Bik Van der Pol
Maaike Gouwenberg
Joris Lindhout
Karin Hueber
Anna Okrasko
Elian Somers
Emily Whitebread
Mariette Dolle
An exhibition inspired by a book. In 2010 the French author Michel Houellebecq wrote his bestselling novel The Map and the Territory. Its title is derived from the assertion made by Polish linguist Alfred Korzybski, The map is not the territory. On show Bik Van der Pol, Maaike Gouwenberg & Joris Lindhout, Karin Hueber, Anna Okrasko, Elian Somers, Emily Whitebread.
Between the Map and the Territory is an exhibition inspired by a book. In 2010 the French
author Michel Houellebecq wrote his bestselling novel The Map and the Territory. Its title is
derived from the assertion made by Polish linguist Alfred Korzybski, ‘The map is not the
territory’. The map-territory relationship describes the impossible relationship between a
location and the representation of that location, such as the relationship between a city and its
map. In his book, Houellebecq uses the fictional course of a successful artist’s life as the
framework for a series of essay-like observations on the failure of the capitalist system and the
decline of modernism. But also in the reality of the Twenty-teens, increasing numbers of writers
and theorists are attempting to think beyond modernism. But how can these attempts make a
difference when The Map is Not the Territory and the relationship between words and reality is
an impossible one?
Between the Map and the Territory manifests itself as a frame story for a number of artists who
address our complex relationship to modernism, capitalism, politics and citizenship in the
contemporary city, in a productive, but also deliberately evasive way.
In 2011 Bik Van der Pol wrote the influential essay Work To Do for TENT, on the prospects for
the arts in the big city. Has Rotterdam become a shrinking city with nothing to lose? And should
it not seize the opportunity to turn the city’s vacant buildings into a productive experimental
garden? For many years, Liesbeth Bik and Jos van der Pol have been prominent standard bearers
for an artistic practice that reaches further than just the exhibition space. The meaning of their
art becomes manifest in symposia, educational programmes, exhibition concepts and essays. In
TENT, they place a monumental scoreboard with letter-cards. The board is animated live by
assistants who constantly change the modular text elements to spell out a number of abstract
idioms, quotes and maxims. The profusion of texts activates the observer into thinking and,
thus, is also a plea for language as an important form of capital in today’s knowledge economy.
The Swiss artist Karin Hueber graduated from the Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst in Basel
in 2005 and has lived and worked alternately in Rotterdam, Berlin and Basel since 2006.
Hueber’s work consists of installations of architectural elements that are apparently waiting to
be used, as pieces of scenery for a stage production, as attributes for a performance. Elements
are bent, folded, doubled, reversed or enlarged. Her sculptures are derived from what she
encounters in the space; they obtain their form from the space in which they are shown.
Hueber’s interest in the differences and similarities in the languages of architecture and
sculpture result in works that create conflicting sensations oscillating between the physical and
metal experience of space.
For some time now, Maaike Gouwenberg and Joris Lindhout have been conducting joint
research into ‘gothic as a cultural strategy’. They regard gothic as a flexible concept that is not
confined to just a single period or style. In 2010 they made a road-trip through the south of the
United States in search of Southern Gothic, which resulted in an exhibition in the 1646
exhibition space in The Hague, among other things. Brazilian Gothic was the objective of their
stay in Brazil, the country in which Oscar Niemeyer is a hero and modernism is almost sacred.
Gouwenberg and Lindhout focus on an alternative hero: Zé do Caixao (loosely translated: Coffin
Joe), the alter ego of filmmaker José Mojica Marins. He wears a black cape and top hat, hates
superstition and religion and is entirely amoral. For Zé, Gouwenberg and Lindhout create a locus
amoenus as a temporary habitat. Locus Amoenus was originally a literary term referring to an
idyllic place devoid of rules.
Maaike Gouwenberg works as curator for Expodium, If I can’t Dance and W139, among others.
She is founder of A.P.E., through which she organizes international performance projects. Joris
Lindhout is a visual artist. Their interest in the obscure is expressed in zines, murals, reading-
and discussion groups and the Department of Misdemeanor, Myth and Monstruosity (currently
under development).
The Polish artist Anna Okrasko shows a number of video pieces, including her latest film that
plays out against the background of the Utrecht housing estate Kanaleneiland, where she stayed
at the invitation of art collective Expodium. The central aspect of her video work is the idea of a
shared urban space and how the decisions that affect it are made, and the negotiations this
involves. In a cinematic form, she aims to discuss issues relating to migration, housing and
redevelopment. In her fictional documentaries she often incorporates various film genres and
references to filmmakers, such as in Justus Story, a storyboard about the Van Effen complex in
Rotterdam. This modernist national monument is currently being renovated. Okrasko
transforms the block of houses into a surprisingly appropriate setting for a Robin Hood-like tale.
Okrasko studied at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts and at the Piet Zwart Institute in
Rotterdam.
Urban utopias such as Brasilia, Kaliningrad and the Cité Modèle in Brussels have all been the
subject of photographic research projects by Elian Somers. She searches for traces of the
various ideologies that define the history of a city. For the past three years Somers has been
working on a series about California City, a city in the Mojave Desert in the United States. In the
nineteen fifties, sociologist Nathan Mendelsohn developed the plans for this utopian desert-city.
Mendelsohn acquired a huge piece of land (330 square kilometres, in area the third largest city
in America) and had designs drawn up for a grid of 52,000 lots, complete with roads, shops and
facilities. The roads were built, but hardly any inhabitants arrived and in 1969 Mendelsohn sold
his development company. California City is a work about utopia and dystopia, about the dream
of the developer and the real estate bubble. In Somers’ photographs the landscape presents
itself as both deserted and untouched: with traces of a past history, but also opportunities for a
new story.
For Emily Whitebread, writing is an integral part of her artistic work, which also comprises
video, audio, printed matter and performance. Her audio piece The Birth And Growth of Worlds
takes us along on a journey through the cosmos. A man measures the distances between the
planets in the Solar System. The greater the distance, the longer the pause before the next
planet is named. The relationship between time and space is translated into silence and sound.
The logic behind this does not solve riddle of its purpose. In 2012 Whitebread was RAIR artist-in-
residence at artists’ initiative Duende in Rotterdam.
The exhibition is compiled by Mariette Dölle.
Events:
Wednesday 05.09.2011, 17.00 & 20.00h: Joint opening of Witte de With and TENT.
Witte de With opens Surplus Authors from 17.00 hrs, TENT opens Between The Map and The
Territory from 20.00 hrs. Joint afterparty in WORM from 23.00 hrs.
Friday 14.09 – Sunday 16.09.2012: De Wereld van Witte de With and 24 Uur Cultuur.
Outdoor programme with De Bende, Drunken Lion Sound System and Mesh Print Club.
Thursday 18.10.2012, 20.00h: Re-public.
Evening about innovative education projects in TENT. With Sophie Krier on t.z.t., Authentic Boys
on Rehearsing Revolution, a.o.
Education
20.09 – 23.12.2012
t.z.t.
Long-term project in collaboration with Sophie Krier.
In Tijdelijk Zonder Titel (Temporarily Untitled) a group of 25 secondary school pupils conduct an
artistic investigation for twelve weeks long, supervised by artist/designer Sophie Krier. The only
thing that’s certain is the starting point: the group has a fixed operating base in one of TENT’s
exhibition spaces.
Editorial note, not for publication:
For more information please contact Josephine van Kranendonk, communication and marketing TENT via
com.tent@cbk.rotterdam.nl or +31 (0)10 201 09 62.
Opening September, 5th
TENT and Witte de Wuth
Witte de With Straat 50, 3012 BR Rotterdam
Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday: 11.00 - 18.00hrs
Admission prices:
€ 4,- TENT,
€ 2,- (<18, student, CJP, 65+, groups of 10 people or more),
€ 7,- combi-ticket Witte de With & TENT,
Free: <12, Rotterdampas, Museumkaart