Theo Altenberg
Michel Auder
Marc Camille Chaimowicz
Neville D'Almeida
Yayoi Kusama
Manon
Gustav Metzger
Helio Oiticica
St. Petrischnee is a variety of positions from the 1960s and 1970s, the age that sought to expand or to move beyond the old rules of art history and of society. Seldom have there been such radical advances, causing older generations so much anxiety and alarm. An entire generation of youth was in upheaval, attacking the fallout of the Cold War, attacking petit-bourgeois hypocrisy and parochialism...
Theo Altenberg
Michel Auder
Marc Camille Chaimowicz
Neville D'Almeida
Yayoi Kusama
Manon
Gustav Metzger
Hélio Oiticica
"Of all the affairs we participate in, with or without interest, the groping
search for a new way of life is the only aspect still impassioning." Guy
Debord
St. Petrischnee is a variety of positions from the 1960s and 1970s, the age
that sought to expand or to move beyond the old rules of art history and of
society. Seldom have there been such radical advances, causing older
generations so much anxiety and alarm. An entire generation of youth was in
upheaval, attacking the fallout of the Cold War, attacking petit-bourgeois
hypocrisy and parochialism, attacking nuclear rearmament and the Vietnam
war. Subversive strategies were debated and experimented with: the
postulation of free love, sit-ins, the peace movement, consumption of
mind-expanding drugs, conspiratorial Maoist cells, the politicisation of the
working classes, support for guerrilla operations in the Third World, the
counter-culture of the communes... For the young, it was all about
tolerance, but ultimately the views of individual groups led to divisions,
radicalisation of political ideas or to a politically passive party culture.
Out of this mood of upheaval, the young generation sought to escape the
dictates of Modernism, and also to break away from Minimal Art, at the time
the predominant trend in art. There were already early signs of
participatory environments, but these were largely disregarded until some
years later.
The works of the Brazilian HELIO OITICICA are an excellent example; he
developed from his starting point in constructivism and sought to link his
art directly to life. His approach was no longer based on the materiality of
individual works; he saw his work rather as experiences in a post-industrial
world. His nine-part series Block Experiments in Cosmococa, the first five
of which he produced with the filmmaker NEVILLE D'ALMEIDA, is based on the
idea of a Quasi-Cinema, actively involving the observer. The work is a
direct response to the repressive dictatorship in Brazil, from which
Oiticica escaped to New York in the early 1970s. On show will be CCI
Trashiscapes, dating from 1973, a room-sized installation, combining
portraits of the cineaste Luis Buñuel, the actor Luis Fernando Guimaraes and
album covers by Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention. All the characters
wear a "make-up" of fine lines of cocaine. A soundtrack of popular Brazilian
music provides the background to the pictures, which is interrupted by
snatches of Stockhausen, Jimi Hendrix, street noise or a man's voice
reading. Mattresses and nail files invite you to lose yourself in this
cosmos of sounds and images.
MARC CAMILLE CHAIMOWICZ's room-sized installation Celebration? Real Life
Revisited from 1972 was rebuilt for the first time again in 2000. The
silvery walls act like "silver screens", on the floor are groups of objects
like flowers, items of laundry or masks of sentimental value, the theatrical
lighting is broken by the reflections from mirror balls. The sound of David
Bowie or the Rolling Stones sets the atmosphere. In contrast to the
minimalist neutrality of the time, Celebration? Real Life seeks to move
closer to an excessive subjectivity. It is a turning away from the permanent
object towards a time-dependent process, also involving the observer. The
work is also a turning away from belief in a socio-political work, which
reduces art to mere information. For Chaimowicz, the emphasis is on sensory
perception and metaphor; the models are either unheroic figures from
literature, like Leopold Bloom in James Joyce's Ulysses, or the dandified
attitude of figures of the night, following in the French tradition, from
Baudelaire and Proust, via Gide and Camus to Genet.
Since the end of the 1960s, MICHEL AUDER has been filming his Bohemian
surroundings in New York. The "scene" comprising actors, photographic
models, musicians, film makers and artists was his background, and formed
the factual material for his films and videos. His viewpoint is
non-hierarchical and intimate. Auder renounces the hypothetical objectivity
of the film documentary, preferring the analogy with contemplative
meditation. In 1971, Michel Auder accompanied and filmed the Cockettes when
they visited New York, a visit that led to the break-up of the legendary
performance group. The Cockettes emerged from the San Francisco hippy scene
and captivated the media and the underground scene between 1969 and 1972.
Their performances were freely improvised from the vital consciousness that
was based on drugs, glam-rock and wild outfits. Their gender-bending - like
drag queens with a subversive political humour - brought the fame. In San
Francisco, they were the darlings of the cultural scene. But, invited to New
York in 1972, their fame disintegrated, caught in a cultural crossfire
between East Coast and West Coast. The New Yorkers, used to slick
professionalism, found the group's uncouth dilettantism just too much.
The Japanese YAYOI KUSAMA was at the height of her creativity in New York
in the 1960s and early 1970s, before returning to her homeland. Kusama is
regarded as a forerunner of the Pop Art movement, especially the serial
works of Andy Warhol. As a key figure at the beginning of the age of
installation and performance art, she was the first to use current content
as propaganda, which amounted to a break with art criticism. Content that
stood in radical opposition to the Vietnam war, or took up themes like
bulimia or sexism in art. But essentially, Yayoi Kusama's leitmotif remains
the obliteration of the self in the never-endingness of the Universe. It is
the struggle against Japanese expectations of a collective soul that
tolerates no individual "infidelities". Kusama draped her canvases with
net-like structures, later adding polka dots. She uses phallic sculptures
for her installations, out of material which she spreads over whole
environments. The materialisation of these hallucinatory "dot" worlds into
infinity is also seen in her mirror-lined installations: Love Forever
,1969/2000 and Fireflies on Water, 2000. Both installations draw the
observer into the endless expanse of the self, reflected in the Universe.
The Swiss artist MANON has been occupied since 1974 with the theme of
identity, self-representation and image. Manon presents herself with
equipment, insignia and environments, conveying a personal philosophy and
condensing images describing the social upheaval of the 1970s. The
liberalisation of sexuality, breaking free of social rules and drugs are the
cornerstones of her work. On display in the migros museum of contemporary
art will be the black and white series of photographs Dame au crane rasé, a
work created in 1978 in Paris. There are pictures of the fallen angel of the
city, oscillating between mundane life and isolation in the city. Her
attention is focussed on individual free space, because self-presentation is
a code which conveys the opposing nature of something familiar or something
unknown, but which also - like camouflage - can be misleading.
GUSTAV METZGER's work Liquid Crystals had its premiere in 1966 at a rock
concert by The Who at the Roundhouse in London. The kaleidoscopic structures
of liquid crystals created a psychedelic stage image. In the mood of social
upheaval in the 1960s, Gustav Metzger developed his idea of
"Auto-destructive Art". In five manifestos he pursues the issue of the
conditions and possibilities for art after the Holocaust and Hiroshima. His
flight from Nazi Germany in 1939 showed Gustav Metzger the possibility of
destroying his own existence, and has characterised the work of the artist,
who is of Jewish extraction, up to the present. His strategy for
reconquering the terrain of art lies in the creation of "Autodestructive
Art", a form of art in which there is an inherent self-destructive
mechanism, and which is constituted from this. Metzger later expanded the
idea of auto-destructive art to take in the dimension of auto-creative art,
of which Liquid Crystals is also an example. The concept behind it is a work
that can create itself of itself, without the guiding hand of the artist.
THEO ALTENBERG was a member of the Viennese Otto Mühl Commune
Friedrichshof. There, he photographed the life of the commune from 1973 to
1978. These pictures provide a documentary record of one of the most radical
attempts at creating an alternative way of life. Communal life was a life of
intense psychological self-admiration, cut off from the outside world;
there, the most diverse forms of free love and the sexual culture were
played out. The potential released by this was converted into screenplays,
photographic works and paintings - giving rise to new social utopias,
researching democracy and analyses of language and substitution. According
to Altenberg, the commune was "owned by the most consistently leftist
practice, because we had made communal ownership a reality and had overcome
petty rivalry, because we interpreted revolt as hedonism and were united by
psychoanalytical theory." This experiment fell apart in 1990 on the collapse
of the monarchy of Otto Mühl.
The migros museum of contemporary art is an institution of the Migros
Culture Percentage.
Press Conference: Friday, 14 June 2002, 11.30
Opening: Friday, 14 June 2002, 18.00
Opening times: Tue - Fri 12.00 - 18.00 Sat., Sun. 11.00 - 17.00
closed on Mondays
Information: Tel +41 1 277 20 50 / Fax +41 1 277 62 86
http://www.kulturprozent.ch
Migros museum
Limmatstr. 270
Zurich