as the series' title
states). One-upping the motto "Make Love not War," the artist also plays
with and on the "soft" strategies of the Cold War, whose dogma was
"unlimited consumer freedom."
The victory of the western world with its ideologies of unlimited consumer
freedom is reflected in Rudolf Bonvie’s photograph Pariser Platz,
January 1990: Short after the "turn", it shows a part of the Berlin Wall
covered by a banner, which says "Saatchi & Saatchi first over the Wall".
Volker Eichelmann, Roland Rust and Johannes Schweiger
The book/poster series "What does it mean when a whole culture
dreams the same dream" by Volker Eichelmann, Roland Rust and
Johannes Schweiger, reads like a compilation of strange conspiracy
theory and is written in the typography of LED displays. It tells, among
many other things, about the incredible parallels in the lives of both
American presidents Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy, who were
both assassinated, are listed here: Lincoln was elected to the Congress
in 1846 and Kennedy in 1946, both last names contain 7 letters. Lincoln
became president in 1860 and Kennedy in 1960, both of their wives lost
a child while living in the White House. Lincoln's secretary was named
Kennedy and Kennedy's secretary was named Lincoln. Lincoln was shot
in a theatre named Kennedy while Kennedy was shot in a car named
Lincoln
Ross Sinclair, who has the words "REAL LIFE" tattooed on his back in
capital letters, has dealt with questions around the perception and
construction of "reality" since 1994. In the context of various projects he
has displayed the words "REAL LIFE" made of red neon tubing in public
and private locations as well as institutions. The neon tubing, which on a
large scale was considered as fashionable urban design in the 1960s,
can be read as a reference to the artificial "make-up" of everyday life.
But for Sinclair it's more a question of declaring and thinking the artificial
as "reality". "
REAL LIFE....and how to live with it GEOGRAPHY" is a large-format
installation and neon work that radically and in an aggressive way
demands the idea of citizenship and citizens to be abolished using
different imperatives such as "Burn your passport," "Renounce
Citizenship," or "Annihilate Nations".
Douglas Gordon's video installation "10 MS-1" - the title refers to the
speed at which an object falls under the pull of gravity - is based on
silent films of scientific experiments in World War I. The film shows a
soldier in an empty room wearing only his underpants. He falls to the floor
after taking a couple of clumsy steps. His repeated attempts to stand up
fail miserably. Gordon has created a loop using this short scene. The
man continually tries to stand up, but he never succeeds. The scene is
also in slow motion, which only reinforces the impression of bitter
hopelessness. Since the man appears in good physical and almost
athletic shape, the viewer is left to speculate that he is suffering from
shock, a war-induced neurosis or is under the influence of paralysing
drugs - or he also could be an actor who is merely pretending a symptom
for scientific purposes. The video is projected onto a free-standing
screen, whose "state of suspension" somehow "cushions" the man's fall.
The aesthetic effect of the installation is perfect and carries the video,
which - already through its nostalgic references to the beginning of the
age of film - is also defined by a sublime beauty. The horrors of the
scenario portrayed in the film, which resembles those nightmares where
one would like to escape but cannot, are present and yet at the same
time preserved in a kind of double "suspense."
Annis Joslin. It is said that more and more people in "Western civilisation" are
suffering from depression and states of anxiety. In any case, the
pharmaceutical industry and more-or-less reputable providers of
pycho-social care are certainly raking in huge profits from this state of
affairs. The fact that there are legitimate reasons for anxiety and
depression is often mercilessly overlooked when the psychologically and
physically intact careerite is used as the measure. In Annis Joslin's video
'unhelp' a series of aphorisms appear as text against a thick and gloomy
blanket of rain. At first glance they remind us of lines from countless
self-help books that drum into the readers mind: "Tell yourself 'I am
strong' 10 times a day and all your problems will disappear". Joslin,
though, has inverted the content of such brainwash-like phrases, making
the reader who searches for consolation and stability bluntly aware that
they are a born loser and have no hope of escaping their dilemma.
In the video installation "Someone, Somewhere is doing this" by Mike
Marshall we witness the highly aesthetical, almost hypnotic scenario of a
sunset that slowly breaks across the soft waves of a water's surface. This
strong spectacle of nature is accompanied by an absent minded
disharmonic hum that appears from off screen. The hum breaks up the
overwhelming scene but still supports its suggestive power. "Someone,
Somewhere is doing this" involves the viewer in an equivocal
psychological and emotional situation. He struggles between the desire
of total devotion to the dreamlike situation and a certain strangeness or
suspicion - and even a kind of unconscious fear.
Link
The representation of fictitious and of real scenarios of war or violence -
that means on the one hand action movies and on the other hand
television coverage of war - are following a distinctly different script so
that we can clearly differentiate between the two. In action films the
over-aesthetisizing of even the most blood-curdling carnage, which the
camera focuses on in such a detailed manner, ensures that the death
and violence involved is covered up and we can more or less enjoy the
scene.
Compared to this short-sightedness of action films, television images
showing theatre of war are often soberingly dissociated from the
occurrence, as if what is happening is taking place on another planet.
The commentators finally dismiss the disaster through its verbal fixation.
In both cases, - action films as well as authentic television images, the
violence we see is shifted to a level of unreality.
In a radical way Heather Burnett’s video, " Witness:AnAesthetic " irritates
our abilities to dissociate ourselves regarding action films and war
reporting or even to differentiate between both "genres". The split screen
work, which was produced for a wide-screen monitor, begins with the
featuring of a number of brutal scenes from different Hollywood
productions, accompanied by the theme from "Mission Impossible." A
short time later, the music fades and authentic war images are shown:
sequences from Sorious Samura’s documentary film "Cry Freetown" on
the civil war in Sierra Leone. Unlike television images of trouble spots,
the viewer here witnesses how individuals are really killed and really
die; however, it takes a little while to understand that all this in fact is
happening. Once the viewer realises that the auth-entic images are
indeed real, they overstep the boundaries of how we are used to
registering violence and death. Than, the shock that the war images
generate all in a sudden is with a second delay carried over also to the
Hollywood images so that the viewer in some ways is no longer able to
make a difference between fiction and the authentic disaster.
Heather Burnett's video does neither represent an act of enlightenment
nor does it aim to shock the viewer. Instead, the artist succeeds in
counteracting the viewer's perception by irritating his well-established
viewpoint, depending on the suppression method used in the
representation of on the one hand fictitious violence and on the other
hand authentic violence.
A project by
medien_kunst_netz dortmund
> hartware > Museum am Ostwall > Kulturbüro Stadt Dortmund
Context
Scene: Großbritannien, 36. Internationale Kulturtage der Stadt Dortmund
Curated by
Hans D. Christ, Iris Dressler
Assistants
Tabea Sieben
Technics
Hans D. Christ, Uwe Gorski
Courtesy
The artists
The British Council, London (Douglas Gordon)
The Agency, London (Heather Burnett, Ross Sinclair)
Museum am Ostwall, Dortmund (Wolf Vostell)
Museum Bochum (Wolf Vostell)
Thanks to
Jari Lager, VTO Gallery, London
Bea de Souza, The Agency
Support
Kulturbüro Stadt Dortmund
Ministerium für Städtebau und Wohnen, Kultur und Sport des Landes
NRW
British Council
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