'Temoin de chambre vide-L'art male a voir fissa' presents an an installation room immersed in an enigmatically cool grayish blue by Hentsch. Hofstetter in 'Avoir la larme facile' placed a large number of yellow and black bowl-shaped vessels in the lower.
In its 25th exhibition, the KMD shows for the first time two solo presentations that nevertheless engage in a mutual
dialogue.
The walls of the upper, larger exhibition room are immersed in an enigmatically cool grayish blue. On show here is
Jérôme Hentsch’s Témoin de chambre vide, an object cast in hardened, transparent resin. Measuring 19 x 16 x 9.5 cm, this
enlarged object as sculpture seems, when viewed through the peep holes of the KMD, decidedly heroic and monumental.
In its everyday existence, however, it is much smaller and far less impressive, notwithstanding its important function as a
safety element that is inserted into the empty cartridge chamber of a pistol. In other words, it is an object that prevents a
pistol from firing, rendering it “impotent,” so to speak. As a sculpture, on the other hand, it is unmistakably phallic (L’art
mâle à voir fissa). It is precisely through this ambivalence that Hentsch is able to generate a mysterious and contradictory
mood that transcends the sublime and strikingly aesthetic character of the object, an effect that is heightened still further
by its presentation in this exhibition room of the KMD. We for our part, as “voyeuristic” viewers gazing through the peep
holes of the KMD, become witnesses of the “témoin”—of the safety catch of a lethal weapon: a “humanitarian safety seal”
that has mutated into an art object, a phallic emasculating element, egocentric, hard and assertive, but for all that highly
transparent, adaptable and empathetic.
Compared with Hentsch’s industrially manufactured Readymade, Erwin Hofstetter’s installation Avoir la larme facile
generates metaphors of an entirely different sort. He has placed a large number of yellow and black bowl-shaped vessels
in the lower, small exhibition room. Through the visible traces of their hand-made production in soft, pliable wax, these
pieces convey an impression of extreme sensitivity and at the same time evoke in the mind’s eye of the viewer what the
title already suggests: a picture of vessels that serve to catch invisible tears, tears that might just as easily be those of
the viewer, for he or she must bend down in order to peer through the peep hole into the “overcrowded” exhibition room.
The sight of these empty or emptied vessels could indeed elicit a tear, especially as their shape and color vaguely awaken
associations with dull, misshapen contact lenses. Moreover, in their potential role as vessels for foodstuffs and beverages,
they may be seen as a female counterpart to Hentsch’s phallic “witness”, who stands there in his mysterious, empty
chamber—upright, rigid and yet altogether forlorn.
Emptiness is what is inherent in both works and, viewed in the context of current realities, cannot fail to disturb and
disconcert us. Emptying the pistol’s cartridge chamber of its témoin certainly brings death closer, while the life-giving
food and drink vessels have lost their contents—even the tears. And as the theme of emptiness is dealt with in these two
exhibitions in altogether different ways, we suddenly realize the extent to which rejection and acceptance, yearning and
disappointment, joy and suffering, gentleness and violence, life and death are dependent on the purpose or function of
emptiness in one form or another: “Avoir la larme facile, l’art mâle à voir fissa.”
Stefan Banz
Association Kunsthalle Marcel Duchamp
place d'Armes | quai de l'Indépendance
1096 Cully, Switzerland
Opening times: 24/24 from mondays to sundays