Tatiana Trouve'
Gwenael Belanger
Christian Eisenberger
Peter Fischli
David Weiss
Daniel Hafner
Carsten Holler
Erika Giovanna Klien
Lu Qing
Aleksandra Mir
Lisi Raskin
Ludwig Reutterer
Wilhelm Rosler
Ed Ruscha
Anri Sala
Roman Signer
Xavier Veilhan
Stella Weissenberg
Markus Wilfling
Adam Budak
Katrin Bucher Trantow
With her monumental installation Il Grande Ritratto, Tatiana Trouve' converts the lower level of the Kunsthaus into a truly subjective realm: an inner post-apocalyptic landscape with spatial autonomy and strength, inspired by a science-fiction novel, Il Grande Ritratto (1960) by Dino Buzzati, an uncanny story of science and love, fiction and reality, an assemblage of desire, space and utopia. The group exhibition "Catch Me!" is about the phenomenon of acceleration, the personal experience of speed relative to time and space. With: Peter Fischli and David Weiss, Carsten Holler, Aleksandra Mir, Ed Ruscha, Anri Sala, Roman Signer, Xavier Veilhan among others.
Tatiana Trouvé
Il Grande Ritratto
Curator Adam Budak
Kunsthaus Graz is pleased to announce a very first in Austria, the solo exhibition Il Grande Ritratto
by one of the leading artists of the younger generation, Tatiana Trouvé (born 1968 in Cosenza, Italy,
now living and working in Paris).
Awarded the prestigious Prix Ricard (2001) and Prix Marcel Duchamp (2007), Trouvé has participated
in numerous exhibitions all over the world, including the Venice Biennale (2005), Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris (2008), Manifesta7 (2008), and most recently, migros museum für
gegenwartskunst, Zürich (2009). Her work (mainly large scale installations, sculptures and
drawings) defines what the artist herself articulates as "ways of world-making and ways of being in
the world."
Tatiana Trouvé with her monumental installation Il Grande Ritratto, conceived especially for the
Kunsthaus Graz, will convert the lower level of the Kunsthaus (Space02) into a truly subjective
realm: an inner post-apocalyptic landscape with spatial autonomy and strength, inspired by a
science-fiction novel, Il Grande Ritratto (1960) by the Italian master of literary neo-avant-garde, Dino
Buzzati, an uncanny story of science and love, fiction and reality, secrecy and dreams, an
assemblage of desire, space and utopia. Buzzati’s oeuvre which oscillates between magic realism
and social alienation sets up a context for Trouvé’s radical elaborations of space and time that in
effect turn the viewers’ journey through space into less a physical than rather a psychological
experience. Her Il Grande Ritratto concentrates on creating a space of blurred boundaries between
the inside and the outside: by an almost delirious act of spatial reconfiguration, the artist
deconstructs the space, saturating, condensing and "decelerating" it.
The installation carries
performative and participatory qualities: while walking through the space, the viewer morphs into
the landscape which disrupts the autonomy of the museum’s space and imposes its own spatial and
temporal grammar with small gardens of rocks and plants, a proliferation of columns that generate a
different spatial rhythm, cables running through the air, surreal working spaces and bizarre
automatic elevators... Trouvé’s is a sort of anti-space: an alternative environment where all regular
spatial and temporal coordinates are either negated or suspended: the sculptures act as the
prothesis of the building and some objects are set in a state of levitation, partly stopped in their
movements or challenged by the artist’s own treatment of scale and perspective. Il Grande Ritratto
is, however, far from a portrait of chaos: on the contrary, it is an "image" of precision and formal
unity that aims at generating a new and refreshing sense of space’s perception and comprehension.
The exhibition is accompanied by a series of events, including a meeting with the artist, a lecture by
Werner Helmich on Dino Buzzati’s literary work within the context of science-fiction literature of the
1960s, lectures by Pamela M. Lee and Louise Neri on the work of Tatiana Trouvé, as well as three
cinematic marathons (Into the Night) that will introduce a cinematic reference to Trouvé’s exhibition.
Into the Night will include screenings of Andrey Tarkovsky’s major works (The Mirror, Stalker,
Nostalgia) with an exclusive introduction by Tarkovsky’s son, Andrey Tarkovsky; two major works by
Hungarian director, Béla Tarr (Damnation, Werckmeister Harmonies), introduced by the author
himself in a conversation, as well as the screening of Jean Cocteau’s Orphic Trilogy (The Blood of a
Poet, Orpheus, Testament of Orpheus).
The catalogue of Tatiana Trouvé’s exhibition will consist of rich visual material that enlarges the
context of Trouvé’s exhibition in the Kunsthaus and it will be accompanied by a sequence of critical
texts by the artist herself, Louise Neri, Maria Gough, Francesca Pietropaolo, Dieter Roelstraete,
Pamela M. Lee as well as a curatorial text by Adam Budak and introduction by Peter Pakesch. The
catalogue (€ 29,90) is available in German and English at the Kunsthaus Graz Shop.
Tatiana Trouve' (born 1968 in Cosenza, Italy, living and working in Paris) was awarded the prestigious Prix Ricard (2001) and Prix Marcel Duchamp (2007), and has participated in numerous exhibitions all over the world, including the Venice Biennale (2005), Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (2008), Manifesta7 (2008), and most recently, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zürich (2009).
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Catch Me!
Grasping Speed
With: Gwenaël Bélanger, Christian Eisenberger, Peter Fischli and David Weiss, Daniel Hafner, Carsten Höller, Erika Giovanna Klien, Lu Qing, Aleksandra Mir, Lisi Raskin, Ludwig Reutterer, Wilhelm Rösler, Ed Ruscha, Anri Sala, Roman Signer, Xavier Veilhan, Stella Weissenberg, Markus Wilfling, among others.
Curator: Katrin Bucher Trantow
Contrasting with Tatiana Trouvé’s solo exhibition Il Grande Ritratto in Space02 that will show a space in a condition of arrested time, the group exhibition Catch Me! is about the phenomenon of speed as a personal experience in relation to a socially constructed image and as a quest to grasp life in full bloom.
Speed as an experimental phenomenon has been in the minds of many theoreticians and artists during the 20th century and is generally either negatively exaggerated or romantically idealized as perhaps in Jack Kerouac´s On the Road, or in Paul Virilio’s benchmark essay Polar Inertia. Speed has been the metaphor for everything new and hot, for development as a general driving force of life itself, as well as for intense situations of energy, creativity and spirit. The works selected for Catch Me! are about this fascination with acute situations, the thrill of an accelerating dynamic and the exhilaration that speed can generate, as well as about captivating the force of movement in time. That every form of speed is invariably followed by slowing down is something that we usually try to forget when we are in the exhilarated stage of acceleration, but if nothing else this is what the recession has undoubtedly shown us by confronting us with stark images of the stock market index.
So Catch Me! will deal with the longing, the waiting, even the lust for speed that can be seen as a desire to be master of a concentrated moment. Speed and acceleration carry with them a usually very male image of power that borders on the carnal and erotic. Thereby promising an exciting, sometimes even clear-sighted experience as spelt out so vigorously by the Futurists one hundred years ago when Marinetti proclaimed that passivity was over, "aggressive action" was to come and "that the world’s magnificence had been enriched by the new beauty of speed." In 1909 when Marinetti wrote his famous sentence and damned everything old with it, cars were just about getting faster than the fastest animal, the first planes had left the earth, but no man or woman had yet been to the moon and actually seen the slowed down circular movement of the small blue ball in a huge, never ending, continuously moving space. And no one had dreamt of actually diving into the depths of a proton and finding there a whole new – continuously moving - universe of existence.
Accordingly the desire to grasp speed is also to be understood as a desire to comprehend the phenomenon as a metaphor for life itself in its form and composition and to scrutinizingly take it apart, maybe by anachronistically slowing it down, by splitting it up or by extracting forcefully an essence.
Starting with High-Speed Gardening by Ed Ruscha, the exhibition represents an attempt to set up a choreographed display, with a group of artists making speed in its various facets the libretto in the design of Space01.
A catalogue accompanies the exhibition.
Image: Tatiana Trouvé, Untitled, 2008. Courtesy Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin. Photo: André Morin
Press Information:
Universalmuseum Joanneum Press Office
Mariahilferstraße 4, 8020 Graz, Austria tel +43/316/8017-9213 and -9211 presse@museum-joanneum.at
Sabine Bergmann T: +43/316/8017-9211 F: +43/316/8017-9253 sabine.bergmann@museum-joanneum.at
Mag. Christoph Pelzl T: +43/316/8017-9213 F: +43/316/8017-9253 christoph.pelzl@museum-joanneum.at
Opening: Feb 5, 2010, 7pm
Kunsthaus Graz, Space02
Lendkai 1, 8020 - Graz
Opening hours
Tue – Sun 10am-6pm
Admission
Adults: 7,00 €
Groups of seven or more, senior citizens, people on military or alternative service, disabled people: 5,50 €
Pupils, apprentices and students up to 27 years: 3,00 €
Pupils in school groups: 1,50 € apiece
Families (2 adults and children up to 14 years): 14,00 €
Children up to 6 years: admission free