Jon Thomson
Alison Craighead
John Menick
Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay
Roee Rosen
Brina Thurston
Mireille Bourgeois
Anais Lellouche
The works selected in the exhibition share a process akin to what the Situationists International have referred to as detournement; a term that implies a reuse of well known media to deliver a message opposed to the original. Featured artists: Jon Thomson and Alison Craighead, John Menick, Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay, Roee Rosen, and Brina Thurston.
Curated by Mireille Bourgeois and Anaïs Lellouche
bitforms gallery is pleased to announce They Told You So, an exhibition curated by
Mireille Bourgeois and Anais Lellouche. The exhibition will run Thursday July 16th
through August 14th, 2009.
The group exhibition They Told You So gathers work by international artists: Jon
Thomson and Alison Craighead, John Menick, Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay, Roee Rosen, and
Brina Thurston. The works selected in the exhibition share a process akin to what
the Situationists International have referred to as détournement; a term that
implies a reuse of well known media to deliver a message opposed to the original.
The artworks gathered have studied a very specific form of rhetoric, one shaped and
disseminated as a tool for the political and economic industries. The artworks in
the exhibition They Told You So invert, expand, and parody the rhetoric of power.
The artworks reveal the tropes of rhetoric by deconstructing its cliché yet widely
spread mechanical apparatus, from lie detectors to surveillance cameras, and
investigate some of its psychological methods, such as brainwashing and the use of
subliminal messages. They present an industrious tension of skepticism and cognitive
desire to mimic and channel the numerous forms of language manipulations that we
endure from political and corporate powers daily. The works, via video, sound
installation and printed text, capture the successes and shortcomings of linguistics
and its means of interpretation.
Evaluating the authenticity of the recorded voice as a mechanical source of reliable
knowledge, artists Thomson and Craighead have subjected a series of telephone
speaking clocks to lie detector tests. In Five lie detector reports (2000-2005) most
of the speaking clocks are deemed suspect or untruthful, highlighting the absurdity
of these two examples of authoritative technologies.
Embedded within multiple layers, language also takes on secret meanings in John
Menick's especially commissioned work, The Subliminal Projection Company (2009).
This series of audio CD's Vol. 1-5, uses various soothing sounds of nature to lure
the listener into a state of relaxation. Experimenting with subliminal techniques,
Menick aims to translate a selection of his most intimate memories into the
unconscious of the listener. The artist will also exhibit a single drawing from a
series entitled How to Tell a Story (2009) based on a writing manuals often used for
screenplays and novels. The drawing points to an ostensibly systematic creativity
shaped by the guidance of an emotionless and uncritical tool.
In Live to Tell (2002) Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay exposes his private performance of
the musical hit by Madonna, the queen of pop and gay icon, and positions the viewer
as voyeur. Replicating the action in multiple locations, the performances are
synchronized in a compilation of security camera footage that inverts the
psychological associations of security cameras as tools of repression into ones of
free expression and identity politics.
A self-stated adorable child is possessed by evil in Confessions Coming Soon (2007)
by Roee Rosen and subjected to deliver messages in a language he does not
understand. He announces an upcoming work, the terrible confessions by the "famously
depraved artist Roee Rosen". The video is composed as satirical movie trailer and
represents a child whose candor has been annihilated by the culture industry.
In the multimedia sound-sculpture Dark Pump (2008) Brina Thurston with DJ Private
Time plays with our perception of "home" by using the domestic object, a vacuum, as
a vehicle for an audio piece that allows the listener to peek into an absurd sexual
fantasy of which the vacuum hose is the main object of desire. Thurston's video Harm
(2007) also toys with social conventions by delivering a steady flow of verbal
insults onto a poodle, making the viewer uncomfortable and somewhat abused, as the
animal remains undisturbed.
Power relations between the speaker and the receiver remain illusive, navigating a
space that lies outside conversation, narration, and a true state of being. The
artworks gathered in They Told You So present an industrious tension of skepticism
and cognitive desire to mimic and channel the numerous forms of language
manipulations that we endure from political and corporate powers daily. The works
can be read as monologues of personal experiences that operate in a neo-confessional
mode that is both ambiguously intimate and anonymous for there is no human or
personalized return. In some artworks, the miscommunication is transformed into
role-play with no means of proving the validity of their claims or whether the
experience belongs to the person ventriloquizing it. The works construct situations
where technological media - from the video camera, to the computer, to sound pieces
- is caught in a form of communication that is peculiarly unilateral.
Opening Reception: Thursday July 16, 6:00 - 8:30 PM
Bitforms Gallery
529 west 20th Street - New York
Summer Gallery Hours: Monday - Friday, 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Free admission