Boltanski
Claus Carstensen
Peter Holst Henckel
Søren Martinsen
Edvard Munch
Richard Deacon
Apokalypsis Katapafsis
Superflex
For the third consecutive summer ARKEN exhibits selected works from its permanent collection in the Art Axis and the Graphics Gallery. As the most recently established museum of modern art in Denmark, ARKEN’s collection is concentrated on modern and contemporary art. The collection supplements and broadens the scope of other collections of art in Denmark, and the focus is especially on Danish and Nordic art in an international perspective.
For the third consecutive summer ARKEN
exhibits selected works from its permanent
collection in the Art Axis and the Graphics
Gallery.
As the most recently established museum
of modern art in Denmark, ARKEN’s
collection is concentrated on modern and
contemporary art. The collection
supplements and broadens the scope of
other collections of art in Denmark, and
the focus is especially on Danish and
Nordic art in an international perspective.
Today, ARKEN’s collection comprises
around 260 works of art - 50 of these
have been chosen for this summer’s
exhibition, which centres on the museum’s
most recent acquisitions. These are shown
in continuation of the works, which are
already part of the collection.
The Art Axis
A new artist in Denmark is the Israeli artist
Doron Solomons whose video My
Collected Silences is shown at the top of
the Art Axis. Solomons was formerly
employed in a television company, and his
video shows a collection of discarded cuts
from television interviews brought by the
company in their news programmes. There
is no speech on the video. It only shows
the moment when the speakers
temporarily pause. Solomons’ work gives
visual expression to the pause - the
moment of reflection, doubt or
compassion, and the search for the right
words and the right continuation.
The photograph Flex Pissing/Björk er en
nar [a.k.a. Bringing It All Back Home]
1, 1997, by Claus Carstensen and the
artist group Superflex, is the size of a
billboard and the most famous work in
ARKEN’s collection. It received a lot of
attention in an ironic and critical campaign
by the Danish tabloid newspaper Ekstra
Bladet, which attacked what they
described as The Danish Art Mob in the
winter of 1998-99. As a result, the work
was included in a large exhibition at the
Aarhus Museum of Art in the autumn of
1999, which showed works of art, which
have caused a scandal in the 20th
century. Here, it was on display along with
a prominent selection of central works
from Danish art history.
The persons in the photograph are not
immediately recognisable because they
hide their faces. But in fact the picture
represents the artists themselves: Claus
Carstensen (his back to the camera) and
Superflex (wearing animal masks). The
photograph is from the Californian desert
and contains a number of references to
music as idiom. Especially the reference to
the Irish band U2 and their record "The
Joshua Tree" is obvious due to the
composition which imitates their album
cover.
It is an unusual work because it is a
co-creation by two parties who do not
normally work together. Claus Carstensen
was a professor, and Superflex were
students at the Royal Danish Academy of
Fine Arts, when the photograph was
taken. Thus, two different generations
and two different idioms are joined in the
photograph.
Another example of how the Danish artist group Superflex works can
be seen in the next work in the Art Axis: Superflex Biogas in Africa.
In 1997, Superflex developed a biogas plant, which was installed in a
village in Tanzania. Since then, two orange balloons have transformed
biological waste from humans and animals into gas, thus making an
African household self-sufficient in terms of heating and lighting.
At ARKEN, this work presents itself as a kind of stand for the biogas
plant displaying the prototype of the balloon, diagrams, posters and a
table with brochures.
The three videos document the installation of the plant and show
how Superflex, in a situation like this, interacts with the local
population. The large orange balloon, which at first sight appears to
be a glaring sculptural object, turns out to be a functional object as
well. Superflex does not use art to point at specific issues, but as a
way of actively intervening in social and political structures - as a
place for real, practical solutions.
Superflex Biogas in Africa shows a simple, cheap, attractive and
ecologically sound model for the production of energy in a third world
country. And a work of art that encourages thought on the relations
between rich and poor countries.
To the right of Superflex’s work, a number of monochromes by Ciaran
Lennon, Ola Billgren and Claus Jensen are on display. The surface
of their paintings consists of one single colour. These paintings all
seek to explore formally the traditional categories of painting and
sculpture. Claus Jensen, for instance, calls his piece Painting in three
parts, but leaves it standing on the floor rather than hanging on a
wall.
This year, ARKEN has acquired two large works by the young Danish
sculptor Martin Erik Andersen. His sculpture Lamp knitwear
(Apokalypsis Katapafsis) from 1999 hangs from the ceiling. It spreads
a rare light because of its pink aquarium neon tubes. The subtitle
Apokalypsis Katapafsis is spelt out in the machine knit squares each
containing a letter.
Apokalypsis Katapafsis is Greek and denotes the place on the island
Patmos where St. John the Divine had his revelation of the
Apocalypse - the world coming to an end. According to the
revelation, the world will come to an end four times after which God
will create a new Earth and a new sun. The sculpture refers not only
to the destruction of everything, but also to regeneration and a new
beginning. The title, however, is misleading in terms of the location of
the sculpture because it refers to a specific place on a Greek island
remote from ARKEN’s Art Axis.
The work exhibits a balance between form and idea, language and
physical material as well as body and spirit. The connection to the
body is established through the knitted material. The spectator’s
thoughts are naturally directed at clothing, and then - because of
the transparency and the pale, pink colours - at the skin itself. The
ragged, almost dissolving, knitwear reinforces the reference in the
title to Judgment Day and total breakdown.
The other sculpture by Martin Erik Andersen Shuttering with
wallpieces was originally made for ARKEN’s exhibition "Out of Shape" in
1997. Shut-tering with wallpieces is designed especially for ARKEN’s
Art Axis. It emphasises the connection between sculpture and
architecture. The shuttering materials of the box suggest concrete
casting and therefore relate directly to the walls of the Art Axis,
which have been cast on site. The sculpture establishes a gradual
transition from the box as a detached spatial shape to the relief of
the wall shuttering. This is a way of effecting the transition between
space and its limit - the wall.
The sculpture also plays with the opposition between public space -
in this case the museum - and private space belonging to the
individual, the artist. The box represents both spaces. In fact, it has
a very private dimension: It is a 1:1 model of the artist’s bedroom.
Martin Erik Andersen wants to demonstrate that the sculptures spring
from - and are inextricably tied to - the private reality of the artist.
Richard Deacon’s sculpture Piltdown offers a double experience. It is
both an interesting shape created from various, very sensuous
materials and an object, which, because of its size and colour
resembles a skull. The title Piltdown also refers to a skull and adds a
unique dimension to the sculpture. "Piltdown" refers to a famous
archaeological discovery of a prehistoric human skull.
The discovery became one of the most talked-about scientific
scandals. In 1912, English scientists believed the skull to be The
Missing Link, which establishes the evolutionary connection between
monkey-like creatures and humans. Not until 40 years later, the
"Piltdown-man" was revealed to be a falsification. The combination of
a human skull with the jaw and teeth of an orangutang had deceived
the archaeologists. This complexity also characterises the sculpture.
It is constructed of different elements and materials, including curtain
rings. The subtlety of the title draws attention to the fact that
Deacon’s sculpture - like the "Piltdown-man" - is a human
construction, which resembles, but is not, what it pretends to be.
On the right wall, three recently purchased paintings by the German
artist Günther Förg are displayed. They are variations on the same
pictorial theme or motif: Different figures and pictorial treatment of
the surface have been placed on a yellow monochrome background.
Around a central stem-like yellow figure the canvas is filled with loose
brushstrokes, painted spaces and a grid structure consisting of
vertical and horizontal brushstrokes.
The grid motif can be found in Edvard Munch’s late paintings where
the figures in the painting as well as the background often are
realised by vertical and horizontal brushstrokes. The three paintings
from 1999 are among the earliest Munch-inspired paintings done by
Förg, and it is obvious that concrete-abstract painting clashes with a
more lyrical, expressive form of expression. The paintings show how
Förg has adapted the specific Nordic tradition and assimilated it into
his own artistic expression.
Two of the artists who are currently attracting attention because of
a distinct and strongly personal style in painting are Tal R and
Kasper Bonnén. The new paintings emerge as apparently
spontaneous and unsophisticated expressions, often deliberately
sloppy, but possessing an innocent sincerity which seems to be
moving away from the intellectual paintings of the 1980’s.
Furthermore, Tal R paints recognisable objects and everyday
situations. The spectator does not need any prior knowledge in order
to understand his works. They use a simple, humorous, almost
cartoon-like figurative language and have great pictorial and
colouristic power.
In Blocked door (2000) the surface has been diagonally divided into a
white and a blue area. On top of this abstract structure is a
figurative layer where you see an arm opening or closing a door.
Behind the door is a chaotic mess: chairs, lamps, potted plants,
mugs, speakers. To close off, or to create openings, is a recurring
motif in Tal R’s art. Blocked door is about not being able to get in. It
shows a situation where everyday objects have piled up and block
the occupation of a space.
During the latest decades photography has acquired an increasingly
prominent position in contemporary art. Therefore, it now has a
distinct and natural place in ARKEN’s collection.
The Romantic landscape tradition is continued in Mads Gamdrup’s
photographs of the night at Moens Klint where the path of the stars
and the rotation of the Earth have been mapped as luminous lines
across a dark sky. And in Per Bak Jensen’s photographs of burning
haystacks and wood paths where suspended sacks protect young
pheasants against birds of prey. The photographs strangely portray
the special magic of the place. Gamdrup and Bak Jensen are
exponents of "straight photography", i.e. photography without
arrangement and manipulation.
Claus Carstensen’s 10 colour photographs Crossland, Exile (1992)
similarly portray places and situations from the artist’s travels.
Claus Carstensen, Peter Holst Henckel and Søren Martinsen,
whose photographs are also part of ARKEN’s collection, do not employ
photography alone, but use it in combination with a range of different
mediums in their artistic practice.
A different type of photography can be seen in Lene Stæhr’s
photographs of voluminous, weightless human bodies turned upside
down, questioning our common notions of proportion and gravitation.
If you continue up through the Red Axis, you see ARKEN’s permanent
display of photographs from the collection.
On the wall leading to the Graphics Gallery hangs Torben Ebbesen’s
wall object Caprice from 1999. This work teases our usual notion that
if something hangs on a wall, it must be a painting. Ebbesen’s work is
a hybrid of painting and sculpture where the picture is sliding out
from under the glass.
With the sculpture Cellarabesque Elisabeth Toubro has created a
transparent, hanging sculpture - a system of iron bars covered by
bulging glass fibre plates. It resembles cell nucleuses or unpredictable
biological structures invisible to the naked eye. The sculpture is
presented in connection with Hairarabesque 1 and 2, which contain
references to Toubro’s childhood in Greenland. The skin of a polar
bear as well as the Eskimo hairstyle inspires her shapes. From these
sculptures emerge letter-like designs of wood.
They can be seen as images of the ritual sounds made by the
shamans of Greenland (and registered by the Danish Arctic explorer
Knud Rasmussen).
With their references to skin and hair the works be-come part of the
tradition of using skin and hair in trophies - as emblems of victory. In
this instance, we may assume that Toubro is demonstrating the
victory over and the suppression of the original culture of Greenland
by Western culture.
The photographs on the wall are also by Elisabeth Toubro. They show
different rooms constructed and later photographed by the artist.
The rooms are like miniature theatre stages, built for the occasion
and hereafter non-existent.
They are further examples of how photographs have become an
integrated part of the practice of contemporary art, though - like
Elisabeth Toubro - they primarily work with different forms of
expression.
The Graphics Gallery
The Beds is an installation by the French artist Christian Boltanski.
The work is designed as a group of hospital beds or incubators. Next
to some of the beds there is a stand, the kind which hospitals use to
attach little bags with blood and other fluids. The artist, however,
has attached a fluorescent light. Boltanski says of his own work that
it gives associations to hospitals, suffering and the chaos before
death.
The work activates the emotions we experience in connection with
illness and death - both the emotions rooted in our individual
experiences and a more general and common fear of life threatening
situations. As such, the work is in line with the recurring motif in
Boltanski’s art: Man and the human condition.
Boltanski works with common everyday materials in order to make art
present for the spectator. A work like The Beds relates closely to real
life in an attempt to speak directly to our emotions. By using the
installation as an artistic expression Boltanski creates a suggestive
scenography in the exhibition area.
The Beds was originally shown in ARKEN’s exhibition of Christian
Boltanski’s work in 1998/99 and it was subsequently purchased.
Visit The ARKEN Collection at http://www.kid.dk - The National Database on
Art in Danish Museums.
Opening hours:
Tuesday-Sunday
10.00-17.00
Wednesday
10.00-21.00
Monday
Closed
Arken Museum of Modern Art
Skovvej 100 - Denmark-2635 Ishoj
tel +45 43540222
fax +45 43540522