Ann-Sofi Siden, born in Stockholm 1962, living in New York and Berlin (DAAD 2001). Studied at art academies in Stockholm, Maine and Berlin in the Eighties. For the new exhibition in the gallery, Ann-Sofi Siden created another biographical situation for her bronze figure fidei commissum, first being installed in the park of Wanas Castle in Southern Sweden, a self-portrait squatting and urinating, with the micturition making it work as a fountain.
fideicommissum
Ann-Sofi Sidén, born in Stockholm 1962, living in New York and Berlin (DAAD
2001). Studied at art academies in Stockholm, Maine and Berlin in the
Eighties. Her work was shown a.o.: 1994 P.S.1, New York; 1996 Malmö
Museum; 1997 Steirischer Herbst, Graz; 1998 XXIV Bienal de Sao Paulo;
Manifesta 2, Luxembourg; 1999 dAPERTutto, Biennale di Venezia;
Kunstverein München; Carnegie International, Pittsburgh; Secession Vienna;
2000 South London Gallery; Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston; 2001
Berlin Biennale; 2002 Hayward Gallery, London.
In QM, I think I call her QM, Ann-Sofi Sidén plays the role of a strange,
lizardlike, prehistoric creature, a mute female being covered with mud,
found under the bed of a paranoid psychiatrist. Vulnerability, surveillance,
controll, madness, social and collective conscience are recurrent themes in
Sidén´s work. To a great extent also in her multi-layered video-installation
Warte Mal!, where the artist uses the language of the documentary to
investigate prostitution and human exploitation.
For the new exhibition in the gallery, Ann-Sofi Sidén created another
biographical situation for her bronze figure fidei commissum, first being
installed in the park of Wanas Castle in Southern Sweden, a self-portrait
squatting and urinating, with the micturition making it work as a fountain.
"It upends a long trail of associations, for instance how many other
sculptural figures, almost always male, you´ve seen similarly urinating in
various parks and gardens through the years. This is a humorous inversion,
but an extremely effective one. (...) Peeing marks the space territorially, as
animals do, but so too does Sidén´s crouching image, and by extension it
infiltrates a culturewide, or worldwide, situation in which men in general
occupy hugely skewed proportions of public space. (...) There is an
interesting progression, caught on videos, as the figure is transported and
installed. It is lifted up by its thighs, carried, touched, moved, adjusted, and
eventually installed in its proper crouching perch. Workers are not entirely
uncomfortable, but then neither are they entirely at ease. That´s probably a
pretty good description of what happens for the audience with the finished
piece, which is simultaneously inviting and disconcerting, weird and familiar.
This female fountain with its trickling water is beautiful in its way, lulling, and
quietly meditative."
CHRISTINE KÖNIG GALLERY
Schleifmühlgasse 1A
1040 Vienna
Tel: 00431-585 74 74