Tracking Happiness
curated by Mirjam Varadinis
From 28 August to 8 November 2009, under the title 'Tracking Happiness', the
Kunsthaus Zürich presents the young Romanian artist Mircea Cantor, whose
work addresses traces left and deleted by our age of computer
communication and electronic surveillance. With his videos, photos, objects
and installations, Cantor puts the digital information society to the test in a
remarkably lyrical artistic process, and offers the viewing public three new
pieces.
In 'Tracking Happiness' Mircea Cantor considers a society that stores ever more
personal information. To Cantor's own bemusement, however, despite this
proliferation of digitalized data on every possible activity, the process does not
leave enduring traces. There is scarcely any traditional written record to remind
future generations of the way we lived – nor is there likely to be, since e-mails,
text messages, and entire digital databases are all at permanent risk of deletion
at the touch of a button or rollout of a new IT system.
NEW FILMS
In a film created especially for the exhibition, Cantor examines the ostensible
paradox of an age in which traces are perpetually left and deleted. 'Tracking
Happiness', which also lends its name to the exhibition, features a group of
women clad in white sashaying in various formations barefoot across fine white
sand. As they stroll along, their traces are eradicated by their broom-wielding
successors. Brilliantly harsh light blurs the edges of their surroundings into the
infinite, and a slightly mystical cast to the tableau makes of the women angelic
figures, although the everyday banality of their straw brooms disrupts the
impression. The film soundtrack, too, composed by Adrian Gagiu, contributes to
the somewhat sinister atmosphere, as with each pass of the broom the air of
sanguinity seems progressively to diminish. Like a mantra, the same image
appears again and again, albeit with subtle nuances, serving to distinguish the
women and the various compositions – as if to say that the quest for happiness
takes an identical form for all of us, but follows its own course for each
individual.
Cantor's 2008 work entitled 'Angels and Satellites', one of his rare paintings, is
closely associated with the new film. 'We are told that there are angels watching
over us, just as we are said to be under satellite surveillance, in both cases with
an eye to making us feel safe and protected. And yet we cannot see these
guardians, neither the angels nor the satellites. So this fictitious painting reveals
how worlds are layered, and how faiths and facts can co-exist.' For its part,
'Untitled (The New Times)' (2009) also gestures subtly at the utopia of a new age,
one that may bring contentment.
INSTALLATION ON FREEDOM, CONTROL AND MIGRATION
Another work created especially for the exhibition is 'Like Birds on a High
Voltage Wire' (2009). Hundreds of spoons of all different varieties, some
traditional Romanian wooden implements, are strung on wires within an
enormous abacus, with grains of wheat strewn across the floor. Cantor's piece
addresses topics such as control, freedom and migration. Many people leave
their homelands in search of their fortune and a better life – whether voluntarily
or not. In contrast to the image of birds on a wire evoked by the title, however,
people are not free to fly across any and all borders. Their movements are
strictly circumscribed, as globalization has been accompanied by a systematic
re-imposition of borders and a sharpening of visa restrictions in many countries.
The pierced spoons thus convey a certain brutality, echoed by the scissors in
Cantor's 'Vertical Attempt' (2009), also created especially for the Kunsthaus.
Although 'Vertical Attempt' lasts only one second, for the artist the video is 'as
dense as 'Tracking Happiness'. The boy cutting the water is the perfect image of
the way we court the impossible – a kind of disruption of the cyclical 'panta
rhei'.'
ARTIST'S CAREER AND BOOK
Depending on the context, Cantor works in a range of different media, such as
film, video, photography, objects and installations, as well as in ephemeral
genres like events and newspaper advertisements. Born in Romania in 1977 and
today a resident of Paris, the artist has already had a brilliant career, including
solo shows at the Camden Arts Centre (London) and the Centre Pompidou
(Paris), participation in group exhibitions at Washington's Hirshhorn Museum
and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and contributions to key international
events, such as the Berlin Biennial, or the São Paolo Biennial.
The Kunsthaus Zürich is hosting Cantor's first solo show in Switzerland, curated
by Mirjam Varadinis, who also invited the artist to take part in 'Shifting
Identities', the group exhibition she organized at the Kunsthaus in 2008. His two
new films and artist's book were produced in collaboration with the Städtisches
Museum Abteiberg in Mönchengladbach and 'Edition Bewegte Bilder', a joint
venture of the Museum Abteiberg and the Rheingold Collection. The book (224
pages, Kehrer Verlag, Heidelberg) presents a collection of images that inspired
the artist to create the pieces shown at the Kunsthaus, a glimpse at the artistic
universe of Mircea Cantor that reprises the notion of 'tracking' by pointing out
the traces to be found in Cantor's own work. The publication is slated to be
available as of mid-September at the Kunsthaus shop.
Image: Vertical attempt, 2009 © Mircea Cantor
Press Contact:
Kristin Steiner kristin.steiner@kunsthaus.ch Tel. +41 (0)44 2538413
A vernissage featuring the artist himself will take place on 11 October, 11 a.m.
Supported by the Dr. Georg und Josi Guggenheim-Stiftung
Kunsthaus Zürich
Heimplatz 1, CH–8001 Zurich
Opening hours Sat, Sun, Tues 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Wed, Thurs, Fri 10 a.m.–8 p.m., closed on Mondays
Admission CHF 14 / concessions CHF 10