Kunsthalle Dusseldorf
Dusseldorf
Grabbeplatz 4
+49 0211 8996243 FAX +49 0211 8929168
WEB
A Void
dal 14/5/2013 al 29/9/2013

Segnalato da

Dirk Schewe



 
calendario eventi  :: 




14/5/2013

A Void

Kunsthalle Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf

Henri Chopin, Guy de Cointet, Channa Horwitz. In accordance with the aims of the OuLiPo group (\"Workshop of Potential Literature\") the French author George Perec sought to expand the potentials of language by means of self-imposed formal constraints - a method that is similarly binding for the oeuvre of the 3 artists whose works are being shown together in this exhibition.


comunicato stampa

Cu­ra­ted by Elo­die Evers and Magda­le­na Holz­hey

In 1969, the French aut­hor Ge­or­ge Pe­rec wro­te the ex­tra­or­di­na­ry no­vel La Dis­pa­ri­ti­on (pu­blis­hed in English un­der the tit­le A Vo­id, and in Ger­man as An­ton Voyls Fort­gang) in which the vo­wel E does not appear. The no­vel shows how lan­gua­ge can as­su­me the ro­le of the nar­ra­tor even when it is bound in the cor­set of a strict ru­le. Pe­rec’s work was a ma­jor sour­ce of in­spi­ra­ti­on and point of re­fe­rence for nu­me­rous con­tem­pora­ry con­cept ar­tists. In ac­cor­dance wi­th the aims of the Ou­Li­Po group (“Work­shop of Po­ten­ti­al Li­te­ra­tu­re”) Pe­rec sought to ex­pand the po­ten­ti­als of lan­gua­ge by me­ans of self-im­po­sed for­mal cons­traints—a me­thod that is si­mi­lar­ly bin­ding for the oeu­vre of the three ar­tists who­se works are being shown to­ge­ther for the first ti­me in this ex­hi­bi­ti­on. Hen­ri Chopin (1922–2008), Guy de Co­in­tet (1934–1983) and Ch­an­na Hor­witz (1932–2013) be­gan de­ve­lo­ping their works in the ni­n­e­teen six­ties, a ti­me that was de­fined by the ap­proach of post-struc­tu­ra­lism: In 1968, Ro­land Barthes pos­tu­la­ted the de­ath of the aut­hor who now no lon­ger held so­le power over le­gi­bi­li­ty. Se­mio­tic sys­tems we­re de­bun­ked as ar­bi­tra­ry and the pro­blem of the re­la­ti­ons­hip bet­ween sign and mea­ning as well as the chan­ge­abi­li­ty of con­struc­tions of mea­ning we­re ex­plo­red. In art, the fo­cus was pla­ced in par­ti­cu­lar on the con­cep­tu­al sys­te­ma­tic dea­ling wi­th the ba­sic pa­ra­me­ters of our ex­pe­ri­ence: ti­me, space, lan­gua­ge and com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on. Each in their own way, Chopin, de Co­in­tet and Hor­witz de­di­ca­ted them­sel­ves to ana­ly­zing sys­tems of mea­ning and wor­king out their ru­les-ba­sed con­nec­tions, trans­for­ming or re­inven­ting them in the pro­cess. Ch­an­na Hor­witz’s drawings are in­deb­ted to the aest­he­tics of no­ta­ti­on, the clo­se link bet­ween idea, pro­cess and work. Wi­th the help of a set of ru­les she crea­tes com­plex struc­tu­res who­se vi­b­ra­ting pic­to­ri­al struc­tu­re masks their un­der­ly­ing lo­gic. Chopin sli­des the ima­ge­ry of the ty­ped cha­rac­ters over their se­man­tic con­texts whi­le Guy de Co­in­tet con­ce­als mea­ning in coded signs and li­nes.

For all three ar­tists, this is the first in­sti­tu­tio­nal ex­hi­bi­ti­on of their drawings in the Rhi­ne­land or Ger­ma­ny, re­spec­tive­ly. Wi­th a selec­tion of works each da­ting from the ni­n­e­teen six­ties to the ni­n­e­teen eigh­ties, the show fo­cu­ses on works on pa­per, thus em­pha­si­zing an as­pect of their work that has first attrac­ted re­ne­wed and in­crea­sing at­ten­ti­on in re­cent ye­ars. Drawing ap­pears in the pro­cess as a ge­nui­ne me­di­um along­side the per­for­ma­ti­ve and mul­ti­me­dia forms of ex­pres­si­on wi­th which Chopin, de Co­in­tet and Hor­witz ha­ve lar­ge­ly be­co­me known.

Hen­ri Chopin was a key fi­gu­re in vi­su­al and sound poe­try. Par­ti­cu­lar­ly in his ty­pewri­ter po­ems he ex­plo­res the re­la­ti­ons­hip bet­ween cha­os and or­der. Chopin breaks down words in­to their in­di­vi­du­al let­ters, ta­kes up their or­na­men­ta­ti­ons and di­stils them down in­to gra­phic ima­ges. In do­ing so, he con­fronts the mea­ning of lan­gua­ge wi­th the pos­si­bi­li­ty of an in­fi­ni­te trans­for­ma­ti­on of its signs. Pa­per and ty­pewri­ter en­ter in­to an unusu­al re­la­ti­ons­hip, which leads to over­lap­pings, cros­sings, re­ver­sals and ex­pan­si­ons of wri­ting’s ele­ments. Pre­cise, subt­le and hu­mo­rous writ­ten ima­ges wi­th a spa­ti­al depth struc­tu­re are crea­ted through ac­cen­tua­ti­ons of co­lor and the me­thod of over­typ­ing. Hen­ri Chopin not on­ly had a de­cisi­ve in­flu­ence on con­tem­pora­ry poe­try as an ar­tist and sound poet but al­so as a jour­na­list. Along­side his own works he al­so pu­blis­hed pie­ces by other ar­tists such as Raoul Haus­mann, Wil­liam Bur­roughs and François Dufrêne in his ex­pe­ri­men­tal jour­nals Cin­quie­me Sai­son (1959–1963) and Re­vue OU (1964–1974).

The French-born con­cep­tu­al ar­tist Guy de Co­in­tet, na­med “Los An­ge­les’s Duch­amp” by so­me, was an in­flu­en­ti­al mem­ber of the Ca­li­for­ni­an art sce­ne from the la­te ni­n­e­teen six­ties un­til his un­ti­me­ly de­ath. His gra­phic oeu­vre en­com­pas­sing over 300 drawings pro­du­ced in the ni­n­e­teen seven­ties and eigh­ties can be read from a pre­sent-day per­spec­tive li­ke a pre­cur­sor of the im­pen­ding di­gi­ta­liza­t­i­on age be­cau­se of the em­ploy­ed codes. De Co­in­tet’s in­te­rest was fo­cu­sed on pop cul­tu­re, but al­so on ever­y­day si­tua­ti­ons and ad­ven­ture sto­ries that he trans­la­ted in­to mir­ror wri­ting, mi­li­ta­ry codes and fic­titious ciph­ers. In other drawings he ma­de use of cal­li­gra­phy or Na­va­jo co­lor codes. In the pro­cess, he was not con­cer­ned wi­th the le­gi­bi­li­ty of the works, which can by all me­ans be de­coded. He was in­s­tead in­te­rested in the trans­la­ti­on of mea­ning in­to vi­su­al signs that be­co­me an image, ge­ne­ra­ting in turn mul­ti­ple, in­fi­ni­te mea­nings. In for­mal terms, the works fa­sci­na­te us be­cau­se of their re­duc­tion, the flowing dy­na­mism of their signs and their ne­ar­ly spi­ri­tu­al ab­strac­tion. Ever­y­thing ap­pears per­fect­ly ba­lan­ced, har­mo­nious. The ar­tist loved play­ing wi­th iden­ti­ties and wor­ked un­der va­rious he­te­ro­nyms. In do­ing so he ap­p­lied his fa­sci­na­ti­on for codes and puz­zles to his own ar­tis­tic per­so­na and pu­blis­hed works un­der dif­fe­rent na­mes.

The re­cent­ly de­cea­sed Ca­li­for­ni­an ar­tist Ch­an­na Hor­witz wor­ked at the thres­hold bet­ween signs and phy­si­cal ac­tion, oc­cu­p­y­ing hers­elf wi­th a ma­the­ma­ti­cal­ly-ba­sed sys­tem of drawing sin­ce the ear­ly ni­n­e­teen six­ties, one that enables her to vi­sua­li­ze mo­ti­on and ti­me. Al­most all of her black and whi­te as well as co­lo­red works are ba­sed on a grid of ho­ri­zon­tal as well as ver­ti­cal li­nes, on ba­sic geo­me­tric shapes as well as the se­quence of num­bers from one to eight that Hor­witz de­clined li­ke verbs in ever new va­ria­ti­ons: it is an al­go­rithm that can con­den­se in­to struc­tu­res of ne­ar­ly un­de­co­da­ble com­ple­xi­ty. Alt­hough the strict­ness of her ru­les makes an al­most her­me­tic im­pres­si­on, her fi­ne drawings dis­play a pe­cu­li­ar vi­su­al ap­peal. This de­ri­ves in equal me­a­su­re from the spa­ti­al vor­tex vi­si­ble in ma­ny of the drawings, the li­nes of which ap­p­lied to tra­cing pa­per al­most seem as if they we­re ho­ver­ing in thin air, as well as from the vi­si­ble ten­si­on bet­ween the pro­gram­med pro­ce­du­re and the drawn li­ne, bet­ween sets of ru­les and free­dom wi­t­hin a com­plex ar­tis­tic sys­tem that Hor­witz hers­elf cha­rac­te­ri­zed as a “vi­su­al phi­lo­so­phy.”

The ex­hi­bi­ti­on is ac­com­pa­nied by a pu­bli­ca­ti­on fea­turing an in­tro­duc­tion by Lo­di Vers and Magd­al­na Holz­hey, an es­say by Gre­gor Stemm­rich as well as in­tro­duc­to­ry texts on the three ar­tists by Ma­rie de Bru­ge­rol­le, Lu­ca Ce­riz­za and Chris Kraus.

The per­for­man­ces “Va­ria­ti­ons on Sina­ki­na­to­gra­phy” by Ch­an­na Hor­witz and “Fi­ve Sis­ters” by Guy de Co­in­tet, wi­th sets and ligh­ting de­sign by Eric Orr, will be sta­ged in con­junc­tion wi­th the ex­hi­bi­ti­on

Press and Communication
Dirk Schewe Tel.: +49 (0)211 8996256 Fax: +49 (0)211 8929576 presse@kunsthalle-duesseldorf.de

Ope­ning on 15 May 2013.

Kunsthalle Düsseldorf
Grabbeplatz 4 D-40213 Düsseldorf
Hours
Tuesday – Sunday, public holidays: 11 am – 6 pm
Entrance
Adults EUR 5,50
Concessions EUR 3,50
Groups (10 or more) EUR 3,50
Disabled free
Young persons under age 18 free

IN ARCHIVIO [37]
Cody Choi
dal 8/5/2015 al 1/8/2015

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede