MARCO, Museo de Arte Contemporanea
Vigo
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Things that only an artist can do
dal 28/1/2010 al 1/5/2010

Segnalato da

Marta Viana Tome'



 
calendario eventi  :: 




28/1/2010

Things that only an artist can do

MARCO, Museo de Arte Contemporanea, Vigo

Humour in current art


comunicato stampa

Curators David Arlandis and Javier Marroquí

Artists:
Julien Berthier (Besançon, France, 1975)
Gelitin (Wien, Austria; from 1993 they began exhibiting internationally)
Piero Golia (Naples, Italy, 1974)
Leopold Kessler (Munich, Germany, 1976)
Yamashita+Kobayashi (Chiba, Japan, 1976/1974)
Enrique Lista (Cambre, A Coruña, Spain, 1977)
Aleksandra Mir (Lubin, Poland, 1967)
Gianni Motti (Sondrio, Italy, 1958)
Paola Pivi (Milan, Italy, 1971)
Wilfredo Prieto (Sancti Spiritus, Cuba, 1978)
Tere Recarens (Barcelona, Spain, 1967)
Xu Zhen (Shangai, China, 1977)
The group exhibition 'Things that only an artist can do' is part of a research that analyses the presence of humour in current art. The exhibition brings together twelve artists, all share the same artistic references, and, above all, share a work methodology. The works here exhibited are remnants of actions, records, documentation, or devices that speak of their projects.

MARCO of Vigo opens its 2010 programming with a group project coproduced with MEIAC of Badajoz and curated by David Arlandis and Javier Marroquí. 'Things that only an artist can do' arises as part of a curatorial research which since 2005 analyses the presence of humour in contemporary art, from different perspectives.

Here, the project focuses on the rise of certain artistic attitudes where humour shows up in nearly absurd manner. The exhibition brings together works by a tweleve artists, who insist on projects that entail a great effort. An irrational and disproportionate effort in relation to the end result. In the curator's words, 'To undertake an absurd, or out of context action always implies a comic charge for the observer, but when, furthermore, that action is carried out with intensity, with an absolute dedication and with a huge effort, and in full awareness that this effort is totally useless, we have a square-cubed absurdity, and, therefore, a square-cubed comic charge. The effort acts as an element which reinforces absurdity, its function is that of exaggerating. Exaggeration has always had an important role in humour, by being an element of distortion which removes us from reality and takes us to the comic realm through incoherence.'

'Things that only an artist can do' deals with the evolution of the concept of an artist, with their place in society and with the reconsideration of the function of art. What is it that makes them reach extremes where absurdity and humour are stronger than practical reason? Without a doubt, it is a new attitude, a new way of facing their creation, and a way of situating themselves in the world. The artists present in this exhibition share the same references, and, above all, share a work methodology, which is far from the production of objects and that tackles the action itself. The pieces shown in the galleries are most of them results, consequences, documentation or vestiges of an action.

Piero Golia's installation, remembrance of his canoe crossing through the Adriatic; Yamashita+Kobayashi's video, Infinity, register of an action without human presence; Wilfredo Prieto's installation — a plant, a wheelbarrow and a photograph — , trace of the performance executed on the island of Curaçao; Xu Zhen's video and photographs, showing the 18-day 'feat' on a van; Gianni Motti's stroll along the tunnel of the CERN LHC hadron collider in Geneva; Tere Recarens's video, showing the artist 'sweeping' the clouds over Berlin; the video-prologue of the 1999 performance by Aleksandra Mir, or the one with goldfishes on a plane, by Paola Pivi; the mail of the unfruitful action by the Gelitin collective; the balcony leading Julien Berthier's proposal, or Leopold Kessler's installation, Diplom, which registers the unwinding of a 1,200m cable along the city. And as an example of work in progress, Enrique Lista's installation, which began back in September 2009 with the drafting of an agreement on work production, and which will go on until August 2010.

About the curators
In 2002, David Arlandis (Valencia, 1979) and Javier Marroquí (Dolores, Alicante, 1978) join in a collaborative team work applied to the field of cultural production and focussed on research, curatorship and critics. This year they begin with exhibition programming, among them: Sobre una realidad ineludible. Arte y compromiso en Argentina in MEIAC (Badajoz) and CAB (Burgos); I Ciclo de Vídeo Internacional ALBIAC 06 (Almería), Empieza el juego in La Casa Encendida (Madrid), Carte Blanche in Le Comissariat (Paris), Hay algo de revolucionario en todo esto in Sala Parpalló and Centre Cultural la Mercè (Girona), Cine Infinito in Sala la Gallera (Valencia), Art for Fun in Casal Solleric (Palma), Mapping Valencia in MhV (Valencia), Positive Critical Imagination for Edinburgh Art Festival (Edimburgo), Tragicomedia (Cádiz and Sevilla), and Gabriela Golder. Habitada (Valencia). They are now organising a research about 'the crisis of cares', to be held in Valencia, Zagreb and Praga.

Catalogue
On the occasion of the show, MARCO of Vigo and MEIAC of Badajoz has published a trilingual catalogue (Galician-Spanish-English) which includes, besides a text by the curators, two essays about humour in contemporary art by David G. Torres and Mami Nataoka, texts by different authors —David Armengol, Montse Badía, David Barro, Mery Cuesta, Álvaro de los Ángeles, José Luis Pérez Pont— about each of the works in exhibition, the artist's biographies and images of the works.

Image: Piero Golia, Going to Tirana, 2001. Installation (video still). Courtesy of the artist

Production:
MARCO, Museo de Arte Contemporánea de Vigo / MEIAC, Museo Extremeño e Iberoamericano de Arte Contemporáneo, Badajoz

Communication & Press Department
Marta Viana Tomé marta.viana@marcovigo.com
Pilar Souto Soto pilar.souto@marcovigo.com
Tel. +34 986 113908 / 113903
Fax +34 986 113901

MARCO, Museo de Arte Contemporánea de Vigo
Rúa Príncipe 54 - 36202 Vigo (Pontevedra). Spain
Exhibition rooms on the first floor
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday (holidays included) From 11am to 9pm Sundays, from 11am to 3pm

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