Gift of Dieter and Gertraud Bogner. The video installation. Voice off is a double projection onto both sides of a wall that separates a space into two identical rooms: the projections form the division wall between these two adjacent rooms. Visitors are invited to move from one side of the projection to the other through a barely discernible curtain hidden in the projection screens.
With Voice off (1999) the mumok is presenting the video installation by the American
artist Judith Barry that the married couple and collectors Dieter and Gertraud Bogner
gifted to the museum last year.
In 2007, these long-time supporters and friends of the mumok who began their
collection at the end of the 1970s, donated its central complex of constructive,
structural and conceptual art to the museum. Comprising around four hundred
works, including pictures, sculptures, objects and graphic works–from, for example,
Marc Adrian, Heinz Gappmayr, Dan Graham, Dora Maurer, Josef Mikl or Heimo
Zobernig–along with artist books and archival materials, the house became the
recipient of the biggest gift in its history. The mumok is producing a comprehensive
publication which will focus on the Bogner gift and it will be presented on 21
September during the “Fifty Years of mumok” celebrations.
Voice off is a double projection onto both sides of a wall that separates a space into
two identical rooms: the projections form the division wall between these two
adjacent rooms. Visitors are invited to move from one side of the projection to the
other through a barely discernible curtain hidden in the projection screens. Each of
the two video projections presents a different experience of how the voice might
become visible, exploring how ideas intrinsic to the question of 'what the voice is' in
terms of possession and loss, might be represented.
In one projection, a group of characters find themselves in a suspended ambience
within a seemingly endless space filled with patches of fog or mist. In this dream-like
environment, they demonstrate some of the personal, intimate and interior
encounters that one might have with the voice – with your own voice, and with other
voices. These include personal and social experiences, overheard bits of speech,
interior monologues, and snatches of songs. These are the kinds of experiences with
the voice that catch you as you move through your daily life; that both possess you
and which you may try to resist, or which you may give yourself over to.
On the other side of the wall, a man in an office tries to work, but is increasingly
disturbed by the voices and sounds that penetrate his space. Becoming more and
more desperate, he tries to discover the source of the voices, demonstrating, from a
different perspective, how through the act of involuntarily hearing, one can also be
possessed, even haunted, by the voice. At this point in the narrative the projections
appear to coalesce only to separate once again, as another story takes over.
In her work Judith Barry often negotiates the interactions between media and
architecture, and questions how the relationships between the individual within a
variety of social spaces might be represented. In Voice off, these questions are linked
through gender issues, film theory and perceptual processes. In 2000, the artist was
awarded the Austrian Friedrich Kiesler Prize for Architecture and Art for her
interdisciplinary work.
Judith Barry, was born in 1954 in Columbus, Ohio, and lives in New York. She
studied at the University of California/Berkeley and the New York Institute of
Technology. Since her solo show in the Whitney Museum 1982, she has had
numerous exhibitions including participating in the documenta 2012.
Image: Voice off, 1999
Zweikanal-Videoinstallation / two channel video installation
Ton, Maße variabel / sound, variable dimensions
Edition #4 aus / of 5, 17 min
Schenkung Dieter und Gertraud Bogner, 2011 / gift of Dieter and Gertraud Bogner, 2011
© Judith Barry
Press contact
Barbara Hammerschmied Phone +43 1 52500-1450 Fax +43 1 52500-1300 barbara.hammerschmied@mumok.at - press@mumok.at
Press Conference: October 12, 2012, 10.00 a.m.
Opening: October 12, 2012– 7.00 p.m.
MuseumsQuartier
Museumsplatz 1, A-1070 Wien
Opening hours
Monday: 2–7 p.m.
Tuesday to Sunday: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Thursday: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Tickets
Normal € 10,–
Reduced € 8,– or € 7,–