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Postcard from Vienna

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By Jörg Heiser

… a pretty large postcard, tightly written on, about some winter highlights of art from the banks of the Danube, on occasion of Vienna Art Week a month ago.

Deutsche Version: frieze d/e blog
Vienna is, now and again, a great paradox: every time you go you easily meet people from the local art scene who will readily tell you about the current symptom testifying to the Viennese’s general ignorance towards anything modern – modern and contemporary art in particular – as the majority prefers to revel in nostalgia for lost 19th century grandeur of the Habsburg monarchy. And yet at the same time, in the very same city, you encounter a pretty impressive accumulation of institutional power in regard to the modern and contemporary. Probably precisely because of this there are few places in Europe where the tension between backwards-oriented traditionalism and the desire for the radically other and new is as strong as in Vienna: between the annual Vienna Opera Ball and a film about actionist primal scream therapy (Marcel Odenbach’s exciting video based on original material from Otto Mühl’s AA-commune at Friedrichshof outside Vienna, combined with scenes staged on Freud’s London sofa, at Kunstraum Sammlung Friedrichshof), between the wannabes of Vienna’s glitterati and Queer Theory (the conference Dildo Anus Power: Queer Abstraction which took place at the Academy of Arts, accompanied by the exhibition ‘Rosa Arbeit auf Goldener Straße’, featuring the great early films of German filmmaker Stefan Hayn such as Pissen [Piss, 1989/90], which in a refreshingly blunt manner brings to a head a child’s experiences of shame, and gay initiation).

Vienna Art Week is an annual festival co-organised by the auction house Dorotheum and ‘Art Cluster’, a conglomerate of 28 art institutions, including all major Viennese players, from MUMOK to Secession to Kunsthistorisches Museum, to the Austrian association of private galleries. There were tons of panel discussions, public studio visits, museum receptions and gallery openings, and even the most ambitious visitors had to admit that they would only be able to take in a fraction within the course of a few days. The number of major solo exhibitions by internationally reputed artists simultaneously on show in the city was quite impressive: Ed Ruscha, Sharon Lockhart, Dan Flavin, Kerry James Marshall, Michaël Borremans, Pae White, Norbert Schwontkowski, Marina Abramovic, to name but a few.

There was also a large group exhibition, curated on occasion of the event, entitled Predicting Memories, curated by Vienna Art Week’s Artistic Director Robert Punkenhofer and Ursula Maria Probst. Located in the Telegraphic Centre – an empty late 19th century office palace – the unrefurbished rooms however didn’t provide any false pomp, and the art on show was not of the merely pretty or bling-bling type either, in case anyone thought the (indirect) involvement of an auction house would imply that. The title was to be taken literally: art anticipating the working through of historical blind spots and traumas. The duo of Simone Bader and Jo Schmeiser a.k.a. Klub Zwei was included with a film documentary entitled Liebe Geschichte (Love History, 2010) about women whose ancestors were Nazi perpetrators, and whose ways of coming to terms with that fact range from personal introspection to active and public examination. The interviews are impressive, as are the protagonists. Not so convincing, however, is the filmic juxtaposition with public architectural sites where most of the interviews were shot. To film Katrin Himmler – grand niece of Heinrich Himmler and an engaged author addressing the history of her family – in front of the Viennese United Nations building doesn’t bring much to the interview other than a vague reference to post-war history. Refraining from including historical footage isn’t justified by that, neither is the focus solely on female ancestors – if the film was about addressing differences in the way women and men deal with having such ancestors, wouldn’t that have called precisely for the comparison? That said, in a country where the ‘thesis of the first victim’ – still in 2008 Otto von Habsburg received ovations at a commemorative meeting of the ÖDP (the Austrian Conservatives) for arguing that Austria, with the ‘Anschluss’, became Nazi-Germany’s first victim – films such as this are more than just necessary.

Despite the principle historical differences the issue of trauma and stigmatization permeated the exhibition. In Yao Jui-Chungs Long Live (2011), filmed on the Taiwanese military island Kinmen near the coast of mainland China, we see a general in full gear amidst the ruin of a vast cinema and congregation hall – built during the times of ‘White Terror’ (the period of constant martial law in Taiwan 1949 to 1987) – and continuously calls out ‘Wansui’, literally ‘ten thousand year’, the traditional Chinese expression for ‘Long live…’, which was used both for Mao as well as his arch enemy Chiang Kai-Chek. History appears as a ghostly conjuring of the past, present both in denial and critical reflection. Terence Gower also roams the ruins of past dreams, as he sketches with a few images the history of the Austrian inventor of the modern American shopping mall, Victor Gruen – the very Victor Gruen whom in the 1960s built whole districts of Tehran (more expansive on Gruen and the Shopping Mall: Anette Baldauf’s and Katharina Weingartner’s documentary The Gruen Effect). Julieta Aranda’s ‘Memory Newspaper’ provided philosophical insights into the question of memory in the form of a free newspaper, while Kara Walker’ Fall Frum Grace, Miss Pip’s Blue Tale (2011), somewhat similarly to William Kentridge’s animations reminiscent of Chinse shadow play, for the first time transposes Walker’s well-known grotesque silhouette technique to the medium of film. Walker examines again the horrific reality of atrocities committed during times of slavery as a fairy-tale-like grotesque, the castration fear and angstlust of slave-masters towards male slaves, and the murdering of supposed or actual black love rivals; a productive discontent is produced by the ‘inappropriateness’ of presenting historical trauma and injustice with the means of ‘cheap’ shadow play reminiscent of Vaudeville times, including sexually drastic depictions – you may ask yourself how much that activates or numbs ones ability to engage with that history; but in any case one shouldn’t forget that still today people might watch a film like Gone With the Wind (1939) and successfully ignore or even endorse the brutal reality of slavery. And considering the politics of the NRA or the Tea Party today there shouldn’t be any illusions that white suprematism is becoming extinct.

Postcard from Vienna

Which brings us to Kerry James Marshall and his exhibition at Secession (which ended earlier this month), a painter whom reformats stereotypical representations of African Americans in his own painterly way. The large main space of the building proved to be the perfect arena for his large canvasses in which ‘Black Aesthetics’ (as Marshall calls it) is the echo chamber for political struggle as well for the micro-social subtleties of everyday reality. My favourite painting is that of a hairdressing salon, probably on a busy Friday afternoon, a veritable School of Beauty School of Culture (2012). In the middle of the picture two small kids play with a strange amorphous colour field – which at an angle turns out to be an anamorphosis of a blond-white girl’s head; the Barby regime appears as the ‘Real’ of the image, as its haunting Vanitas, just as the skull in Hans Hohlbeins The Ambassadors (1533) – certainly an intended reference, just as the mirroring of the photographer’s flashlight in the middle of the painting, alluding to Velsquez’ Las Meninas (1656). Generally speaking there are lots of these kinds of robust painterly references, starting from the show’s title ‘Who’s Afraid of Red, Black and Green’ relating Barnett Newman’s famous Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue (1966) to the colour of the Pan-African flag established in 1920. Gustav Klimt’s world-famous Beethoven frieze, permanently housed in the basement of the building, is commented on with the Robert Johnson Frieze (2012) – the orchestral classic meets the Blues classic. Formalist art discourse and the political questioning of the white cultural canon become directly intertwined.

Just a stone’s throw away, up the street, *Christian Mayer*’s exhibition at gallery Mezzanin: historiography and memory play a central role here as well. But Mayer’s time horizon goes back millions of years. His starting point is the strange story of a see an ice age squirrel buried 32000 years ago in the Siberian perma-frost, and which Russian scientists managed to reanimate today; Mayer uses footage of the little plant resulting from the effort und reproduces it using Dye Transfer – an equally distinct yet reanimated technique. The doubling up of natural history and technology provides a cue to the next piece, involving the idea of the time capsule: Mayer exhibits ‘allochtoons’, petrified trees from Madagascar that are 200 million years old, about as big as a Brancusi sculpture, readymades courtesy of nature; but there is also a series of black and white photographs stemming from newspaper archives, documenting time capsules – containers filled with mementos for later generations – being placed, for example, in the foundations of Chicago office buildings in 1963.

There seems to be a current fascination of contemporary artists – from the perspective of a roughly one hundred years old Duchampian idea of making the contemporary conditions of display an explicit subject of art – to look back towards epochs counting in hundreds, thousands, if not millions of years. Old Masters, stones, crystals. Ed Ruscha captures this fascination with an ironic reversal: ‘The Ancients Stole All Our Great Ideas’ was the title of his exhibition at the Kunsthistorisches Museum which ended earlier in December. The first in a series of shows for which a contemporary artist is invited to curate from the world-famous museum’s collection, here the ‘Great Ideas’ included things not made by human beings: a small meteorite and a huge Aragonite crystal from the vaults of the nearby Natural History Museum, for example. An idiosyncratic Wunderkammer selection, working as comments on Ruscha’s own oeuvre: starting from the inclusion of a coyote and a snake as a reference to the Californian desert, to ladybirds pinned in rows, amounting to what Ruscha describes as ‘Magnificent creatures all in a row, their obsessive cataloguing displays fascination and wonder by the humans that collect them. Here, nature certainly meets art. Their simple arrangements make for an aesthetic triumph’. The description can be taken literally, but at the same time describing ladybirds pinned in rows as an ‘aesthetic triumph’ can be taken as a deadpan remark about the strict geometrical lines of conceptual and minimalist displays. This kind of irony also appears in the way Ruscha includes obscure pieces from the Wunderkammer of Ambras castle in Innsbruck (for example a 16th century Dodecahedron, an object built of pentagons featuring picture puzzles of double faces that can be seen straight forward as well as upside down), or old masters selected according to subjective criteria, such as the Arcimboldo vegetable faces, or a Rubens portrait that Ruscha included because of the blood red sundown sky in the background, reminiscent of some of his own works.

Asking contemporary artists to cast a fresh eye on historical collections has become something of a royal road for many institutions. Not least in the MAK (Museum of Applied Arts), which under its new Director Christoph Thun-Hohenstein wants to return to its ‘core task’ of presenting applied arts and design. At the MAK, it’s Pae White, a Californian like Ruscha. White directs her artmaking towards design issues – or to be more precise, she backhandedly brings the specific, obsessive kind of care for texture and material stemming from the world of functional design to the realm of contemporary art. Accordingly it’s not surprising that rather than putting an emphasis on the iconic chairs, images and names of Wiener Werkstätten – from Josef Hoffmann to Koloman Moser to Klimt – she instead highlights the anonymous designs of wallpaper, gift wrapping, greeting cards or jam jar labels, which feature the typically exalted, partly orientalised, partly geometrical-psychedelic aesthetics, however are not linked with the famous names, and are not even objects in the strict sense but packaging. That is maybe the conceptual, pop-minimalist legacy that Pae White deals with: to reinvigorate such artefacts as the ‘actual’ canonical essence, which otherwise – as in the MAK one floor below – would almost only be defined by way of precious interior decoration objects. However, both with White and Ruscha – both being the first instalment in annual series of contemporary artists being invited to ‘intervene’ in art-historical collections – arises the question how often you can repeat this gesture of the ‘subversive’ or ‘slanting’ glance at an established canon before it itself becomes worn out. In the long run, wouldn’t it be better if contemporary art was present rather as an alien element, following its own logic and thus providing friction with applied and traditional arts ex negativo rather than as a kind of curatorial harvest hand? Either way, I’m curious to see how things develop.

Postcard from Vienna

As if in telepathic accordance, the theme of a Californian perspective onto historical applied arts continued at TBA21’s new venue Atelier Augarten. *Sharon Lockhart*’s exhibition (whom like White and Ruscha lives in Los Angeles) is devoted to dance choreographer and textile designer Noa Eshkol, the legacy of whom Lockhart came across during a trip to Israel in 2008. In a five channel video installation we see dancers fluidly performing, to the strict pace of a metronome, Eshkol’s complex abstract movements, with single tapestries of Eskhkol’s design as the only stage element (the tapestries are made in a patchwork technique, from found fabric collected in Kibbutz and from local textile manufacturers). Conceptual centre stone of Eshkol’s work is the Eshkol-Wachman Movement Notation System that she developed with architect Avraham Wachman in 1958; it notates bodily movements in geometrical patterns, a sort of 3D-animated variation on Leonardo’s anthropometric circles. Lockhart translates this into a series of 22 photographic still lives of the spherical wire orbits created by Eshkol and Wachman for didactic purposes, in which curved planes or simple triangles stand for movements of the limbs (Models of Orbits in the System of Reference, Eshkol-Wachman Movement Notation System, 2012). Lockhart, similarly to Pae White, detects what seems like a conceptual-minimalist legacy avant la lettre in all of this, as well as frisking the borderline between abstraction and application. I have to confess I’ve never been much of an enthusiast of faithful artistic reprocessings of pioneering modernist achievements, but doesn’t take anything away from the fact that the artefacts of the anonymous designers of Wiener Werkstätten, just as the choreographies and concepts of Eshkol, fully deserve the attention awarded to them.

Same goes for buildings of Soviet Modernism! A very interesting exhibition at Architekturzentrum Wien, on show until 25 February, documents post-war architecture in non-Russian Soviet republics between 1955 and 1991. In 1990, I was lucky enough to be able to make a trip to Baku, Azerbaijan, and I experienced some of the buildings shown in photographs and film footage from original sources – the grand hotel on town hall square, the Lenin Palace (a concert and congress hall), as well as the bazaar. You don’t have to turn a blind eye to the dictatorial conditions under which all of this was erected, and yet to appreciate the sometimes bizarre politburo-baroque, sometimes strictly functionalist yet modernist-elegant styles, that were in effect between the Baltics and Central Asia. Especially the adaptations of post-constructivist ideals to political and local demands: for example the genre of the ‘wedding palace’, owed to the fact that socialism needed to offer a ceremonial alternative to the Church it had overpowered. Many of these buildings are documented for the first time, at least for a non-local audience, with this meticulously researched exhibition, accompanied by an extensive catalogue – while quite a few of the buildings in question are on the verge of decay.

Dan Flavin, a grand retrospective of whom is on show at neighbouring MUMOK (until 3 February), seems almost early modernist in comparison. An entire floor is reserved for the series of 1964 neon works devoted to Tatlin’s Monument for the Third International (1920). The neons are reminiscent of skyscrapers, white and with no apparent traces of power cables and such: everything is very classically white cube, no fissures, extremely clean. Just as Flavin surely would have wanted it; he is quoted in the exhibition: ‘I can take the ordinary lamp out of use and into a magic that touches ancient mysteries. And yet it is still a lamp that burns to death like any other of its kind.’ The aim of historical self-immortalization is juxtaposed with the noble awareness of future evanescence, anticipated in the present.

Considering the contrast between the jagged post-constructivist legacy of architecture in the Soviet republics and the extremely confident purism of Flavin, a third exhibition in the Museum Quarter completed a shrill triad: ‘*Naked Men*’ at Leopold Museum. Apparently an exhibition on the same subject at Lentos Museum in Linz, on at the same time, had been conceived earlier on, but in any case navigating the Leopold show was fun. Besides curiosa – strongmen in old black and white photographs with their privates covered by studiously attached fig leaves – there were a number of stand-out works. Contemporary classics such as Felix Gonzalez-Torres or Wolfgang Tillmans are well-known; new to me was the great work of painter Franz Gerstl, young lover of Arnold Schoenberg’s wife Mathilde, whom had committed suicide at age 25. A frontal half-naked self-portrait in a white bath towel around the waist, an intense stare of 1904/05, symbolistically of its time yet very of the Facebook now; for me, more exciting than many of the works of Egon Schiele.

How appropriate that two contemporary painters had hung great shows in the city – which couldn’t have been more different though. True antipodes: Michaël Borremans and Norbert Schwontkowski. Borremans at BAWAG Contemporary – a place at which director Christine Kintisch had a string of fantastic shows in recent years – is a super-precisely and sparsely hung show, small old-masterly painted canvasses with an almost suffocating sense controlling gaze onto the performing of gender and body and spirit. Any faint sense of fatherly warmth still present in Richter’s Betty, any glorified Vermeerian romanticism of peeping at female beauty (Borremans mainly depicts young women and girls in bourgeois-avantgardist clothing, some of whom posed for the artist in his Gent studio) has been purged from these canvasses with a pathologist’s precision. Which is not to say that Borremans paints callously; quite the opposite, it’s exactly the awareness of the cruel clichés of representations that make him look so coldly and mercilessly at the profiles and necks.

Postcard from Vienna

Norbert Schwontkowksi, showing at the Viennese venue of Innsbruck gallery Elisabeth & Klaus Thoman (on show until 26 February), does the exact opposite in pretty much in any respect, and probably because of that is on a par with Borremans. Instead of eeriness and coldness a humorous, cheeky warmth. Instead of ultra-precise hanging, a consciously sloppy ‘oh, there is another awkward corner here to fit a small painting’, happily ignoring the ideals of balanced exhibition choreography that have long since become a convention. Instead of paint application in the style of the old masters, a cheerful quickness – all paintings were made in the last four months – which, however, how else could it be, testifies to a sure hand and the maturity of decades of painterly exactitude. My favourite picture is Wo Der Mensch Herkommt (Wer Man Comes From, 2012), a naked pair of legs stumbling across the canvas as if through mudflats, feet stuck in diving fins: the story of the origin of terrestrial animals stemming from thalassian ancestors is turned into physical comedy – where we REALLY stem from, there is embarrassment and awkwardness.

What better keywords than ‘embarrassment’ and ‘awkwardness’ could there be to end a blog on Vienna (embarrassing self-praise), because this is where the Viennese are traditionally masters: to explore societal embarrassment with great precision, Borremans and Schwontwoski both at once so to speak. Yet – Vienna Art Week end of November demonstrates it year after year – Viennese institutions and galleries are able to put together a top array of shows, simultaneous and rich in resonance, that few places can rival with, and that is entirely unembarrassing.


Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 1

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 1

The first in a series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

Anthony Hubermanis a curator and writer. He is the director of The Artist’s Institute in New York, USA and teaches at Hunter College.


Lutz Bacher, The Book of Sand, 2010-12, 25 tons of sand, dimensions variable

PICKS OF 2012

EXHIBITIONS:
‘Steve McQueen’ at The Art Institute, Chicago (until January 6). I think he’s the Bruce Nauman of my generation, but even more perverted.
‘Locus Solus’ at the Reina Sofía, Madrid. Finally, I got my chance to really get to know the world of Raymond Roussel.
‘In the Still Epiphany’ at the Pulitzer Foundation, St. Louis. Curated by the artist Gedi Sibony, this exhibition taught me everything about how to hold something in place.
Lutz Bacher at Alex Zachary Peter Currie, New York and at the Whitney Biennial. One involved 25 tons of sand filling an Upper East Side apartment, and the other thousands of baseballs filling the entire 4th floor of a major art museum (Baseballs II, 2011-2012). Both also included a video called What Are You Thinking? (2011) which simply faded from white to black and back again, with a heart-breaking soundtrack. Enough said?
The idea of a “brain” made up not of words or statements, but of objects. As in: the semi-circular gallery in the Fridericianum that was the heart of dOCUMENTA (13), and the white-tiled room at the centre of Rosemarie’s Trockel’s ‘A Cosmos’ at the New Museum, New York (until January 20)
• Some great machines: Thomas Bayrle‘s car engines at dOCUMENTA (13), Trisha Donnelly‘s selection of microchip diagrams in MoMA‘s collection, and Bruno Gironcoli‘s possibly alien machines at Mamco, Geneva.

INSTITUTIONS:
Raven Row. But then again, Raven Row is to the art world what Jon Stewart is to TV – there is no suspense, because you know they’ll win every year. Another extraordinary year at Raven Row.
Yale Union. A newcomer – Saul Steinberg, Marianne Wex, Ian Hamilton Finlay, George Kuchar, Susan Howe… a brilliant program run by brilliant people in Portland, Oregon.

PEOPLE:
David Weiss, we miss you.
Julian Assange, we support you.


Thomas Bayrle, Frankfurter Tapete, 1980, offset print on paper, wall paper (detail)

REASONS TO BE CHEERFUL IN 2013

ALLTHAT IS BELGIAN OR SEMI-BELGIAN:
Thomas Bayrle at Wiels, Brussels (February 9 – May 12)
Harald Thys and Jos de Gruyter at MuKHA, Antwerp (February 8 – May 19)
Peter Wächtler, based in Brussels, having his first show in New York at Ludlow 38 (opens January 20)
Lucy McKenzie, also based in Brussels, and her show at the Stedelijk, Amsterdam (April 20 – September 20)
• Finally getting to visit the Antoine Wiertz Museum, Brussels

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Dan Foxis senior editor of frieze and is based in New York, USA.


Pierre Huyghe, Untitled, 2011–2, Karlsaue Park, dOCUMENTA (13)

The numerologically credulous amongst you will be aware that the 5125-year cycle of the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar is due to come to an apocalyptic close on 21 December 2012. This is when the Earth collides with the planet Nibiru and suffers a catastrophic geomagnetic reversal of the North and South Poles. In preparation for the arrival of the final day of the 13th b’ak’tun, I am dispensing with the conventional decimal-based ranking system for my highlights of 2012, and will instead use what scholars of eschatology have calculated to be a New Number Order that will come into effect following the appearance of Kisin, Mayan God of Death, and the radical distortion of linear time caused by the supermassive black hole due to open up in the centre of the galaxy around lunchtime on Christmas Day. In the event that Armageddon does not arrive before the holiday sales start, the following list also includes my reasons to be cheerful for 2013, although a fat lot of good they’ll do you as Quetzalcoatl rips you limb-from-limb amidst the scorched ruins of civilization.

1,472,657: dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel. If you had asked me in early June what my exhibition highlight of 2012 was, I might well have predicted a hands-down win for dOCUMENTA (13). Looking back, I suspect I was tIPSY oN tHE kOOL-aID oF cRITICAL pRAISE that had pinned Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev’s edition of the quintennial mega-show for gongs at the Academy Awards, Nobel Prize and London 2012 Olympics. Which isn’t to say that dOCUMENTA (13) didn’t feature intelligent and thought-provoking passages, but it tested my patience with the rhetorics and personality cults of curating, and as the year wore on, left me with feelings of increasing alienation from the purpose of super-sized exhibitions.
Six months on from visiting Kassel, my memory of dOCUMENTA (13) is made up of only fragments and details; small working parts of a bigger engine motoring curatorial ideas that were often hard to fathom. Clearest of these memories is a walk I took one afternoon that started with Pierre Huyghe‘s Untitled interzone in the middle of the orderly Karlsaue park, a ghostly patch of mud and wild plants populated by bees and a pink-legged dog. From there I walked on to Raimundas Malasauskas and Marcos Lutyen‘s Hypnotic Show; 30 blissful minutes spent under hypnosis, the ‘art work’ appearing in my mind’s eye. My stroll finished up at the Tino Sehgal piece where, in a blacked-out room, a troupe of dancers enchanted the dark with call-and-response cries, anecdotes about the financial precarity of the creative life, and an a cappella version of The Beach Boys’ Good Vibrations. These experiences were each intimate, small-scale, tinted by humour, pleasure, imagination.

5: ‘Artist’s Choice: Trisha Donnelly’, Museum of Modern Art, New York. Speaking of shows that are intimate, small-scale, and tinted by humour, pleasure and imagination, how about Trisha Donnelly’s ‘Artist Choice’? (This beat to the punch my other favourite MoMA show this year, ‘Century of the Child: Growing By Design 1900–2000’ a fascinating look at how artists and designers have shaped children’s learning and play.) Donnelly’s inventive and often surprising selections from the museum’s art and design collection were spread across three rooms, packing together like cosmic sardines works such as Odilon Redon and Marsden Hartley paintings, Eliot Porter bird photographs, Walter Pichler drawings, pyramidal air-ionizers, Polaroid sunglasses, a wheelchair and psychedelic-coloured diagrams of silicon microprocessors.

2,389,524: Yale Union, Portland, Oregon. Yale Union’s exhibition ‘Steinberg, Saul. The New Yorker. New York, 1945–2000. (Harold, William, Robert, Tina, David, Eds.)’, organized by Robert Snowden and Scott Ponik, looked at Steinberg’s work for The New Yorker, attentive to the questions his career raises about how art circulates in society. (I wrote about it here if you’ve the inclination to find out more.) The existence of this non-profit space in the Pacific Northwest is also a reason to be cheerful in 2013.


Saul Steinberg, cover illustration for The New Yorker, October 1969

11: Jonas Mekas. Two retrospectives in 2012 – one at the Centre Pompidou, Paris, the other at London’s Serpentine Gallery – reminded us not only of the extraordinary historical record Mekas’ film diaries provide of artistic life in New York across six decades, but how the lifeblood of art and culture depends upon communities of friends, family and like minds; not global gallery brands, market logic and the tinnitus din of PR.

79,672: 2012 Whitney Biennial. Particularly LaToya Ruby Frazier’s photographs, Wu Tsang’sGREENROOM installation, Charles Atlas and Michael Clark’s performance, and the films of Luther Price, Michael Robinson and Laida Lertxundi. And whilst we’re talking about the Whitney Museum, a cheery prospect for early next year is ‘Jay DeFeo: A Retrospective,’ which arrives there from San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Leapfrogging ahead, the 2014 Whitney promises to be something to be cheerful about given the recent appointment of Stuart Comer, Anthony Elms and Michelle Grabner as the show’s curators. But before that, in biennial land, I’ve high hopes for the 2013 Carnegie International, put together by Daniel Baumann, Dan Byers and Tina Kukielski.


Frank Ocean; photograph Nabil Elderkin

9: New music. I didn’t have many no-risk-disks this year, but amongst them were Frank Ocean’sOrange (if R’n’B were to have its own prog rock moment, then surely it’s Ocean’s track ‘Pyramids’ although the return in 2012 of R. Kelly’s lunatic musical soap opera Trapped in the Closet is a close contender); Jai Paul’s single Jasmine, which sounds like a hazy memory of Prince, Detroit techno and too many late nights; Third Mouth by Alexander Tucker, a vision of modern pastoral psychedelia; the drone dub of Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe’s LP Timon Imok Manta and the ever-inventive C Spencer Yeh’s album-length foray into pop songwriting, Transitions. One album I’m particularly looking forward to in early 2012 is Museum of Loneliness, a spoken word LP by filmmaker and writer Chris Petit (director of Radio On and author of essential London novel Robinson), released by London-based label Test Centre as part of a new series of albums made with writers.


Laurie Spiegel in her home studio, circa 1976. Photo: Lewis Forsdale

431: Old music. Reissues on highest rotation for me were Can’sLost Tapes, and the compilation Personal Space: Electronic Soul 1974–84. Can need no introduction, but Personal Space salvages obscure soul and funk tracks crafted from rudimentary synthesizers and drum machines, creating some astonishing, spaced-out dance music. (Check out Deborah Washington’s ‘Shortest Lady’ or Spontaneous Overflow’s ‘All About Money’, for instance.) Laurie Spiegel’sThe Expanding Universe (originally released in 1980) acquainted me with the work of one of the female pioneers of electronic composition, whilst the re-release of the 1985 album Zummo with an X, by Peter Zummo, recorded with Arthur Russell, Rik Albani and Bill Ruyle, was a slow, beautiful reminder of how fertile New York’s downtown music scene was in the 1980s. (The piece ‘Lateral Pass’ was originally composed for the Trisha Brown Dance Company.) I was also happy to see a re-release for Midnight Cleaners (1982) by Cleaners from Venus, an overdue nod to Martin Newell, the one-man music scene of downtown Wivenhoe, rural Essex.

8999: Other music. In live performance, the opportunity to see Pauline Oliveros play in New York, at her 80th birthday concert at ISSUE Project Room in May, was a special one. So too was Darmstadt’s 8th annual performance of Terry Riley’s In C at Public Assembly, New York; a joyous, raucous and spirited rendition of Riley’s landmark work of 20th century art, performed by around 20 key players from New York’s new music scenes, including David Grubbs, David van Teigham, Nick Hallett, Zach Layton, Kid Millions and Alex Waterman. (Waterman’s Vidas Perfectas a new Spanish language production of Robert Ashley’s 1983 opera Perfect Lives, continued to evolve in 2012, with a performance at London’s Serpentine Pavilion.)

For music makers, Sufi Plus Ins released this year and developed by DJ Rupture (aka Jace Clayton) with Bill Bowen, Rosten Woo, Hassan Wargui, Maggie Schmitt and Juan Alcon Duran deserves a nod for blowing open the Western-centric mindset of most music software interfaces.

As for books about music in 2012, Tam Tam Books’ English translation (by Paul Knobloch) of Gilles Verlant’s biography of Serge Gainsbourg, Gainsbourg: The Biography was a page-turner. Once I finally get around to reading David Byrne’sHow Music Works– a book I’ve been excited to read since it came out in September – I’m looking forward to the publication early next year of Bob Stanley’s presumably epic Do You Believe in Magic? A Complete History of Pop.

5499: David Levine, Habit. Here is the long story: but the short version is: realist play performed on loop, eight hours a day – a meditation on the daily grind of creative life, and habituated emotional behaviour. In 2012 Levine also co-authored, with Alix Rule, the essay ‘International Art English’ for brave new pioneers of digital publishing Triple Canopy. If this essay makes even one iota of difference in pushing back against all that is dreary, pompous, vacuous, and downright grammatically whack in art writing, press releases and museum speak, then Levine, Rule and Triple Canopy will have done us a service.

42: W.A.G.E. Survey results: An onerous task, but someone had to do it. This year saw the release of results from a survey undertaken by Working Artists and the Greater Economy into the economic experiences of 600 visual and performance artists who, between 2005 and 2010, worked with museums and non-profits in New York City. The survey asked questions about artist fees, honorariums, payment of expenses, shipping and production costs. Read the analytics, presented in graphic poster form here.


Graphic from the W.A.G.E survey

74,903: Art in print. Alan Moore, author of Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell, describes The Vorrh by Brian Catling as ‘one of the most original and stunning works of fantasy that it has ever been my privilege to read.’ With this novel, sculptor and performance artist Catling has written a dizzyingly vast work of imagination, but it’s thankfully not of the dragons and dwarves variety of fantasy. Rather, the intoxicating language of The Vorrh– like breathing thick tropical air – is in the tradition of surrealist fiction (its title is borrowed from Raymond Roussel’s Impressions of Africa, 1910), and closer to the kitchen sink sci-fi of Alasdair Gray’s Lanark (1981) than Game of Thrones. I’m not much of a comics fan, but the collection of Dal Tokyo comic strips by artist Gary Panter from the early ‘80s LA Reader, which imagines a future Mars colonized by workers from Japan and Texas, was wonderfully mind-frying. Ridinghouse brought us The Space Between, a collection of writings on art by novelist, critic and frieze contributor Michael Bracewell– long overdue, and essential reading. Also, if anyone wants to buy me for Christmas a copy of O! Tricky Cad and Other Jessoterica, collecting together the collages and works on paper of Bay Area artist Jess, I wouldn’t say no.

Significant Objects spun from a project by Joshua Glenn and Rob Walker, isn’t exactly an art book, but it has much to say about how we ascribe value to objects. Trinkets, tchotchkes and other unwanted second-hand flotsam and jetsam were purchased for a few dollars and auctioned on eBay, each item paired with a short fictional text by a writer about the object’s provenance. The experiment looked at how each story affected the amount people were prepared to pay for an item. A gold rabbit-shaped candle, for instance, bought for $3, sold for $112.50. It came with a story by Neil LaBute about a man – who may or may not be on the edge of a nervous breakdown – convinced the candle contains a real bunny made from real gold. A kitsch Russian figurine, missing its glass case, that was purchased for $3 went for a whopping $193.50. This crudely made little ornament was gilded with the legend of St. Vralkomir, as unreliably recounted by Doug Dorst. All proceeds were donated to the charity Girls Write Now and contributors included Matthew de Abaitua, Nicholson Baker, Matthew Battles, Meg Cabot, Patrick Cates, Willliam Gibson, Ben Greenman, Jason Grote, Shiela Heti, Wayne Koestenbaum, Shelley Jackson, Jonathan Lethem, Mimi Lipson, Tom McCarthy, Lydia Millet, Annie Nocenti, Jenny Offill, Gary Panter, Ed Park, James Parker, Padgett Powell, Bruce Sterling, Luc Sante, David Shields, Colleen Werthmann, Colson Whitehead, Cintra Wilson and Douglas Wolk. You want insight into the psychology of collecting? Read this.

∞: Sandy. The destructive impact of the super-storm on the Caribbean and east coast was no highlight of 2012, but it was a reminder that the view art provides on life is a parallax view; that there are crucial degrees of difference between what we think is important to keep in the frame, and what’s really essential.

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Summer Gutheryis a curator and writer based in New York, where she runs The Canal Series and teaches at the School of Visual Arts.

Picks of 2012


Roberto Benigni goes wild at the Oscars
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8cTR6fk8frs

Risks to sentiment but I like smaller, less shiny, set ups for looking. These places provide, startling, indeed impudent, new slants. Artist’s Institute, Soloway, Cleopatras. All are exuberant. As is Triple Canopy and Artists Space – Books and Talks. We should be scrawling their names on subway walls. Lucie Fontaine at Marianne Boesky as a two-week seance of an exhibition gave hope. “Views from a Volcano” on the early days at The Kitchen was a fascinating look back. A few quick trips to the west coast left me enthused, open and receptive – Math Bass’s performance Brutal Set and Vishal Jugdeo’sGoods Carrier both at the Hammer and Land Art at MOCA made the trip. In the Pacific Northwest, the curatorial undertakings at Yale Union are teaching the rest of us a thing or two about the firmness of opinion and the clarity of exposition. And, The Documenta. Sweeping statements miss the crumbs. Michael Portnoy’s27 Gnosis was a highlight, a twisted carnival gameshow in a dirt mound led down a path by Michael and Ieva Miseviciute, Korbian Agnier’s apples stole breath and Kadar Attia’s colonial flotsam has been like philosophical flypaper. I feel lucky to have seen each of these and others.

I am looking forward to Performa 2013 (November 1-24) in all its ambitions and complications.

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Quinn Latimeris the author of Rumored Animals (Dream Horse Press, 2012) and the forthcoming Describe This Distance , which examines the work of Sarah Lucas, as well as shame, palindromes, passivity, fertility statuary, Antonin Artaud, Diego Rivera, and Susan Sontag.


Heike-Karin Föll, ‘n° 25 – n° 89 (the delphinium version), installation view at Elaine MGK, Basel.

BEST OF 2012 MIXTAPE (EXTENDEDVERSION)

1. Heike-Karin Föll / ‘n° 25 – n° 89 (the delphinium version),’ Elaine MGK, Basel, Switzerland
http://www.elaine-mgk.ch/index.php?/project/n-25—-n-89-the-delphinium-version/
2. Cevdet Erek / Room of Rhythms 1, 2010–2012, Documenta 13, Kassel, Germany, and ‘Week’ (2012) at Kunsthalle Basel, Switzerland
3. Moyra Davey / The Wet and the Dry (The Social Life of the Book) (Paraguay Press, 2012)
4. Mahmoud Darwish Museum / Ramallah, Palestine
5. Charlotte Moth / ‘Ce qui est fragile est toujours nouveau,’ Centre d’art Contemporain Genève, Switzerland
6. Susan Sontag / As Consciousness Is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012)
7. Solange / ‘Losing You,’ True EP (Terrible Records, 2012)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NT15fhb9QAA
8. Karl Holmqvist and Stefan Tcherepnin / New Jerseyy, Basel, Switzerland
9. Julia Rometti and Victor Costales / Inscriptions in stone—Cosmic volume (2012)
24-page black-and-white supplement in Al-Ayyam newspaper, Palestine, Sunday November 4, 2012
10. Solange / ‘Some Things Never Seem to Fucking Work,’ True EP (Terrible Records, 2012)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkjqudulJTw
11. Lili Reynaud-Dewar / ‘Ceci est ma maison / This is my place,’ Centre National d’Art Contemporain de Grenoble, France
12. Kaspar Mueller / Galerie Francesca Pia, Zurich, Switzerland
13. Hannah Ryggen / anti-fascist tapestries, dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, Germany
14. Klappfon / experimental music program curated by Michael Zaugg, Plattfon, Basel, Switzerland
http://www.plattfon.ch/upcoming-events/
15. Nuri Koerfer / Oslo 10, Basel, Switzerland
16. Cat Power / ‘Manhattan,’ Sun (Matador Records, 2012)
17. Ariana Reines / Mercury (Fence Books, 2011)
18. Fabian Marti / Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich, Switzerland
19. Stedelijk Museum / reopening and re-hang, Amsterdam, Netherlands
20. Clarice Lispector / new translations into English out from New Directions (The Passion According to G.H., The Hour of the Star, Near to the Wild Heart)
22. Louis Cole and Genevieve Artadi / ‘Around,’ Think Thoughts (2012)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaIUcAVos5Y
23. La Grotta Bar / Ramallah, Palestine


Haris Epaminonda, Chronicles, 2010-ongoing, Super 8 transfer to digital, video still

VOLUME 2 (FORTHCOMING 2013)

1. ‘Projects 100: Akram Zaatari’ / June 4–September 23 / Museum of Modern Art, New York.
2. ‘Abstract Generation: Now in Print’ / February 13–June 24 / Museum of Modern Art, New York.
3. ‘Tell It To My Heart: Collected by Julie Ault,’ / February 2 – 12 May / Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel
4. ‘Haris Epaminonda’ / Kunsthaus Zurich (February 15–May 5)
5. ‘Mike Kelley’ (through April 1) / Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
6. Paolo Thorsen-Nagel / And On (Material Records, 2013).
7. I am also looking forward to getting around to reading: Aleksandar Hemon’s The Book of My Lives (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, March 2013) and Lisa Robertson’s Nilling: prose essays on noise, pornography, the codex, melancholy, Lucretius, folds, cities and related aporias (BookThug, 2012); R’s Boat (University of California Press, 2010) and The Men: a Lyric Book (BookThug, 2000).

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‘Noticias de America’, exhibition view at Mendes Wood, São Paulo

Jochen Volzis Head of Programmes at the Serpentine Gallery, London and curator at Instituto Inhotim, Brazil.

BEST OF 2012

Fernanda Gomes’ installation at the 30th São Paulo Biennial, São Paulo.
http://www.bienal.org.br/30bienal/en/artistas/Pages/detalheArtista.aspx?Artista=38
Robert Ashley’sVidas Perfectas, a five episode opera performance, starring Ned Sublette, Elio Villafranca, Peter Gordon, Elisa Santiago and Raul de Nieves as part of Park Nights at the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 and at Café Oto, London.
http://www.serpentinegallery.org/2012/09/robert_ashley_park_nights.html
Helen Marten’s solo exhibition, ‘Plank Salad’, at the Chisenhale Gallery, London. http://www.chisenhale.org.uk/exhibitions/current_exhibition.php
Tino Sehgal’sThis Variation shown at the Huguenot House in Kassel, Germany, as part of documenta (13)
http://d13.documenta.de/#/participants/participants/tino-sehgal/
Paulo Nazareth’s exhibition, titled ‘Noticias de America’, at Mendes Wood, São Paulo
http://mendeswood.com/en/noticias-de-america/#press-release
‘Parque Industrial’, curated by Julieta González, Galeria Luisa Strina, São Paulo, including artists like Yael Bartana, Thomas Bayrle, Alexandre da Cunha, Carlos Garaicoa, Magdalena Jitrik, Jac Leirner, Renata Lucas, Marepe, Josephine Meckseper, Cildo Meireles, Mai-Thu Perret, Pedro Reyes and Gabriel Sierra, amongst others. http://www.galerialuisastrina.com.br/exhibitions/parque-industrial.aspx
‘The Ungovernables’, the second triennial exhibition at the New Museum, New York, curated by Eungie Joo. http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/the-ungovernables

LOOKINGFORWARD TO IN 2013

9th Mercosul Biennial, Porto Alegre, Brazil, curated by Sofía Hernandez Chong Cuy, together with Sarah Demeuse, Mônica Hoff, Raimundas Malašauskas, Daniela Pérez, Julia Rebouças, Bernardo de Souza and Dominic Willsdon. http://bienalmercosul.org.br/novo/index.php?option=com_noticia&Itemid=5&task=detalhe&id=1103

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 2

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 2

Continuing our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

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Jennifer Higgieis co-editor of frieze and based in London, UK.


Bruno Munari stood in front of Concave-convex, 1948, wire mesh installation. A retrospective of Munari’s work, ‘‘My Futurist Past’, is on show at the Estorick Collection, London, until December 23)

In terms of exhibitions, 2012 was an embarrassment of riches; a year in which the idea of what constitutes ‘political’ has thankfully expanded to accommodate subtlety, idiosyncrasy and cultural specificity. Where to begin? In no particular order highlights for me included dOCUMENTA(13) in Kassel – a show I was steeling myself to battle with, and ended up wishing I had longer to explore; the 13th São Paulo biennale, ‘The Imminence of Poetics’, which was, despite its cumbersome title, one of the best biennales I’ve ever visited and chock-full of extraordinary work – much of which I wasn’t familiar with. Also in Brazil, I paid my first visit to the jaw-dropping sculpture park, gardens and pavilions that is Inhotim (in the central Brazilian state of Minas Gerais). In New York, I had to be dragged away from ‘The Steins Collect: Matisse, Picasso and the Parisian Avant-Garde’ at the Met, and a great show by one of my favourite painters: ‘Edouard Vuillard: A Painter and His Muses, 1890-1940’ at the Jewish Museum. I also enjoyed ‘Ecstatic Alphabets’– an exploration of the material qualities of language – at MoMA and the eclectic mix of the raw and the cooked at the Whitney Biennial; ‘Radical Localism’, curated by Chris Kraus and Mexicali Rose at Artists Space; and the Benefit Exhibition at the ever-splendid White Columns. Finally, two highlights were Anselm Franke’s utterly absorbing ‘Animism’ (a happy counterpoint to the debacle of the Berlin Biennale) at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin, and the inaugural Qalandiya International, a celebration of Palestinian culture that took place across towns and villages in Jerusalem and the West Bank.

In London – and quite apart from the good shows at commercial spaces, of which there are too many to mention here – Tate continues its brilliant run of great exhibitions (Damien Hirst proving the exception to the rule). The most exciting development of the year was the opening of the Tate Tanks– a terrific15-week programme of installation, performance and events in an amazing space. Also at Tate Modern, ‘William Klein + Daido Moriyama’ (which runs until 20 January) and Munch were beautiful shows. I’ve long been fascinated by the wonders and weirdness of Victorian art, and thus loved ‘Pre-Raphaelites: The Victorian Avant-Garde’ at Tate Britain. At Studio Voltaire I was reminded, once again, what a great artist Nicole Eisenmann is – her new sculptures are both magnificently nuts and weirdly moving; at the ever-wonderful Estorick Collection, I was thrilled to see a show devoted to one of my heroes, the Italian modernist artist and children’s book writer and illustrator, Bruno Munari. At the Chisenhale Gallery, director (and frieze contributing editor) Polly Staple continues to programme shows that are as timely as they are fresh (Christina Mackie and James Richards in particular) – the latest, by wunderkind Helen Marten, was no exception: it was fantastically inventive (and fun). The Hayward Gallery’s quiet show of contemporary Chinese art was refreshing in its lack of spin; I also loved their pairing of Jeremy Deller and David Shrigley and their month-long ‘Wide Open School’ was inspired. The inaugural LUX/ICA Biennial of Moving Images heralded a promising future, and at Raven Row, ‘The Stuff That Matters: Textiles collected by Seth Siegelaub for the CSROT’ was an unabashedly beautiful show at London’s most beautiful space. I also enjoyed the plethora of interesting things happening at Auto Italia South East, V22 (in particular, ‘Young London’), INIVA, Camden Arts Centre, Henry Moore Institute, South London Gallery, David Roberts Art Foundation, Peckham Artist Moving Image, and the Showroom. And finally, at the Whitechapel Gallery: ‘Aspen Magazine: 1965-1971’ (which runs until 3 March) – what’s not to love?

Around the UK, galleries such as Baltic, firstsite, Focal Point, IKON, Nottingham Contemporary, MIMA, MK Gallery, Tate St Ives and Liverpool continue to programme great shows. The year was marred by the death of Modern Art Oxford’s director, Michael Stanley; he will long be mourned.

I am writing this in Australia, where I’ve come for my annual visit. Overlooking Sydney Harbour, the new wing of the MCA (under the dynamic leadership of Liz Ann Macgregor) is dazzling; ‘Primavera’, their annual exhibition of work by Australian artists under 35, highlighted the plethora of energy and imagination in the Antipodes. The new John Kaldor Collection at the Art Gallery of New South Wales– the result of Kaldor’s generous gifting of his great collection of 200 works by artists including Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Jeff Koons, Sol LeWitt, Robert Rauschenberg and Ugo Rondinone – is a great addition to the city.


Sylvia Sleigh, Paul Rosano Reclining, 1973, 137 × 198 cm, oil on canvas

So, reasons to be cheerful in 2013? Massimiliano Gioni’s Venice Biennale is an exciting prospect as is Yuko Hasegawa’s Sharjah Biennale. I can’t wait to see ‘Hilma af Klint – A Pioneer of Abstraction’ at Stockholm’s Moderna Museet– she’s long been one of my favourite artists. In London – quite apart from the slew of young, energetic spaces and artist collectives in London that I hope to get to know better – Tate Modern will be hosting three shows, all of which will be a treat: retrospectives of Roy Lichtenstein (co-organised by The Art Institute of Chicago); Richard Hamilton (which is travelling to Madrid’s Reina Sofia, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art); and a solo show of Lebanese artist Saloua Raouda Choucair– and I’ll also be travelling to Tate Liverpool to see the Sylvia Sleigh show. Anything to do with Rosemarie Trockel is fine by me: thus, I’m really looking forward to ‘Rosemarie Trockel: A Cosmos’, at the Serpentine, an exhibition that ‘juxtaposes the artist’s works with a range of objects and artworks created by others with which she feels an affinity’. I have come around to the work of Jordan Wolfson, so am curious to see what he’ll come up with for the Chisenhale Gallery. I’m also looking forward to the show of Pacific bark painting at Birmingham’s IKON gallery. In Melbourne, the National Gallery of Victoria has had a shake-up with a new director, Tony Ellwood, who returned to the city after five years running the Queensland Art Gallery; he has appointed Max Delany – who did a great job running Monash University Museum of Art – as Senior Curator, Contemporary Art; to my mind, a hugely clever decision, and I look forward to seeing what he’ll come up with. The Director of the ever-interesting Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Juliana Engberg, has been appointed Artistic Director of the 2014 Sydney Biennale – I know it’s a long way off, but her show is definitely something to anticipate. In the US, Daniel Bauman (and his team’s) Carnegie International is an exciting prospect. I’ll also be travelling to Istanbul for Fulya Erdemci’s biennial.

OK; I know that there is a lot more I could mention and much I have missed, but I must stop somewhere. Suffice to say, I always look forward to travelling, and I’ll be doing a lot of it in the coming year. One of the best things about this job is anticipating experiencing great work by artists I’ve yet to discover – and without a doubt 2013 won’t be an exception. I can’t wait.

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Max Andrewsis co-director of the curatorial office Latitudes in Barcelona, Spain.


SADEIS, 2012, resin and paint, each 147 × 60 × 60 cm, installation view at Meessen De Clercq, Brussels

Some 2012 highlights (short form, vaguely chronological version):

Retrospective by *Xavier Le Roy *at the Fundació Antoni Tàpies / Mercat de les Flors, Barcelona
Jeremy Deller, Joy in People at the Hayward Gallery, London
Tarek Atoui’s Revisiting Tarab, Sharjah Art Foundation, Sharjah
‘The Medium of Media’ the 6th Global Art Forum at Art Dubai, Dubai
• Mireia Sallarès’s Se escapó desnuda. Un proyecto sobre la verdad, Espai 13 of the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona
Manifesta 9, Genk (Manuel Durán, Praneet Soi, Duncan Campbell, Antonio Vega Macotela…)
Sarah Ortmeyer,* SADEIS*, Meessen De Clercq, Brussels
ZOO, or the letter Z, just after Zionism, NAiM/Bureau Europa, Maastricht
dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel (Korbinian Aigner, Michael Rakowitz, Mariana Castillo Deball, Adriana Lara, Rossella Biscotti, Jérmome Bel, Haegue Yang, Walid Raad, Anna Maria Maiolino, Lara Favaretto…)
Isidoro Valcárcel Medina, 18 pictures and 18 stories / Performance in Resistance, Bulegoa z/b with If I Can’t Dance I Don’t Want To Be Part Of Your Revolution at the Fundació Antoni Tàpies, Barcelona
Utopia is possible. ICSID. Eivissa, 1971, Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA), Barcelona
Rirkrit Tiravanija and Arto Lindsay, Untitled 2012, (All those years at No. 17E London Terrace), kurimanzutto, Mexico City
Terence Gower, Ottagono, LABOR, Mexico City
Sarah Lucas, Situation / Sadie Coles, London
The Individual and the Organisation: Artist Placement Group 1966-79, Raven Row, London
Alexandre Singh, The Humans, Witte de With, Rotterdam
Ends of the Earth — Land Art to 1974, Haus der Kunst, Munich
Jordi Mitjà, Monumento. Ladrones de alambre, Espai 13 of the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona
• Asier Mendizabal, ProjectSD, Barcelona

Reasons to be cheerful for 2013:

  • Moderation(s), the year-long programme between Spring, Hong Kong, and Witte de With, Rotterdam (Latitudes will be in residency at Spring in January 2013).
  • the 55th Venice Biennale (June 1 – November 24) (Lara Almarcegui for Spain, Mark Manders for the Netherlands, Mathais Polenda for Austria, Akram Zaatari for Lebanon, Jeremy Deller for the UK…)

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Jonathan Watkinsis director of Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, UK.


Memento Mori, unknown artist, late 18th-century, courtesy of The Richard Harris Collection

Picks of 2012 and Reasons to be Cheerful

John Murphy, Voyages to Italy, at the A.G. Leventis Gallery, Institute of Archaeology, University College London (20 January – 30 February)
One of the most intellectually elegant shows of 2012. A combination of photos, books, film stills and volcanic ash, formally it melded with the permanent collection of the Leventis Gallery – mostly very old objects in old fashioned vitrines – but jarred with any comforting notion of scientific order. The pervasive presence of the Marquis de Sade especially put paid to that.

The Voice and The Lens, Ikon, Birmingham (8 – 11 November)
Not one normally to indulge in self-promotion, I can’t pass up this opportunity to mention ‘The Voice and The Lens’, a four day programme of music, with lots of vocals, and film at Ikon in November. It was the brain-child of Sam Belinfante, one of the most promising young artists now in the UK and highlights were Scott Wilson’s performance of Alvin Lucier’s I am Sitting in a Room, Mikhail Karikis’s Empty Words, Loré Lixenberg’s The End of Civilisation As We Know It, Adam De La Cour and Bruce McLean in Live Adult Chat, Al Madina’s Childrens Choir (heartbreaking) and Elaine Mitchener performing Christian Marclay’s Manga Scroll. The whole thing was wonderful – rich, rich, rich in content – both entertaining and clearly the product of fine intelligence.

Nastio Mosquito
Not a great success structurally, the Kwangju Biennial was full of gems. Amongst them was the work of Angolan artist Nastio Mosquito. His videos could not be smarter or funnier. Knowingly politically incorrect with respect to post-colonialist clichés (e.g. Nastio answers Gabi) he muses with charisma on the iniquities of the globalised modern world.

Qalandiya International (1 -14 November)
On the Palestinian West Bank, in various venues in and around Jerusalem and Ramallah, QI was good and brave, asserting that art, any kind of art, is politics. The Palestinian cause is compelling in the light of Israeli brutality – as I write 3,000 more dwellings have been granted planning permission in the continuing outrage that is illegal settlement – but this was not an exercise in emotional button pushing. There was a discernible rigour and some great work, including an installation by Tashweesh at Al Mamal, Jerusalem, and flyposting on the streets of Ramallah by Australian artist Tom Nicholson.

Death: A Self Portrait, Wellcome Collection (until 4 February 2013)
Meanwhile, back in the UK, the Wellcome Collection continues its ingenious programme, mixing art and artefacts to great effect. The most recent exhibition there, Death: A Self Portrait, drawn from the Richard Harris Collection, is an exemplary case in point. Renaissance paintings find themselves in the company of sentimental postcards and children’s toys, Mexican papier-maché sculptures, celebrating the Day of the Dead, sit alongside actual human remains. More philosophical than morbid, informed by a sense of humour not just black, the overall result was a fascinating meditation on a subject that ultimately overwhelms us all.

‘On Being Not Dead’
In this vein, my recent reading has included Bill Hayes’ article in the _New York Times _(22 November), ‘On Being Not Dead’. It is just a few hundred words, downloadable, and quite beautiful. In other words, a reason to be cheerful.
“http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/22/opinion/on-being-not-dead.html”: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/22/opinion/on-being-not-dead.html

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Douglas Fogleis an independent curator based in Los Angeles, USA, and a contributing editor of frieze.


Thomas Schütte, Frauen, installation view at Castello di Rivoli,Italy

Highlights of 2012

1. Thomas Schütte, ‘Frauen’ at Castello di Rivoli, Turin. The Manica Lunga, the 146-meter long former painting gallery of the Savoys in the 17th century, has never looked so impressive. This was a statement about both the possibilities and fragility of sculptural practice. Filled with 18 of Schütte’s frauen along with 100 watercolors and ceramic maquettes, this was perhaps the best show I saw this year until I saw…

2. Marisa Merz, ‘disegnare, disegnare, redisegnare, il pensiero imagine che cammina’ at Fondazione Merz, Turin. I saw both of these exhibitions on the same day and was blown away. Marisa Merz, now well into her 80s, continues to work every day producing work that is both delicate and muscular. This non-retrospective survey showed that sometimes the freshest and most forward-looking artist in the room might happen to be in her 80s.

3. Béla Tarr, Turin Horse. While the beat goes on for Marisa Merz the same cannot be said for the 57 year old Hungarian filmmaker Béla Tarr. The director’s self-proclaimed “last film” actually was released in 2011 but only made it to America this year. Loosely based on a possibly apocryphal story of the onset of Nietzsche’s madness inspired by his witnessing of the beating of a horse in Turin, Tarr’s nearly dialogue-less film is a meditation on the end of the world, the end of images, and the impossibility of communication. A bit of a downer but the apocalypse has never looked so beautiful.

4. First Aid Kit, The Lion’s Roar and their live show at the Henry Fonda Theater, Los Angeles. If the sun has set forever in the oeuvre of Béla Tarr it has risen again in Stockholm in the form of the otherworldly alt-folk sister duo First Aid Kit. Ethereal yet powerful, this album reeks of heartbreaking optimism. It was only outdone by their soaring, enthusiastic, and compellingly authentic live act that made me want to go join something, anything. They are only 19 and 22 respectively so we have much to look forward from them.

5. Shozo Shimamoto’s painting Gutai 02 (1950) in Paul Schimmel’s exhibition ‘Destroy the Picture: Painting the Void, 1949-1962’. If First Aid Kit transports us to another brighter world with their angelic voices and infectious anthems, I found myself on another island altogether when I entered ‘Destroy the Picture’, curator Paul Schimmel’s last project for MoCA, Los Angeles, before his departure. The first work in this show dedicated to anti-painting was an oh so delicate mixed media work on paper by the Gutai artist Shozo Shimamoto. Measuring no more than 20 by 14 inches, this work is composed of a swirl of abstract material in its center that is surrounded by a watery field of blue. It said it all. It offered an island to get lost on, a contemplative abyss to fall into, and an understated commentary on the incredible power of abstraction by an artist living in a time just five years removed from the bombing of Hiroshima.


Ko Nakajima, Paper (formerly Paper 2), 1969, installation view at Blum and Poe Gallery, Los Angeles

6. ‘Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono-ha’ at Blum and Poe Gallery, Los Angeles. We have to give credit to some galleries in the past few years for generating museum quality shows. This exhibition offered the first comprehensive North American presentation of the work of this post-Gutai generation of Japanese artists who explored the relationship between the natural and the industrial.

7. Ellsworth Kelley’s façade of Matthew Marks Gallery Los Angeles. Floating above the neighborhood like Stanley Kubrick’s monolith in 2001 A Space Odyssey, Ellsworth Kelley’s black rectilinear façade for Matthew Mark’s new 3,000 square foot Hollywood outpost is a living thing, chameleon-like in its ability to visually morph with the changing light as the day passes by. It’s unusual that an artist’s work merges with architecture in such a seamless way. Like Kubrick’s monolith, it seems to almost unconsciously emit a signal to the viewers around it, drawing them towards the building but without allowing the proximity that would let it be tagged.

8. Yorgos Lanthimos, Alps, (2012) and the emergence of the New Greek Cinema. Can we call it that? Do two directors make a movement? Well, if Lanthimos’s Alps is considered alongside Dogtooth (2009), his devastating study in familial dysfunction, and we then throw in Athina Rachel Tsangari’s charmingly weird coming of age study Attenberg (2010), it becomes clear that something is afoot cinematically in Athens. These films are strange, fascinating, and incredibly human investigations into the inability of people to connect and the consequences of those failures. Produced for very little money amidst the worst economic crisis in modern Greek history, these two directors point to a bright future for their generation of Greek cinema’s entry onto the global stage.

9. Michel Houellebecq, The Map and the Territory. This novel was published in French in 2010 but did not appear in English until this year. How much fun is this book when a novelist writes a story about a successful contemporary artist who is implicated in the murder of…wait for it…the novelist himself? So many novels and films don’t quite get the true nature of the art world (although I’m still laughing at the hilariously apt depiction of “bad” performance art in Jonathan Parker’s 2009 film (Untitled)). Houellebecq’s book is a great read for anyone involved in the art world as a civilian or a capo.

10. ‘Ken Price Sculpture: A Retrospective’, Los Angeles County Museum of Art. When I hear that a star architect has designed an important exhibition for a major museum I often cast a suspicious eye, but Frank Ghery’s installation design of the Ken Price sculpture retrospective was completely Ghery-esque while also being incredibly sensitive to the delicate nature of his long time friend’s ceramic explorations. This show gives Price his full due within the context of the contemporary art world. We sadly lost Price this year after a long illness which brings to mind the loss of myriad other important art world figures this past year including the likes of Raoul De Keyser, David Weiss, Mike Kelly, Michael Asher, Franz West, Chris Marker, Amos Vogel and many others. It’s a shame that the art world doesn’t have the equivalent of the Oscar’s in memoriam section as many of these figures changed the world that we all live in.

11. Michael Haneke’s Amour. While we are on the topic of the end of life I would have to recommend an 11th addition to my top ten (a bonus track if you will) in the guise of perhaps Michael Haneke’s most poignant and sensitive exploration of the human condition to date. For anyone who has lost a parent (or even if you haven’t) this is a heartbreakingly told, masterfully acted, and also shocking (it is Haneke after all) exploration of personal dignity and the end of life.

Reasons to be cheerful for 2013

Wow, I ended on a bit of a downer. But do not fear, all is not lost. The world goes on as does the art. Here are a few things to look forward to in 2013:

Abraham Cruzvillegas: The Autoconstrucción Suites at Walker Art Center (March); Mark Manders in the Dutch Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (June); the 56th Carnegie International (October); the second installment of Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (December).

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Dena Beardis assistant curator at the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.


Fred Londier, 29 Arrests, Headquarters of the 11th Naval District, May 4, 1972, San Diego, shown as part of ‘State of Mind: New California Art circa 1970’, University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

The Bay Area’s 2012 – some highlights:

At the beginning of the year, the ephemeral State of Mind: New California Art circa 1970 resonated within the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive’s seismically-unsound, Brutalist concrete structure (where I have the precarious pleasure of working). The exhibition, organized by Constance Lewallen and Karen Moss, surveyed California conceptualism in the wake of the 60’s. Walking through galleries punctuated by vitrines, photographs tacked to the wall with push-pins, and flickering CRT monitors with degraded video documentation, the exhibition featured works that could happen anywhere–in the basement of Tom Marioni’s Museum of Conceptual Art, in Al Ruppersberg’s Grand Hotel on Sunset Boulevard, at a freeway intersection sit-in by Asco, or at the intersection of 17th, Castro, and Market Streets in San Francisco where Mel Henderson, Joe Hawley, Alfred Young, and many others stopped city traffic by hailing 100 yellow cabs at once. ‘State of Mind’ encapsulates an irreverence born of the impossibility of commercial success and a sense of experimentation that resists stagnation. Viewing the exhibition in our present moment, it was hard to avoid the word ‘prescient.’ Suddenly it was impossible to talk about the Futurefarmers’ back-to-the-land projects without referring to Bonnie Sherk’s Portable Parks (1970), the Yes Men’s culture jamming without thinking about Sam’s Café (a collective run out of a former greasy spoon near UC Berkeley), or citizen journalism without a nod to Fred Londier’s photographs of antiwar protestors taken from the vantage of the arresting officer, 29 Arrests, Headquarters of the 11th Naval District, May 4, 1972, San Diego. ‘State of Mind’ resurrected long forgotten artists and it did so with humor and serious risk-taking.

Fueled by cocktails, the weekly conversations hosted by the new San Francisco outpost of the Kadist Foundation have consistently packed in a feisty audience looking for something better than free Tecate. Discussions often get heated enough to steam the windows or bring in a few odd passers-by, and despite rumors of fisticuffs, hot-topic conversations with Jens Hoffmann and Lawrence Rinder about the disputed role of the curator, Claire Bishop about the affect/efficacy in social practice and screenings of Ausländer raus! , Schlingensief’s Container proved more incisive than divisive. Director Joseph del Pesco has hosted international magazines like Fillip from Vancouver, Nero from Italy, May from France, and Taxi from Mexico in an effort to cross-germinate with Bay Area writers, artists, curators, and subjects. The Kadist is a collecting foundation, but exhibitions at the small San Francisco storefront are often refreshingly dynamic, including Ben Kinmont’s ‘An Exhibition in your Mouth’, a six-course dinner of recipes created by Louise Bourgeois, Marcel Duchamp, Gordon Matta-Clark, Salvador Dali, and others, accompanied by a hand-printed menu. Zoe Butt of Sàn Art recently curated an exhibition by Vietnamese artists censored in their home country, preceded by an evening screening of Southeast Asian artists’ videos organized by David Teh.

And also:
The Bay Area finally got its own branch of the Public School in the Fall of this year, but it had many precedents, most notably in the autodidactic strategies of Rick and Megan Prelinger, whose Prelinger Library and Archive are wunderkammers of infinite digression. Luca Antonucci and Carissa Potter of Colpa Press recently opened Edicola, a sidewalk kiosk on Market Street re-purposed as a newsstand selling artist books, prints, and periodicals. The dissembling minds behind Will Brown on 24th Street consistently revive oddball cultural gems, most notably the Manitoba Museum of Finds Art, a trove of “unsanctioned art” collected by Alberta Mayo, assistant to SFMOMA Director Henry Hopkins from 1974-1979. Twenty minutes from the city at the national refuge cum artist residency, Headland Center for the Arts, the OPENrestaurant collective served warm bowls of ambrosial ramen with stories of food radiation testing gathered during a recent trip to Japan.

And finally, why be cheerful at the onset of 2013? I’m looking forward to more like this, this , and this).


Charlie Brooker, Black Mirror, (for Channel 4)

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Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 3

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 3

Continuing our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

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Sean O’Tooleis a writer and co-editor of CityScapes, a critical journal for urban enquiry. He lives in Cape Town, South Africa.

2012: A Year of Mountains


Etel Adnan, Untitled (Beirut), 2010, oil on canvas, 24×30cm

Where I live, there is a large mountain: it dwarves the high-rise ghettoes and retro skyscrapers which have taken root on the windy slopes of Table Mountain. I don’t recall seeing many works in 2012 that consciously noticed this craggy natural wonder. Julia Clark’s solo exhibition ‘Booty’ at Whatiftheworld / Gallery included a vintage postcard aggregated into one of her collecting-as-drawing collages. Field Notes from Solitude Island/ No Place, her montage of differently hued blues on a coastal map, delivered what would have been the perfect title for painter Carl Becker and photographer Monique Pelser’s exhibition ‘Our Land’ at the Stellenbosch University Art Gallery. A few years ago, both these artists independently set out to investigate the contemporary sites of JH Pierneef’s constructed modernist pastorals from the late 1920s. In search of something miraculous, the artists discovered very little: sun, dust, ennui, creeping urbanity, the subterfuge of an accomplished painter whose singular vistas were the outcome of composite descriptions, and – of interest to me – unyielding stony mountains.

Last year, I climbed Mount Kilimanjaro with artist Jacques Coetzer. In 2012, in search of some more miraculous, I visited Japan, where, nearly two centuries ago, Hokusai described his much-quoted 36 views of Mount Fuji. Unlike Bas Jan Ader, whose name I repeatedly heard mentioned as a riposte to the ritual parade of good taste and gilded luxury in yet another bubble year, I decided to cycle – not sail – to Japan’s ‘mighty volcano’, as Lafcadio Hearn once described the nearly symmetrical mountain. In the four days it took me to slowly pedal up to the mountain’s northwestern base from Hamamatsu, where I sighted Fuji for the first time – on a billboard – I never once saw Fuji not obscured by clouds. Recounting his 1898 trip, Hearn similarly complained of a ‘uniformly grey sky’ that rendered Fuji ‘always invisible’. Perhaps the weather was different during Hokusai’s time? The lesson: artists are not cartographers.

In Kassel, which I visited after a detour up the Jungfraujoch in Switzerland – to be rewarded with a kitschy mural depicting Caspar David Friedrich’s solitary wanderer – I learnt that Etel Adnan considers Mount Tamalpais in Marin County, California, the most important person she has ever met. The wall text accompanying Adnan’s dOCUMENTA 13 display mumbled something about Cezanne, who repeatedly painted Sainte-Victoire Mountain in Aix-en-Provence. Recently I spotted a really bad knock-off of Pierneef’s pointillist study of the Swartberg Pass, a fabled route through the Swartberg mountains northeast of Cape Town. It made me again appreciate the difficulty recording stone with paint or pencil. Am I being un-contemporary? Perhaps. But Adnan showed me that it is okay to think about mountains, even idealise them. They are their own kind of miraculous.

I haven’t been to Koh-e Bâbâ, a mountain range in Afghanistan. Michael Rakowitz may have been. What Dust Will Rise? (2012), his elegant dOCUMENTA 13 installation, suggested he has: the display included rubble from the demolished Buddhas of Bamiyan, patiently carved into cliffs in the mountainous Ḥazārajāt region. The habit of artists to exhibit their collections rarely prompts me to say, ‘Gee whizz!’ Rakowitz’s sombre meditation on architecture, printed books, censorship, idolatry and memory (also the failure thereof) made me ditch Karlsaue Park as a bad idea. I returned to the Fridericianum for a second time, happy to silently stare at his gift of stones.


Robert Griffiths Hodgins, Clem, 1983, oil on board, 60 × 79cm. Courtesy: Strauss & Co, Cape Town

Yes, there were other highlights. They included: Chad Rossouw’s smart autopsy of white nostalgia in his solo exhibition ‘A History of Failure’ at Brundyn + Gonsalves (in which he concocted a fake historical account about a dirigible airship named De la Rey); a handful of Zander Blom’s over many experiments in abstract painting from his solo show at Stevenson; James Webb’s use of Japanese ukiyoe prints, a Henry Moore bronze and commissioned installation by Stephen Hobbs to supplement his semi-survey ‘MMXII’ at the Johannesburg Art Gallery; the appearance at auction in Cape Town of an agreeably unflattering portrait of Clement Greenberg painted in 1983 by the crypto-abstractionist Robert Hodgins; also Barend la Grange and Louis Mabokela’s joint non-verbal response (defacement) of Brett Murray’s painting The Spear (2012), a flaccid work about a flaccid subject. But, ultimately, nothing I saw really approached the rigorous poetry of Rakowitz’s commissioned installation or Adnan’s unvarnished total engagement with the world. Yes, their works whispered, the world still rewards believing in the miraculous.

A speculative postscript: I am looking forward to Burundi-born sculptor and painter Serge Alain Nitegeka’s solo show ‘Black Cargo’ at Stevenson. Although sometimes presented as a couch-friendly modernist by his gallery, Nitegeka’s jet-black installations – physical infrastructure that speak of trafficking and trade – interrupt easy passage through gallery spaces, sort of like Ryan Gander’s wind, but not. The physical barriers are key. Kendell Geers is the subject of a career retrospective at Haus der Kunst in Munich. His recent Goodman show suggests that his defining period has now passed. Emerging during South Africa’s unsettled transition, his 1990s work skilfully blended danger and argument and insult and plagiarism to produce something almost sui generis. More speculatively: Elvira Dyangani Ose, the Tate curator appointed to oversee the third edition of the stalled Lubumbashi Biennale, has some big promises to deliver on. Speaking at the Joburg Art Fair, she mooted plans mooted plans to stretch this event in the south of the Democratic Republic of Congo over the entire year. Lastly, a sombre yet hopeful speculation: with troubles continuing in Mali, will we see a 10th edition of the much-loved, always enervating pan-African photo biennial, Bamako Encounters? Fingers crossed.

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Christy Langeis associate editor of frieze and contributing editor of frieze d/e. She is based in Berlin, Germany.


Alexandra Leykauf, Spanische Wand, 2012, installation view at Sassa Trülzsch, Berlin

Alexandra Leykauf ‘Heart of Chambers’ at Sassa Trülzsch, Berlin
http://www.sassatruelzsch.com/pages/39.html

Darren Bader at MoMA/PS1, New York– a room full of cats, salad ingredients on pedestals….
http://momaps1.org/exhibitions/view/349

Jeremy Deller’s Beyond the White Walls (2012) at art:concept, Paris– the artist’s articulate meta-commentary on the projects he’s done outside of galleries or museums

Harun Farocki at Galerie Barbara Weiss, BerlinA New Product (2012) is a hilarious indictment of corporate culture and german middle-management
http://www.galeriebarbaraweiss.de/dateien/pressetext.php

Omer Fast’s Continuity (2012) at Documenta 13, Kassel
http://www.tba21.org/program/commissions/163?category=commissions

“Set-up” at Galerie Jousse Enterprise, Paris– a tightly-curated group show by Stephen Hepworth that provided one possible view of where photography is going: including Michele Abeles, Kate Costello, Sam Falls, Corin Hewitt, Matt Lipps and Elisa Sighicelli

TV


Breaking Bad

Lena Dunham’s Girls (more real than reality tv), Catfish the TV show (what is the authentic self in the age of digital culture?), Breaking Bad Season 5 “Dead Freight” (the train heist episode), *Mad Men* Season 5 “The Other Woman” (the Jaguar episode)

Radio

Shalom Auslander, ‘Death Camp Blue’s’ on The Moth Podcast
http://wehearus.com/podcasts/episode/44054

Revisiting John Updike’s Fresh Air interviews on Fresh Air with Terry Gross
http://www.npr.org/2012/03/16/148600210/revisiting-john-updikes-fresh-air-interviews

Tig Notaro’s morbidly hilarious stand-up comedy routine after being diagnosed with cancer, as presented on This American Life’s Episdoe 476, ‘What Doesn’t Kill You’
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/contributors/tig-notaro

This American Life’s Episode 454 ‘Mr Daisey and the Apple Factory’ – an expose on the manufacturing of Apple products in China, and the program’s subsequent retraction of the story in Episode 460, ‘Retraction’
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/454/mr-daisey-and-the-apple-factory
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/460/retraction

RadioLab’s ‘The Fact of the Matter’ (24 Sept 2012) featuring Errol Morris
http://www.radiolab.org/widgets/ondemand_player/#file=%2Faudio%2Fxspf%2F239470%2F;containerClass=radiolab

Print

Dexter Filkins’ ‘Atonement’ in The New Yorker, 29 October 2012– the story of an Iraq war veteran seeking truth and forgiveness for his actions in Iraq
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/10/29/121029fa_fact_filkins

Theater


Rimini Protokoll, Lagos Business Angels, Hebbel Theater, Berlin

Jerome Bel’s Disabled Theater (2012) at dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel

Rimini Protokoll’s Lagos Business Angels (2012) at the Hebbel Theater, Berlin– untrained actors and entrepreneurs from Nigeria and Germany attempt to convince an audience to invest in their businesses through a series of 10-minute presentations.
http://www.rimini-protokoll.de/website/en/project_5410.html

Books


Luigi Ghirri, Kodachrome

The Man without a Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin by Masha Gessen (Riverhead Books) – a problematically-reported but compelling book that dramatically lifts the curtain on Russian politics
http://www.amazon.com/Man-Without-Face-Unlikely-Vladimir/dp/1594488428

Every Love Story is a Ghost Story: A Life of David Foster Wallace by D.T. Max (Granta)

Luigi Ghirri, Kodachrome (MACK) – republished by MACK after 34 years, finally back in print. Indispensible.
http://www.mackbooks.co.uk/books/44-Kodachrome.html

Jacqueline Hassink’s The Table of Power 2, 2012 (Hatje Cantz)
http://www.hatjecantz.de/controller.php?cmd=detail&titzif=00003214&lang=en

Roman Ondák’s Observations, 2012, (Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König)

Film

The Queen of Versailles, directed by Lauren Greenfield– a microcosm of almost everything that’s wrong with America
http://grist.org/politics/the-queen-of-versailles-almost-makes-you-feel-sorry-for-the-1-almost/ http://youtu.be/AdJYzgJ4CwI http://youtu.be/AdJYzgJ4Cwl

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Sally Tallantis Artistic Director of Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art.


Jérôme Bel, Disabled Theater, 2012, performance documentation. Photograph: Roman März

Jérôme Bel, Disabled Theater, dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel
This extraordinary performance surprised and challenged me in ways that I didn’t expect – I was moved and when we left the theatre we were all stunned and speechless for a moment. This was a truly memorable moment in a brilliant programme.
Manifesta 9, ‘The Deep of the Modern’, Genk
The layering of heritage, historic works and work by contemporary artist in the post-industrial setting of Genk was a brilliant lesson on coal and curating by Cuauhtémoc Medina, Dawn Ades and Katerina Gregos.
Einstein on the Beach, Robert Wilson and Phillip Glass, Barbican, London
It was amazing to finally have the opportunity to see this iconic work performed in London after having only ever seen documentation.
Helen Marten, ‘Plank Salad’, Chisenhale Gallery, London
Helen Marten’s first solo show in the UK assembled a complex range of work with wit and precision. Its exciting to see her use the space with such confidence and panache and I am looking forward to seeing more of her work.
Klaus Weber, ‘If you leave me I’m not coming and Already There!’, Nottingham Contemporary
This show right at the beginning of 2012 comprised a solo exhibition of work by Klaus Weber and an exhibition of over 200 objects and artworks curated by him. It was an ambitious and encyclopeadic endeavour and provided a wild glimpse into his thinking and practice.
Glasgow International Festival
Its always inspiring to visit Glasgow. Memorable works by Corin Sworn, Alexandra Bachzetsis, Charlotte Prodger, Rosalind Nashashibi and of course Jeremy Deller’s bouncy Stonehenge.

Things I am looking forward to next year:

Homeworks VI, Ashkal Alwan, Beirut (Spring 2013)
Sharjah Biennial 11, United Arab Emirates curated by Yuko Hasegawa (13 – 17 March)
Manchester International Festival (4 – 21 July)

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Mark Beasleyis a writer and curator at the visual arts performance biennial Performa, New York. His first LP with the group Big legs will be released on Junior Aspirin Records in Spring 2013.

My reading in 2012 was largely from the past but the present struck me sharply with John Menick’s, portrait of Mexico City, *A Report on the City*, 2012, published by dOCUMENTA (13). Moving from the quest to locate a VHS snuff movie through hypochondria to tales of ‘Mad Travelling’ each of its six essays tackle, via some very fine and lightly sprung prose, the curious and compelling facts of city life.


John Menick, A Report on the City

With regard to public lectures, and its lowly cousin hi-falutin’ chat, there have been a number of presentations that have provided substantial brain food. Chiefly Sukhdev Sandhu’s Colloquium for Unpopular Culture at New York University has, over time, hosted a broad range of brilliant minds from Mark Fisher to Mark Pilkington, from Asiatica to off-kilter Englishness. Simon Critchley’s On Truth (and Lies) at Brooklyn Academy of Music presented the facts and otherwise of literary relations to the truth. In quick succession I caught inspiring lectures – come victory laps –by dOCUMENTA (13) curators and organizers Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev and Chuz Martinez.

Anthony Huberman’s Artist’s Institute gallery come schoolhouse continues to be an inspiration. The normative relations of ‘an education in the arts’ – the professor and the schooled – is ditched in favor of direct meditative learning: objects, art works and artists are present in the classroom. Summer Guthery*’s sporadic *Canal Series in an office suite on Canal (New York) keeps the flame of idiosyncratic and savvy programming alive.

Two documentaries recognized two great wordsmiths, BBC4s *Evidently… John Cooper Clarke* provided an overarching insight into the part poet, part singer, part comic, life long inspiration and very thin man Cooper Clarke. Heavenly Films’ Lawrence of Belgravia– technically released at the end of 2011 but screened in New York in 2012 – is a long overdue recognition of Lawrence, the mononamed frontman of Felt, Denim and Go Kart Mozart: perhaps the greatest popstar Britain never had.


Bedwyr Williams, The Hill Farmer, 2011, c-type print on DuroSpec

Four exhibitions: Trisha Donnelly’s ‘Artist’s Choice’ at MoMA married the inadvertently psychedelic chip-board mapping with hummingbird’s and paintings by Odilon Redon: a curious and compelling mix. Nicola Tyson’s photographs ‘Bowie Night at Billy’s Club London, 1978’ at White Column’s gallery revealed the birth and genesis of a New Romantic look and sound that continued with the Blitz Club and exploding into the popular consciousness of the eighties, sweeping hair and everything else before it aside. The Philadelphia Museum’s‘Dancing around the Bride: Cage, Cunningham, Johns, Rauschenberg, and Duchamp’ curated by Carlos Basualdo and Phillipe Parreno was a tour de force in curating as seductive theater. Experienced from a distance – via the publication! – Bedwyr William’s ‘My Bad’ at Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, has managed to transplant his exceptional writing and ear for the satiric into – as David Robbins would have it – the concrete comedy of objects.

In the realms of theater David Levine’s Habit organized by PS122 was an engagingly nervy and durational work stuck on repeat. Meanwhile at the movies Leos Carax’s Holy Motors, his first film in thirteen years, delivered some of the most memorable images of the year from a jade-green suited, red bearded, finger and flower eating goblin apparition to latex-clad-cyber-sex-martial-arts and talking limo’s. On the small screen E4’sMisfit’s forth series continues to poke at the wtf gland. Parker Posey’s cameo in Louis CK ‘s third season of Louie should also be credited.

A personal highlight of 2012 was to perform in China with the group Big Legs. Junior Aspirin Records’ ‘Junior Aspirin Life Size Model’ gigs in Heihe, on the Black Dragon River and Beijing brought together label fixtures Socrates that Practices Music, God in Hackney, Soul Punch and newer ones in a two hour-nonstop gig before five thousand rattle-waving locals, beneath a vast lighting rig and firework display of which Jay-Z would have approved.


Mike Kelley in Venice, 1988, Photograph: Sidney Felson

In January we lost Mike Kelley, which will make viewing his Stedelijk retrospective in Amsterdam (on until April 1) bittersweet. Working with Mike on his Judson Church Day is Done show for Performa 09 and co-curating the Fantastic World music festival at Gramercy Theater with him was a privilege and an education. Over the past year I’ve been re-reading his texts, watching his films and listening to his music. He seems more present to me than ever.

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Gabriela Jaureguiis a writer, critic and editor. She is the author of Controlled Decay (Akashic, 2008) and lives and works in Mexico City.


Teresa Margolles, ‘La Promesa’, installation view at MUAC, Mexico City

Perhaps it is indeed the end of an era, as the Mayans say. Looking forward to the new one! In the meantime, here’s some of what made 2012 into a good ending:

Watching Seun Kuti dance and morph along with his Egypt 80 Shukar Collective at Cine Plaza in Mexico City.

The Argentine writer César Aira’s regenerative prose – any and all of it – this year it’s *_El Mármol_ (La bestia equilátera).

Okkyung Lee’s cello explosion at el nicho aural festival in Mexico City in May.

A spring full of marches and protests, the blossoming of a youth movement of resistance in Mexico.

Eduardo Terrazas’ double whammie in Mexico City: at Casa Barragán and Proyectos Monclova (new location).

Patti Smith’s concert under a full moon at the Anahuacalli Museum, Mexico City.

Lizzy Fitch’s ‘Concrete U’ at New Galerie, Paris.

Re-re-re-reading The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis (even though it’s not 2012, I kept coming back to them this year, as I did The Stories of John Cheever, Picador 2009 and Vintage, 2000 respectively).

Oskar Fischinger’s ‘Space Light Art’ at the Whitney Museum, New York.

Teresa Margolles’ harrowing exhibition ‘La Promesa’ (The Promise) at the Museo Unversitario Arte Contemporáneo (MUAC), Mexico City.

The theatrical release of Matias Meyer’s Los últimos cristeros (The Last Christeros, 2011).

Abraham Cruzvillegas’ Monkey self and family portraits at kurimanzutto gallery, Mexico City (‘Nuestra imagen actual, autorrretratos recientes’ ‘Our Current Imagination: Recent Self-Portraits).

The release of Mexican duo Soledad’s debut 12” Fe (on Vale Vergas Discos).

Colm Tóibin’s lecture at the Claustro de Sor Juana University in Mexico City.

Marihuana voted legal in Colorado and Washington states shining a hope for Mexico’s future and a possible end to its so-called war on drugs.

Spiritualized’s new release Sweet Heart Sweet Light (on Double Six Records).

Palestine granted UN observer state status.


Carlos Cruz-Diez, Physichromie 174, 1965, cardboard, casein, cellulose acetate inserts, mounted on plywood, 62 × 51.4 × 4.6 cm

And in the new year:

I am excited about the retrospective of the French Venezuelan artist Carlos Cruz-Diez, ‘Color in Space and Time’ at MUAC (until February 24)

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 4

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Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 4

Continuing our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

Jason Foumbergis a contributing culture critic at Chicago magazine, art editor and columnist at Newcity, and contributes art criticism to Photograph and Sculpture magazines.

Chicago picks of 2012 and ones to watch in 2013


Alberto Aguilar, Photo Tubes (Rachel Herman), 2012, from the ‘domestic monuments’ series, installation view

ONES TO WATCH IN 2013:
Jeroen Nelemans deconstructs light boxes as they’ve been used in the history of photography, at The Mission Projects in January.
Alberto Aguilar decorates an iconic Mies van der Rohe-designed residence with “domestic monuments” as part of Elmhurst Art Museums’s ‘Open House’ series (January 19 – April 20)
Queer Thoughts is a new gallery showcasing emerging artists.
Aspect Ratio is the first gallery in Chicago dedicated solely to video art, showing Chelsea Knight, Guy Ben-Ner, and more.
Edie Fake draws the history of queer culture in Chicago, at Thomas Robertello Gallery.
Kavi Gupta Gallery will expand and open a second location in Chicago, an 8,000 square-foot space.
Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford will open a solo show at the Hyde Park Art Center. There are rumors of naked artists on horseback at the opening.
Jason Lazarus will open his second solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art. Visitors will be able to carry Occupy Wall Street
protest signs throughout the museum.


Jessica Stockholder, Color Jam, 2012

TRENDING IN 2012:
Artist residencies: This past summer, dozens, if not hundreds, of artists attended residencies in the Midwest, at Oxbow, ACRE, Harold Arts, and the new Summer Forum. They returned to the city refreshed and energized, with new networks formed. The city seems like a friendlier place to live and work after everyone vacationed and collaborated together.
New art fairs: Expo sought to revitalize Chicago’s presence in the global art fair arena, while MDW opened its third artist-run fair, an experimental carnival of emerging-artist projects.
University galleries rise: Solveig Øvstebø will join the Renaissance Society (University of Chicago) as its new director in 2013. Also at the University of Chicago, Monika Szewczyk is the new visual arts program curator at the recently opened Logan Center for the Arts. She joins her husband in Chicago, Dieter Roelstraete, who is senior curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA). Lisa Corrin became the new director of the Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University, and will be filling up the galleries with contemporary art.
Jessica Stockholder created the largest-ever public art sculpture/painting, called Color Jam, by wrapping a downtown intersection in colored vinyl.
Industry of the Ordinary opened a retrospective at the Chicago Cultural Center and invited just about every local artist, and all viewers, to participate in their performative artworks.
Jan Tichy took over the entire Museum of Contemporary Photography and re-presented its collections both in the galleries and online.
• Former MCA curator Tricia Van Eck opened 6018North, an historic mansion-turned-art-house for artists to refurbish with site-specific projects.
‘24 Hours/25 Days’ is an exhibit open all day every day (for 25 straight days) to herald the closing of artist-run space New Capital.
Martin Creed has been the first artist-in-residence at the MCA, and issued a new artwork each month.

TOP 5 SHOWS OF 2012 IN CHICAGO:
Heidi Norton at the Museum of Contemporary Art
‘The Great Refusal: Taking on Queer Aesthetics’ at the School of the
Art Institute of Chicago
Ramón Miranda Beltrán, ‘Chicago Is My Kind of Town’, at Julius Cæsar gallery
Dawoud Bey retrospective at the Renaissance Society
Benjamin Bellas at Slow Gallery

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Sam Thorneis associate editor of frieze and based in London, UK.


Einstein on the Beach

Hanne Darboven, Requiem (2000), St Thomas the Martyr Church, Newcastle
Alina Szapocznikow, ‘Sculpture Undone, 1955–1972’– Hammer Museum, Los Angeles
‘The Stuff That Matters. Textiles Collected by Seth Siegelaub for the CSROT– Raven Row, London
• Sprawling shows with sprawling ambitions, such as ‘Spirits of Internationalism’ (at the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, and M HKA, Antwerp), ‘Animism’ (which I saw at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin), the Paris Triennale 2012 and, of course, dOCUMENTA (13)
• Phillip Glass and Robert Wilson’s Einstein on the Beach (1976) performed at the Barbican, London
John Akomfrah, The Unfinished Conversation (2012) – Liverpool Biennial
• Solo shows by Ed Atkins and Helen Marten at Chisenhale Gallery, London
• Music-wise, I found myself listening over and over to new releases by Julia Holter, Andy Stott, Shackleton, Lana Del Rey (sorry), Frank Ocean (obviously), as well as Music for Keyboards, d’Eon’s lovely trilogy of free-to-download synth studies

• In 2013, I’m hoping to catch the touring Ken Price retrospective, the Carnegie International (which opens in September), as well as to visit the renovated Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, where their Mike Kelley retrospective runs til 1 April.

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Katrina Brownis director of the Common Guild, Glasgow.


Bactrian Princess, late 3rd/early 2nd millennium BCE, Central Asia, shown as part of dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel

Highlights of 2012:

dOCUMENTA (13) was a big highlight of the year, even if its scale risked rendering it an impossible, unachievable whole. Within it, the parts were strong and particular works that stood out for me were those by Omer Fast, Tacita Dean, Pierre Huyghe, Gerard Byrne, Francis Alys, and Roman Ondák, as well as Michael Rakowitz’s remarkable installation What Dust Will Rise? and, of course, those unforgettable Bactrian Princesses.

Elsewhere and throughout the year, some of the most memorable works for me have been particularly strong moving image works: Philippe Parreno’s haunting Marilyn in his solo show at the Beyeler in Basel; Luke Fowler’sThe Poor Stockinger, the Luddite Cropper and the Deluded Followers of Joanna Southcote, which ingeniously and enticingly fused the writings of E.P. Thompson with the voice of Cerith Wyn Evans, at the Hepworth Wakefield, and was a brilliant example of a commission that responded to its location without being overly tied to or dependent on it; and Helen Marten’sEvian Disease, which I saw at Palais de Tokyo, Paris in October, accompanied by one of the best gallery texts I have ever come across, describing it as ‘a wild chase in search of the place and speed of the contemporary individual’.

Michael Clark has been a big part of my 2012, with three shows in Scotland, all of which I saw. His New Work at Tramway, Glasgow, in October offered both Relaxed Muscle and Scritti Politti (playing live) as accompaniment to some astonishing dancing with fantastic costumes by Stevie Stewart.

I am currently enjoying reading Edward Hollis’sThe Secret Lives of Buildings (Portobello Books, 2011), which is a fascinating journey through time and its impact on both the form and function some of the world’s most iconic buildings. In fiction, my highlight was probably Ewan Morrison’s Close Your Eyes (Jonathan Cape, 2012), which has stayed with me.

The near ubiquitous Django Django deserve special mention as their eponymous album was almost entirely responsible for getting me through Glasgow International Festival in April. The recently released and very lovely box set ‘Some Songs Side-by-Side’ (a collaborative project between the Glasgow independent record labels Watts of Goodwill, RE:PEATER Records and Stereo Café Bar) featuring Gummy Stumps, Tut Vu Vu, Muscles of Joy and others, is making me wish I still had a record player!

Reasons to be cheerful for 2013

I am really looking forward to Gerard Byrne’s most substantial UK show to date at the Whitechapel in January, Corin Sworn at Chisenhale in February and, in March, Simon Starling’s take on the collection for the Tate Britain Commission, which is sure to be a treat.

As well as our own exhibition for Scotland + Venice at the Biennale, I’m looking forward to seeing how Jeremy Deller tackles the British Pavilion and what the swapping of France and Germany will produce. And I’m looking forward to seeing Fulya Erdemci’s Istanbul Biennial, given her in-depth knowledge of the city.

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Vivian Sky Rehbergis a contributing editor of frieze and course director of the Master of Fine Art at the Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. She lives in Paris, France, and Rotterdam.


William Kentridge, The Refusal of Time, 5-channel projections with megaphones and a breathing machine, 24 min., Commissioned by dOCUMENTA (13). Photograph: Henrik Stromberg

Highlights, lowlights, anticipations, one reason to be cheerful

Hands down, no contest: the most surprising, disorienting and inspiring exhibition I saw in 2012 was Bernd Krauß’s ‘Das ist heute möglich,’ at the Kölnischer Kunstverein. Krauß’s mixed-media works—comprised mainly out of texts, images and objects culled or handcrafted during daily, town and country meanderings—strike the perfect balance between conceptual rigour and material heft, insouciant disorder and methodological precision. They are also, quite frequently, laugh-out-loud hilarious. This delightful exhibition, which should be seen as a pendant to Krauß’s tentacular online presence, exposed his unwavering commitment to cleave art-making to everyday life to the extent that it simply becomes second nature. It put me in just the right—completely receptive—frame of mind for a second trip to dOCUMENTA (13), where I was again captivated by the crowd pleasers. Etel Adnan’s colour-saturated paintings and William Kentridge’s The Refusal of Time jazzed my senses, while Tino Sehgal’s This Variation and Pierre Huyghe’s droning Untilled garden made me leap lightly from the fence I had been sitting on with respect to their work for some time. Speaking of leaps: I left my homebase in Paris for Rotterdam in early 2012, but just managed to catch ‘Le sentiment des choses,’ curated by Elodie Royer and Yoan Gourmel at Le Plateau/Frac Ile-de-France, and inspired by the Italian artist and designer Bruno Munari, who had the good common sense to make foldable sculptures for hotel nightstands. I could have moved in for the duration, slept on Munari’s Robots Abitacolo, a bed/storage/workspace (so what if it’s for kids?), and I would have never been bored, not even for a minute.

Lowlights? There are so many… But closer to home, the biggest downers are the rampant economic precarity that is so harshly affecting what we try to get about doing as artists, writers, curators and advocates of culture at large coupled with the political lack of imagination on the part of those who govern. Of course I feel this particularly strongly in the Netherlands, where I now spend the bulk of my time, but I could also rant about France, if you let me. Unfortunately, as a diehard sceptic, I anticipate things won’t get loads better anytime soon. Still, I am blown away by the ferocious and admirable determination of those struggling to turn the ship around or to invent new, compromise scenarios when faced with the loss of their livelihoods and workspaces. Solidarity: now there’s a reason to be cheerful and a form of good cheer that deserves to be more widespread.

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Ronald Jonesis professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at Konstfack University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, Sweden where he leads The Experience Design Group.


The Master, dir. Paul Thomas Anderson, DVD still

Highlights of 2012:

The Master (dir. Paul Thomas Anderson) – This movie is pure American cult-poetry, and the single contemporary masterpiece I encountered over the past year. It is the wound-up story of the irreconcilable relationship between Freddie, a traumatized war veteran, hauntingly played by Joaquin Phoenix, and Lancaster Dodd, the spiritual impresario, incarnated by the entrancing Philip Seymour Hoffman. Freddie, seeking some direction, any direction, in life joins in with Dodd’s “The Cause,” a quasi-religion which exists precisely because wounded creatures like Freddie need for it to exist; the reassurance for the hollowed-out that they have an inner life, in-there-somewhere. It is a directorial triumph for Paul Thomas Anderson who has created a call and response relationship between this film and his other masterpiece Magnolia.

• Arizona State University Center for Science and Imagination– Wondering why so many science fiction writers are addicted to dystopian visions of the future, Michael Crow, President of Arizona State University, did what would seem counterintuitive, a.k.a. what seems to come naturally to him. He inaugurated the Center for Science and Imagination to bring together sci-fi writers of the rank of Neal Stephenson who created cyberpunk, perhaps the darkest science fiction genre, and scientists like Keith Hjelmstad to imagine an array of post-critical, pro-active future scenarios. Most ambitious is the project run by author Cory Doctorow (Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom) and the university’s Director of Earth and Space Exploration, Kip Hodges to design a working 3-D printer that, once delivered to the moon’s surface, would begin manufacturing self-assembling astronaut quarters from moon dust, along with other essentials for lunar living.

• President Obama’s re-election– The first black US President’s re-election is the re-assurance that the sea change four years ago will not be turned back, but significantly his second term marks a tipping point even more expansive than his first. As the President to come of age in the post Viet Nam and Watergate era, his re-election tells us that the generations encumbered by ideological and cultural divisiveness, that aggravated the country’s national and international behavior since the 1960’s, are behind us. The President acknowledged as much in his Inaugural Address saying: “On this day, we come to proclaim an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas that for far too long have strangled our politics . . .” The consequence of his re-election? Global beneficence.

Reasons to be cheerful in 2013:


Hilma af Klint, No. 2, Group 9, The Dove (From ‘Series UW’), 1915

• Hilma af Klint– Some might say that the Obama re-election was in part a matter of score settling. Well, Hilma’s long-awaited retrospective at the Moderna Museet (opening February 16, 2013) is the ultimate in revenge served cold. Having pioneered what “received knowledge” tells us is automatic drawing decades before the boys on the continent ever considered it, she was then overlooked with startling consistency, excepting her cringe-making reputation for being the “occultist” she was; a dubious consolation prize. Decades ago, having conscientiously introduced Hilma’s insight and achievements to a well-known art historian, he sat silently, snuffed out his cigarette, looked up at me and said: ‘Do you realize how many PhDs would be undone should this ever come to light?’ Gird your loins.

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Kirsty Bellis a contributing editor of frieze based in Berlin, Germany. Her book The Artist’s House is forthcoming from Sternberg Press.

James Benning, Nightfall (2011) A single take, 98 minutes long, shows a fixed view of a forest as day turns incrementally, minute by minute, into night. Unexpectedly dramatic, this film is an epic study of attention, expectation and mortality. As if to make this clear, the final credit shows James Benning’s name and not the date of the film (2011) but his date of birth (1942).”


Claes Oldenburg, Study for Announcement for One-Man Show at Dwan Gallery– Mickey Mouse with Red Heart, 1971

Claes Oldenburg, ‘The Sixties’, Mumok, Vienna. This show started with The Street (1959-60), a tawdry tableau constructed from odds and ends of cardboard, and culminating in the exhaustive and thrilling Mouse Museum, with its Ray Gun Wing, which assembled all manner of versions of accidental and purposeful “ray guns”, Oldenburg’s ever-present, totemic symbol of transformation.

Katharina Grosse, Galerie Johann König, Berlin and Emily Wardill, Fulll Firearms, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe Two artists for whom I have experienced that rare excitement of a 180 degree turn around, from hate to love. In Grosse’s hyperbolic spray paint installations and Wardill’s feature films that inhabit the genre of melodrama, repellence and overload are integrated and vital parts of the work. Both, in completely different ways, pose challenging questions about ontological relations between one thing and the next, both intellectually and physically.

Danh Võ, 2 Fevrier, 1861, Phung Võ (Kunsthaus Bregenz). This publication synthesized the ongoing project by Danh Võ in which his father, Phung Võ , copies out in his elegant handwriting the last letter sent by the French missionary and priest Jean-Théophane Vénard to his father in 1861, before being decapitated in Hanoi. An edition of unlimited number that will continue until the death of Võ ’s father (the names of all 210 recipients at the time of the making the book are listed in the back), this deceptively simple work is a summation of the overlapping concerns of Võ ’s multivalent work, among them family relations, mortality, labour, language, immigration, colonialism, collecting and distribution.

Philippe Parreno, Fondation Beyeler, Basel. Parreno’s pair of extraordinary new films, Continuously Habitable Zones (2011), a black crystalline, claustrophobic landscape, with no revelation or clues to its location or reason, and Marilyn (2012) described as ‘the portrait of a ghost’, in which we see from the eyes of the actress, as she/we drift somnolently away from the reality of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel interior she inhabits.

‘Between Walls and Windows: Architecture and Ideology’, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin. Valerie Smith’s ultimate exhibition as curator at the HKW was a feat of beaurocratic negotiation that looked as light as air. For a short month, the HKW’s building was stripped of signage and furniture, even the cashier’s desk was removed, to enable it to be “architectural monument, understood as an ideologically determined sculpture.” While ten artists and architects groups were invited to intervene in the newly unencumbered building, it was the building itself, a “gift” from the US to the West Berlin in 1957, that became the clearest evidence of ideology in action.

Karl Holmqvist, reading, Galerie Neu, Berlin. Sitting on rustic milking stools on a patch of lawn behind Galerie Neu, Karl Holmqvist treated his audience to a reading from his new book of poetry ‘’K.’ The repetitive refrains uttered in Karl’s inimitable sweet drone took on a hypnotic quality, like a gentle brain-washing. For weeks afterwards, my kids could be heard sporadically intoning the refrain “WORDS AREPEOPLE / LANGUAGE IS POWER.”


Laura Owens, Untitled (alphabet), installation view at Sadie Coles HQ, London

Laura Owens, Sadie Coles HQ, London. A cracker of a show, easily the best in Mayfair during London’s Frieze Art Fair week, amongst a host of shows by male painter colleagues who paled in comparison to these two wildly energetic series of painterly invention.

Raoul de Keyser, ‘To Walk’ , Barbara Weiss, Berlin. This exhibition of seventeen incredible little paintings that picture the extraordinary locked into the ordinary was the last show of new work by de Keyser, who died on October 6th.

dOCUMENTA (13). My list of highlights would not be complete without mentioning Carolyn Christov-Barghiev’s Documenta. Its combination of a tightly orchestrated “brain” with a somewhat unruly and inclusive “body” seemed an unusually generous and honest portrayal of how art is made and works these days. Is this empathy as a curatorial strategy?

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 5

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 5

Continuing our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

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Jonathan Griffinis a contributing editor of frieze based in Los Angeles, USA.


Alex Israel, ‘Property’, 2010– ongoing, installation view at Museo Civico Diocesano de Santa Maria dei Servi, Citta’ della Pive, Italy, 2012. Courtesy the artist and Il Giardino dei Lauri.

Best of 2012

Two of my favourite recent shows I didn’t even see. Not in person anyway – more’s the pity, because, as it happens, they both took place in Italian Baroque churches. For ‘Treating Shadows as Real Things’, a project by Los Angeles-based Public Fiction (Lauren Mackler, joined by critic Andrew Berardini), the curators placed works by nine artists on a specially installed mirrored floor in Turin’s Church of the Holy Shroud.

Earlier in the year, Alex Israel was invited to produce an edition of his series ‘Property’ (2010– ongoing) in Museo Civico Diocesano di Santa Maria dei Servi, in the Umbrian town of Citta’ della Pieve. Beside the church’s 16th-century statuary, he installed objects including a Virgin Mary, a Greek Kairos and a dirty brown snowman, all made of fibreglass and rented from a Rome movie prop house. In photos, at least, Israel’s interventions look entirely at home.

‘B. Wurtz & Co.’, curated by Matthew Higgs at Richard Telles Gallery, was a rare treat, a tangled web that connected such artists as Vincent Fecteau, Judith Scott and Martin Creed to the underappreciated Wurtz.

A similarly adventurous group show was ‘Out of __________’, curated by Leila Khastoo at Benevento Gallery. (How many curators are brazen enough to put a TV show about an artist in their exhibition? Let alone including a piece of their own work!)


Out of __________’, exhibition view at Benevento Gallery

Pretty much everything The Box does exceeds the ambitions of any other commercial gallery in town.* This year we’ve been treated to important shows by Leigh Ledare, Paul McCarthy and Simone Forti.

In the ambition stakes, Blum & Poe also bowled everyone over with their masterful exhibition ‘Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono Ha’, curated by Mika Yoshitake. Artist Nobuo Sekine somehow balanced a granite monolith on top of a 10-foot tall mirrored plinth.

Some people complained that at Ali Subotnick’s Venice Beach Biennial you couldn’t tell what was art and what wasn’t. That’s why I liked it. Especially the oil-drum trash cans by Mark Grotjahn, painted with a portrait of the artist. Crucified. Crying blood.

Ricky Swallow and Leslie Vance were the first contemporary artists allowed to infiltrate Henry and Arabella Huntington’s Pasadena mansion in its 84-year history. Their joint exhibition at the Huntington Art Gallery reveals the married couple’s profound mutual influence.

Kenneth Tam’s exhibition ‘Two and a Half Hands’ filled artist Mateo Tannatt’s gallery Pauline, which must have been inconvenient for Tannatt because the gallery is also his house. Tam’s sculptures and video made hilarious and uncomfortable viewing.

Things to look forward to in 2013?
Loads. Ali Subotnick’s long-awaited Llyn Foulkes show at the Hammer Museum, James Turrell’s retrospective at LACMA, Marc-Olivier Wahler and Piero Golia’s art members’ club Chalet Hollywood (opening at the back of L.A.C.E.), and Laura Owens’ self-curated solo show in an empty church in east Los Angeles (Owens’ first major show in the city since her acclaimed MOCA exhibition of 2003). This January, Night Gallery opens in new premises as a fully fledged commercial gallery. And in late spring, Hannah Hoffman will add to the growing cluster of Los Angeles galleries around Highland Avenue, with a solo show by Mira Schendel.

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Jenna Sutelaworks with words and structures in the fields of design and art. Based in Helsinki, Finland, she is currently preparing a publishing programme on a digital materiality at the Aalto University, among other things.


‘Unbuilt Helsinki’, installation view at The Museum of Finnish Architecture, Helsinki. Photograph: Achim Hatzius

That euphoric feeling from moments of insight into something that still needs to be specified 2012:

- Kimmo Modig and I invited the artists Bill Drummond and Ingo Niermann, and their respective music projects, to Helsinki this autumn. ‘Sounds Like Work’, our event at the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma featured Drummond’s The17, a choir of people that come together to imagine and enact music after the end of recorded music and Niermann’s Madgermany, a musical movement that transcends nations and humanity, possesses nothing and grants its members neither rights nor duties.

- ‘Tõnis Vint and His Aesthetic Universe’, a recent retrospective at the Kumu Art Museum in Tallinn and its accompanying publication present the first thorough survey of the visionary Estonian artist’s oeuvre from graphic works to studies and teachings on visual sign systems.

- During a visit to Index art space in Stockholm in October, I (finally) discovered OEI, a Swedish language magazine for experimental poetry and speculative sociology, among other things, that has been going since 1999. Since much is lost in translation, my reading of the magazine ironically adds to OEI’s preference for “friction over the smooth exchange of communication”. I also felt it in practice while carrying their 1280 page issue #56-57 on the notion of the magazine as an aesthetic medium with me to Helsinki.

- Graphic design collective Åbäke and artist Nene Tsuboi’s ‘Unbuilt Helsinki’ project gives a shape to a fantastic past with the purpose of expanding contemporary imaginations in and for the city. A series of promising yet unrealized architectural proposals and unfinished plans from the archives of the Museum of Finnish Architecture comes to life in a diorama of a Helsinki that should’ve/would’ve/could’ve existed (until February 25).

- This year in Helsinki, I have also been turned into a carrier of information about the key contradictions in the project SALONS: Birthright Palestine?, by Israeli performance group Public Movement for the New Museum’s ‘The Ungovernables’ exhibition. Debriefing Session, a series of performative one-on-one meetings conveyed the complex relations between cultural production, public and private funding bodies, political agendas and activism, as experienced during a mission of counter branding. Me, the receiver of information, and the informant and artist Dana Yahalomi met in a generic Finnish hotel bar, in the distinct presence of a guard, for an illuminating moment of reflection.

- Starting in January 2013, ‘The Anthropocene-Project’ at Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin confronts the “age of man” from an artistic perspective next to that of science. A series of dialogues and performances will be established to reconsider subject and object positions at a time when, according to Anthropocene theory, humanity forms nature. I am expecting more of what Vera Bühlmann, in her research on the design of mediality, describes in terms of ‘euphoric moments of insight into something that still needs to be specified’.

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Mitch Speedis a writer and artist based in Vancouver, Canada where, along with a group of 3 other designers and writers, he runs the publication Setup.

Marian Penner Bancroft, from ‘For Dennis and Susan: Running Arms to a Civil War’, 1977, 24 silver gelatin prints and 1 text panel, 20 × 26 cm each. Courtesy of the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Marian Penner Bancroft – ‘Spiritlands:t/HERE’ Vancouver Art Gallery

This exhibition presented works made by Marian Penner Bancroft between 1977 and 1999. Since seeing it, images from a work entitled ‘For Dennis and Susan: Running Arms to a Civil War have looped in my head’. That work is comprised of twenty-five small scale, black and white photographs focusing on a period during which Penner Bancroft’s sister Susan, and her husband Dennis coped with Dennis’s battle with Leukaemia, and a short, typewritten text that wove together “just the facts” conceptualism with boldly emotive poetics. This is an artist who has bravely chosen affective subject matter, and who has skillfully engineered structures for that subject matter to move through. With their exploratory but determinate presentation formats – photos and graphite rubbings presented as the surfaces of legged blackboard structures and lecturns, for example – many works felt like they could have been produced just the other day.

Lisa Robertson – Nilling (Bookthug)

Nilling is a collection of prose essays released by Canadian publisher Bookthug, in 2012. In the first essay, ‘Time in the Codex’, Robertson uses prose written in point form to articulate her physical and intellectual passages through codex’s, and books. Lastingness: Rége, Lucrèce, Arendt explores the mechanics of Lucretius’s De rerum natura vis a vis various early translations of it, and the thoughts of Pauline Reage and Hannah Arendt. The book is mostly very difficult, but written in beautiful, idiosyncratically structured prose. Self-reflexive meditations on Robertson’s own struggles with reading difficult material are woven into some of the texts, so a willing reader can find the stubborn wanderings of their own mind reflected in those of the author’s. The book is at once an empathetic and a challenging gesture.

Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Def Jam Records)

Frank Ocean’s voice, self described as a baritone with tenor moments, in swoon-worthy. At the same time, his music can feel languid. In Pyramids, Ocean lazily folds a verse’s narrative trajectory back on itself, by repeating lines at nearly arbitrary points. Delivered in an off kilter hybrid between R & B and slow rap, these kinds of interruptions conspire with the music’s sensuality to produce an uncanny listening experience. The designation uncanny is applicable to Frank Ocean, who as a gay black musician working in an urban milieu often associated with violence, misogyny and homophobia subtly undoes all of the same stereotypes. For more on that, listen to the aforementioned Pyramids which joins the strip club (a fixture setting of the genre) with invocations of Cleopatra – a character come myth whose attributes oscillate freely between the alpha and omega.

Action Bronson – Blue Chips Mixtape (listen here)

No such social functions exist in Action Bronson. You could even say that his music embodies the exact qualities that someone like Frank Ocean works against. Bronson was born in Flushing, Queens to Albanian immigrants. His raps, effortless and laid back, emerge as the collaboration between a brain encased in a skull garnished with a billowing red beard, and a pair of lungs buried beneath a Jabba the Hut physique.

Being that Bronson is also a televised chef, it is unsurprising that lamb, fennel and fettuccine fill out the content of his songs. Most of the tracks on Blue Chips are orgiastic fantasies of food, sex and violence, in which puns and similes snap and bounce over up-tempo beats. Bronson treats words like ingredients – their audible comportments, as they tumble out of his mouth, are the textures, their associations the flavours.

Mark Leckey – ‘BigBoxGreenScreenRefridgeratorActions’, Walter Phillips Gallery – Banff AB

This exhibition was comprised of a state of the art Samsung smart-fridge placed upon a large green screen, a flat screen monitor playing a video, a very large and deadly looking slab of rough-hewn granite propped upright by an iron frame, and a stack of speakers encased in proto-minimal plywood boxes. Now and then, the speaker-box would “talk” to the slab of granite with a crushing wall of bass, mimicking the sound which would accompany the departure of the granite slab from the local mountain whence it came, and (more abstractly) those of the dance culture about which Leckey made his seminal work Fiorucci Made me Hardcore. My favorite work was the video, wherein the fridge was imbued with sentience by a slickly edited montage of its surfaces, and a reverb heavy voice that chanted it’s technical specs like a divine medium.

Oscar Pistorius aka The Blade Runner

Oscar Pistorius is challenging the boundaries that define competitive categories within sport. Dubbed the Blade Runner after the prosthetic limbs that have replaced his legs below the knees, Pistorius is now competing at an Olympic level against able bodied opponents. Mid race, Pistorius’s legs blur into the larger unit of his body. But watch him before the gun goes off. Standing idly, the cyborg-apparatus made from his muscular body and carbon fiber legs could be a 21st century manifestion of a Futurist fantasy. Crouching and setting himself into the blocks, Pistorius’s body appears to extend backwards as the mechanical legs join forces with the machinery of the aluminum starting blocks.

Joaquin Phoenix’s shoulders in The Master

The Master is P.T. Anderson’s loose adaptation of the mad and manipulative methods of Scientology founder El Ron Hubbard. When Anderson’s El Ron, Lancaster Dodd (Phillip Seymour Hoffman), discovers the tortured, alcoholic, violent WWII veteran Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix), he resolves to soothe Quell’s soul. Unfortunately, Dodd happens to be an alcoholic power monger with a mean streak of his own, so it doesn’t take long before everything goes to shit. One of the primary forces that lends the story gravitas is Phoenix’s body. He moves with a brooding gait, neither slumping nor holding a straight posture. Rather, his shoulders make a constant, concave tightening around his chest. They contradict his physical power by shrinking his upper body, and fill out his violence with undertones of broken-ness. The character doesn’t glorify the brooding and violent male, because it is not sensational but real, and really scary. It is the revolutions between psychology and physicality made manifest.

Chris Kraus in Vancouver

On November 1, Chris Kraus’s early experimental films were screened at the Pacific Cinemateque in Vancouver, as part of an event organized by The Western Front Artist Run Centre. The films were short, and structured around stream of consciousness recollections, gender-fucking performances of texts, and stories leading into stories leading into stories. In Foolproof Illusion, Kraus, wearing a dominatrix-ish costume, knelt in the snow and delivered a schizophrenic monologue that segued through accounts of love, murder, and the narrator’s (whose identity I was unsure of, and still am) cosmological links to Artaud. How to Shoot a Crime was organized around footage obtained from a man who worked for New York’s police department creating photo and film documentations of murder scenes. In that work, Kraus provided visceral, visual experiences usually prohibited by basic rules of propriety. She supplemented the films – with their gritty mixture of deep philosophy and critical piss-taking – with candid and sincere conservation.

Garry Neil Kennedy – The Last Art College (MIT)

In 1967, a 32 year old Garry Neil Kennedy became president of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. During his 23 year tenure, he helped to bring the college into step with modern art, and attracted a who’s who list of faculty and guest faculty, who used the college as a site for the production of now canonical works. In 2005, Neil Kennedy was approached by MIT press to edit a history of the school. This book, built over a chronology compiled by Canadian artist David MacWilliam, is the response to that request. Neil Kennedy’s writing* is both informed and readable. I haven’t gotten through nearly the entire thing, and given its scope and detail, would be slightly afraid of anyone who has. The book’s title is both cinematic, and mildly depressing. It is also unfortunately prescient.

Liz Magor, ‘I is being This’, Catriona Jeffries, Vancouver

I is Being This is the first exhibition by Liz Magor at Vancouver’s Catriona Jeffries Gallery. Magor’s work often deals with the desire ridden emotional ether that both separates and links bodies and materials. Recently, she has focused on binges and their by-products – think stacks of empty party platters strewn with candy rappers and the bodies of rodents. This exhibition was the product of the artist’s binge-like accumulation of sculptural materials, which were also the cast off residue of shifting appetites for fashion.

The gallery’s walls had been dressed with a grid of white boxes, overspilling with tissue paper. In each box was a coat, jacket or sweater – from the designer variety to more lowly coverings – decorated with smatterings of sewn on bric a brac – broaches, crests, logos and labels – plucked from the bottom to the top of socio-economic spectra. Some pieces were dressed in layers of slinky mesh, which functioned as carriers for caches of cigarettes and candies. Here, the free and easy use of collage resulted in objects that were often ugly, and were freighted with an aura of gross neurosis. At once large and small, it was probably the best show Vancouver saw in 2012.

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Barbara Casavecchiais a contributing editor of frieze. She lives in Milan, Italy.


Naoya Hatekeyama, Imaizumi area of Kesen-cho, Rikuzen Takata City on April 4, 2011, 2011. Included in ‘Architecture in the Wake of Disaster,’ the Japan Pavilion at the 13th International Architecture Exhibition, Venice Biennale.

Open questions:

The Japanese Pavillion at this year’s Venice Architecture Biennale, curated by Toyo Ito, was awarded the Golden Lion. In a small video near the entrance, Naoya Hatakeyama (whose photographs wrapped up the space at 360 degrees), talked about the experience of taking pictures of what was left of his hometown, entirely wiped out by the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, which also killed his mother. His questions about the sense of producing images (and building architectures), and the possible good of it, kept coming back for a long time.

*Touching Reality* by Thomas Hirschorn at La Triennale in Paris, for its literal brutality.

‘Slideshows’, an exhibition by Massimo Grimaldi held at the reopened Museo di Villa Croce in Genoa (curated by Alessandro Rabottini), brought together for the first time all the works of an ongoing series, started by the artist in 2003. Each slideshow consists of a collection of images (initially web-collected, more recently shot by the artist during his visits at the hospitals run by Emergency, an Italian medical NGO operating in war zones across the globe). Grimaldi presents them on two screens, side by side, on the last Apple model available for purchase at the moment of completion, so that the quick obsolence of the ‘new’ and the commodity fetishism are pushed to the limits. The photos are post-produced to be picture-perfect, sentimental, devoid of violence and visually captivating, like the quintessential Apple ads. Furthermore, Grimaldi uses the slideshows as ‘promotional’ presentations of his work: whenever asked to participate in a prize or to provide a project, he proposes to invest over 90% of his budget on the construction of a new Emergency’s hospital – a conscious ‘moral blackmail’ to push the choice between art and life (and communication).


Bill Bollinger, left: Untitled, 1970 (2002), right: Cyclone Fence, 1968 (2012), installation view at SculptureCenter, New York. Courtesy SculptureCenter; photograph: Jason Mandella.

In no particular order:

dOCUMENTA (13) and the (impossible) Book of Books

Bill Bollinger’s retrospective at SculptureCenter in New York.

Ed Atkins’s solo show ‘Us Dead Talk Love’ at Chisenhale, London, and his reading during frieze week in October.

‘En todo y en todas partes’ at Kurimanzutto, Mexico City, with works by Karla Black, Marieta Chirulescu, Babette Mangolte and Susanne M. Winterling, in response to Edward Krasinski’s legacy.


Carlo Gabriele Tribbioli, from ‘Reperti per il prossimo milione di anni’, (detail), 2012, silver gelatin print, 113 × 56 cm

An Italian round:

Paola Pivi’s recent exhibition ‘Tulkus 1880 to 2018’, at the Castello di Rivoli, Turin (and soon at Witte de With, Rotterdam). Installed in the Manica Lunga, as if mimicking the original quadreria of the castle, it included around 1,000 photographs of tulkus, i.e. powerful Tibetan Buddhist masters who are recognized as reincarnations of previous masters. Tulkus are believed to have the capacity to reveal the place of their next birth. Mysticism aside, this survey on the presence, disappearance and eventual survival of a culture worked quite well also on a non-metaphorical level.

Gina Pane’s great retrospective ‘E’ per amore vostro: l’altro’, curated by Sophie Duplaix at Mart, Rovereto, with an impressive array of works. Pity that Pane’s several exhibitions in Italy and the critical studies they triggered were somehow marginalized. Anyway, chapeau.

‘disegnare disegnare ridisegnare il pensiero immagine che cammina’, Marisa Merz’s exhibition in random order and without labels at the family-run Fondazione Merz in Turin was a brilliant, unguided tour de force of her private world.

Zoloto, Roberto Cuoghi’s monumental, self-critical and at times exhilarating ‘retrospective’ take on the issue of identity, at Massimo De Carlo, Milan.

Luca Vitone’s two joint summer exhibitions: ‘Monocromo Variationen’ at Museion, Bozen, and ‘Natura morta con paesaggi e strumenti musicali’, at the Brodbeck Foundation in Catania, for their subtle reading of the Italian landscape.
Hat tip also to a couple of upcoming Sicilian galleries: Laveronica Arte Contemporanea, Modica, and collicaligreggi, Catania.

Rome-based Nero Magazine just restyled itself as ‘a publication that collects other serial publications in it’. Check it out, free-download: www.neromagazine.it

‘Reperti per il prossimo milione di anni’, the first gallery show by Carlo Gabriele Tribbioli, at Federica Schiavo, in Rome – a very mature exhibition, for an absolute beginner.

As to Milan, my hometown, it shows some signs of recovery from its late atony, nevermind the crisis. In February, artists Mario Airò, Diego Perrone and Stefano Dugnani opened their studios to host ten artists from the last generation, to grant them room and a chance to produce new works. In June, Valentina Sansone from the Swiss Institute curated Bureau for Art Nerds, a lively series of events bringing together a group of young Swiss artists (Fluck / Paulus, Curtat Tunnel, Hannah Weinberger, Hotel Palenque) and Milanese artist-run or independent spaces, such as Anonima Nuotatori, Carrozzeria Margot, Gasconade, Dafne Boggeri’s Full Moon Salon. The list of off-spaces for the local scene now includes also Lucie Fontaine, Marselleria, Spazio Morris, Spazio Cabinet. On the institutional side, Palazzo Reale got back on the map with the solid Fabio Mauri. The End, as well as with a rich, though jumbled survey on the Seventies: Addio Anni Settanta: Arte a Milano 1969-80, curated by Francesco Bonami and Paola Nicolin (the book produced on the occasion, with reproductions of hundreds original catalogues, fanzines, mags was a small treasure. Not so small, in fact: 474 pages, Mousse Publishing). Ongoing is the neat first mid-career show by Alberto Garutti at PAC, Didascalia, co-curated by Nicolin and Hans Ulrich Obrist, which highlights also the artist’s pivotal role as a teacher at Brera art academy. A possible history of Italian art beyond the labels of Arte Povera or Transavaguardia, for a change.

Looking forward to:

The next Venice Biennale, curated by Massimiliano Gioni and – for the first time ever, since its start – even its Italian Pavillion, curated by Bartolomeo Pietromarchi, the current director of MACRO, Rome.

And also the new directorship of Andrea Viliani at the MADRE Museum in Naples, back on track. The times they are a-changing.

Angela Ricci Lucchi & Yervant Gianikian’s new film, coming soon: their exhibition NONNONNON at Hangar Bicocca, Milan, was wonderful.

Giuseppe Gabellone at GAMeC, Bergamo.

The Città delle Culture, set to open in Milan in 2013 (in the ex-Ansaldo factory, redesigned by Chipperfield). More of a ‘Haus der Kulturen der Welt’, than a museum of contemporary art, but maybe getting closer?

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Raphael Gygaxis an art historian and curator at Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Switzerland.

A list of things I’ve seen / heard / read / done in 2012 that lifted my spirits:

Nicole Eisenman, The Breakup, 2011, oil and mixed media on canvas, 142 × 109 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects. Photograph: Robert Wedemeyer

- Sibylle Berg’s novel Vielen Dank für das Leben (Hanser, Munich, 2012); no review will ever be able to catch the spirit of this book.

- Nicole Eisenman’s painting The Breakup (2011) at the Whitney Biennial; after seeing it I was in good mood for the whole day.

- Beach House’s album Bloom (Sub Pop, 2012) has helped me to get over my anxious moments at the airport and other unpleasant situations this year.

- Erna Ómarsdóttir’s dance piece We Saw Monsters; rooooar!

- Willie Doherty’s film Secretion (2012) at dOCUMENTA (13); I watched it twice – and afterwards I left Kassel.

- 7th Berlin Biennale; I really liked the character of this test field (and I didn’t like most of the reviews about it)

- Danny Boyle’s opening ceremony of the London Olympics; what a lovely spectacle.

- Encounters (dinners, studio visits, drinks etc.) with artists including: Ai Weiwei, Patterson Beckwith, Spartacus Chetwynd, Maria Eichhorn, Agnès Geoffray, Teresa Margolles, Nicola Martini, Sara Masüger, Lucy Stein, Julie Verhoeven, Silke Otto-Knapp, Virginia Overton, Loredana Sperini, Lily van der Stokker; thank you all!

- Some shows of dead female artists like: ‘Evelyne Axell. The Great Jouney into Space’ (Broadway 1602, New York) or ‘Sylvia Sleigh’ (Kunst Halle St. Gallen)

- More shows: ‘Carol Rama: Spazio anche piu che tempo’ (Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin), Shana Moulton’s solo presentation at Liste 17 (Galerie Gregor Staiger, Zurich), ‘Rita Ackermann: Fire by Days’ (Hauser & Wirth, London)

- OK – also some shows by male artists: ‘Marc Bauer’ (Freymond-Guth, Zurich / Kunsthaus Baselland, Muttenz), ‘Doug Aitken’ (Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich), Martin Soto Climent (Kunsthalle Winterthur / Karma International, Zurich)

A list of things that I hope to do in 2012 that will cheer me up:


Kelly Nipper, Black Forest, 2012

See the premier of the Ciné-Concert Der Architekt (The Architect) scripted by Marc Bauer and with accompanying music from Kafka (January 18, La Comédie de Clermont, Clermont-Ferrand), the premier of Sibylle Berg’s play Angst reist mit (March 23, Schauspielhaus Stuttgart), the exhibition of Kelly Nipper’s work (including her performance Black Forest, which premiered at Glasgow International Festival in 2012) alongside drawings and watercolours by Rudolf von Laban at Kunsthaus Zurich (April 5 – June 16,); Do the art things in Berlin, London, Paris, New York, Venice, Zurich, Basel plus a research trip to Dublin; Go to Iceland (holidays); Participate at the Second Swiss Congress for Art History (Lausanne); Finish my PHD (fingers crossed)

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Chris Wileyis an artist, writer and curator based in Los Angeles, USA.

Los Angeles

Living in and around New York for my entire life, I never thought I’d be writing high praise of Los Angeles, that much maligned city choked in smog, where I heard tell that pedestrians were shot with impunity for there perambulatory transgressions. LA was, in my mind, nothing but an urban planning nightmare, teeming with New Age yuppies, industry flame-outs, gang bangers, and a terrifying, militaristic police force that seemed to hurt as often as it help. Earthquakes, wild fires, landslides, Charles Manson, race riots, reality television, vegan cafés where your order has be made as a statement of doe-eyed affirmation (“I am vivacious”; “I am dazzling”): surely it was a city that augers the end of days. But, like many of my fellow defectors from New York and elsewhere, the city has gotten its hooks in me. I find that it has afforded me the time a space to think, read, and work, absent the buzz and heat of New York, which, though occasionally stimulating, can too often prove to be an existential merry-go-round—a ride that is loud, colorful and fun, but which spits you out in essentially the same place that you began. This is of course to say nothing of the burgeoning Los Angeles art scene, where the static charge of possibility still hangs in the air. New spaces and new tendencies seem to be springing up here at a quickening pace, and the future looks bright indeed.

Ken Price at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art


Zizi, Ken Price, 2011, fired and painted clay

, 42 × 61 × 43 cm

Though it saddened me to think that Price’s retrospective was only very narrowly posthumous, the exhibition itself was suffused with such lavish and energetic displays of color and form that any hint of dourness was quickly swept away. Price proved in this exhibition (as he had throughout his career) that ceramics could be pulled out of the crafts ghetto and fixed in the firmament of fine art, much as his mentor Peter Voulkos had bade him to. But more importantly, the exhibition also stood as a testament to a figure whose obdurately weird work bucked trends and categorizations, but left next to no one questioning its place in the art world. Price was a consummate insiders’ outsider, and his renegade example is an essential one for an art world that finds itself too often mired in rhetorical and aesthetic feedback loops.

John Houck at Kansas Gallery

In his debut solo exhibition at New York’s Kansas gallery, John Houck proved that investigations into photography’s digital life need not be dry, even when they are strongly analytical. The anchors of the show, were Houck’s beguiling, optically flummoxing works from his ‘Aggregates’ series, in which he exploits his skills as a high-level computer programmer to agglomerate exhaustive, moiré-patterned configurations of colored pixels hewing to a set of pre-determined parameters—sometimes allowing for hundreds of thousands of configurations in a single piece—which are generated in the computer, printed, folded, photographed, and folded yet again, so that the final piece resembles nothing so much as a pieces of Op Art origami. They are beautiful objects, but behind their elegant veneer their exhaustive combinatory logic speaks of the ever-shifting sea of pixels that has become the substrate of our contemporary image world.

Barney Kulok at Nicole Klagsbrun

Kulok’s third solo exhibition at the gallery, which was accompanied by a handsome book published by Aperture, consisted of a collection of stunningly rich black-and-white photographs, taken during the construction of Louis I. Kahn’s great unrealized monument to Franklin D. Roosevelt on Roosevelt Island. (In a cruel twist of architectural fate, Kahn died in the public toilets of reviled, then-recent reboot of New York’s Pennsylvania Station, and is said to have had the plans for the monument in his briefcase.) However, Kulok’s photographs, which, more often than not, take the form of horizonless details of building materials and surfaces, are not mere documentation; they take into obvious account the art historical precedents of Minimalism and Post-Minimalism, with a deftness that has had few parallels since the work of Lewis Baltz. Like Baltz, Kulok reminds us—in light of the recent vogue for self-reflexive investigations of photographic materiality and the emphasis placed on studio practice—that photographs made out in the world at large can still present novel aesthetic propositions, even as they speak, however modestly, of the life outside the darkroom and away from the glare of the studio lights.

The paintings of Tala Madani


Tala Madani, Chinballs with Flag, 2011, oil on linen, 41 × 31 cm

Though I was familiar with her work before, by way of my work on the New Museum’s first Generational Triennial ‘Younger Than Jesus’ in 2009, I have become re-acquainted with it this year as a result of the fortuitous proximity of our Los Angeles homes. Her paintings are a portal onto a world populated exclusively by men, who almost always appear to be of Middle Eastern descent, and who display a gleeful penchant for psychosexual depravity that recalls both the Abu Ghraib prison photographs and childhood games gone horribly awry. Initially characterized by a loose, exuberant facture that verged on the slap-dash, Madani’s restlessness and versatility has led her to further elaborations of her stylistic vocabulary. Recently, this has meant the addition of a more controlled, sharply delineated vein to her painting, with some works coming to resemble demented editorial cartoons. Whatever the manner of their making, however, all her paintings cut close to the bone, reflecting some of the more unseemly, yet undeniably enticing aspects of our collective ideations and desires.

Breaking Bad

Television in the past decade has continued to defy the clichéd notion that it exists only to stupefy the cowed masses, a medium that can be coupled with “real culture” only as an object of campy appreciation, or by way of the winking appropriation by those cultural mandarins who would transmute low culture into high, under the guise of erasing the distinction between the two. Increasingly, it appears that television has entered into its golden age, offering us the moving image equivalent of the 19th century novel: intricate, twisting plots, a complex panoply of characters, high drama, potent social commentary, and popular appeal.

Perhaps the most obvious current exemplar of this turn is AMC’s Breaking Bad, which has, for the last five years, followed the ignominious rise of Walter White (Brian Cranston) from his beginnings as a terminally ill high school science teacher who turned to cooking meth in order to leave an inheritance for his family, to his current incarnation as rapacious, ruthless drug kingpin. This year’s truncated season, which was perhaps the darkest of an already jet black series, has seen the show continue to defy the law of televisual entropy, which the most astute, masterful programs of the past have tended to fall victim to as the years wear on. (Even the faithful must admit that the beloved series The Wire jumped the shark a little in its fifth and final season.) If the show can keep up this momentum, it will stand as significant cultural achievement, a Shakespearian tragedy for our times.

‘New Pictures of Common Objects’ at PS1 MoMA

Recently, the artistic tendencies that have been slowly coalescing around concerns with digital media, branding, corporate culture, and the commoditization of everyday life, have been marked by an obsession with the texture and psychic character of the new world of objects that these technological and cultural phenomena have engendered. PS1’s ‘New Pictures of Common Objects’, which was organized by Christopher Lew, and comprised small solo showings of works by Trisha Bagga, Josh Klein, Lucas Blalock, Margaret Lee, and Helen Marten, represented a modest, yet important step towards pinning down the peculiar, yet strangely consistent artistic response to the material cosmos that we have wrought, which, like the works in the exhibition itself, manages to be both alienating and beguiling all at once.

Things to look forward to in 2013

Owen Kydd at Nicelle Beauchene (January 24 – February 24)

A recent graduate of UCLA’s Masters of Fine Arts program, Owen Kydd will present his first solo exhibition at Nicelle Beauchene’s new space in New York this January. Like Jeff Wall, with whom Kydd worked for many years before moving to UCLA, his work straddles the line between photography and cinema, but in a literal way: his video-photographs are presented on monitors, and shot with a high-end digital video camera. The resulting images, whose subtle movements paradoxically serve to heighten their sense of stillness, are strikingly beautiful and pregnant with mystery.

55th Venice Biennale (June 1- November 24)

Full disclosure: I am working on the next Venice Biennale, both as a curatorial advisor and writer for the catalog. However, as a person with intimate knowledge of the show, and as someone who has worked closely with its curator, Massimiliano Gioni, for many years, I can confidently say that this will be an iteration of Venice that is not to be missed. Unfortunately, I have been informed that I will be summarily executed if I say any more. Mums the word.

Lucas Blalock at White Cube’s ‘Inside the White Cube’, London (May – June)


Lucas Blalock, Gaba with Fans, 2012, chromogenic print, 148 × 118 cm

Though only in his second year of his UCLA Masters of Fine Art, Lucas Blalock has been popping up in group shows all around the world this year, and has had solo presentations of his work at Frieze London and MoMA PS1. Next May, Blalock will be the subject of a solo exhibition at London’s powerhouse gallery White Cube, as a part of their regular ‘Inside the White Cube’ series, which recently gave a sizable boost to the career of another photographic rising star, Elad Lassry. Like Lassry, Blalock is a master of the photographic still life, though he has recently taken his talents to the streets, adding another layer to his already diverse practice. He has also begun to push his energetic digital manipulations in evermore baroque and ambitious directions: ‘Gaba with Fans’ (2012), shown at both PS1 and as a part of his Frame project at Frieze, is a discombobulated nude that could almost hold its ground against Picasso.

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Michelle Cottonis senior curator at Firstsite, Colchester, UK.


Gerard Valcin, Simbis Voyageurs. Courtesy Collection Gallerie D’Art Nader

My picks are as follows:

‘1917’, Centre Pompidou-Metz
Paul Sietsema– both exhibitions at Kunsthalle Basel and the Drawing Room, London
Graham Sutherland, ‘An Unfinished World’ at Modern Art Oxford
‘Kafou: Haiti, Art and Vodou’ at Nottingham Contemporary (until January 6)
Alex Katz, ‘Give Me Tomorrow’ at Tate St Ives and Turner Contemporary, Margate (although I only made it to Margate) (until January 13)
Philip Lai, Stuart Shave, Modern Art, London *Nick Relph, Raining Room, shown at Herald Street as part of Feature, Art Basel* 


Jessica Jackson Hutchins, 2011

Next year I look forward to seeing:

‘1913: The Shape of Time at Henry Moore Institute, Leeds’– already open but I haven’t made it there yet (until February 17)
Jessica Jackson Hutchins at Hepworth Wakefield (group show with Alice Channer and Linder Sterling; February 16 – May 5)
‘Eduardo Paolozzi: Collaging Culture’ at Pallant House, Chichester (July 6 – October 13)
‘Mark Leckey: The Universal Addresssability of Dumb Things’ at the Bluecoat, Liverpool (February 16 – April 14) Nottingham Contemporary (April 27 – June 30) and the De La Warr Pavillion, Bexhill on Sea (July 12 – October 20)

Postcard from Vienna

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By Jörg Heiser

Postcard from Vienna

Michaël Borremans, The Ear, 2011

… a pretty large postcard, tightly written on, about some winter highlights of art from the banks of the Danube, on occasion of Vienna Art Week a month ago.

Deutsche Version: frieze d/e blog
Vienna is, now and again, a great paradox: every time you go you easily meet people from the local art scene who will readily tell you about the current symptom testifying to the Viennese’s general ignorance towards anything modern – modern and contemporary art in particular – as the majority prefers to revel in nostalgia for lost 19th century grandeur of the Habsburg monarchy. And yet at the same time, in the very same city, you encounter a pretty impressive accumulation of institutional power in regard to the modern and contemporary. Probably precisely because of this there are few places in Europe where the tension between backwards-oriented traditionalism and the desire for the radically other and new is as strong as in Vienna: between the annual Vienna Opera Ball and a film about actionist primal scream therapy (Marcel Odenbach’s exciting video based on original material from Otto Mühl’s AA-commune at Friedrichshof outside Vienna, combined with scenes staged on Freud’s London sofa, at Kunstraum Sammlung Friedrichshof), between the wannabes of Vienna’s glitterati and Queer Theory (the conference Dildo Anus Power: Queer Abstraction which took place at the Academy of Arts, accompanied by the exhibition ‘Rosa Arbeit auf Goldener Straße’, featuring the great early films of German filmmaker Stefan Hayn such as Pissen [Piss, 1989/90], which in a refreshingly blunt manner brings to a head a child’s experiences of shame, and gay initiation).

Vienna Art Week is an annual festival co-organised by the auction house Dorotheum and ‘Art Cluster’, a conglomerate of 28 art institutions, including all major Viennese players, from MUMOK to Secession to Kunsthistorisches Museum, to the Austrian association of private galleries. There were tons of panel discussions, public studio visits, museum receptions and gallery openings, and even the most ambitious visitors had to admit that they would only be able to take in a fraction within the course of a few days. The number of major solo exhibitions by internationally reputed artists simultaneously on show in the city was quite impressive: Ed Ruscha, Sharon Lockhart, Dan Flavin, Kerry James Marshall, Michaël Borremans, Pae White, Norbert Schwontkowski, Marina Abramovic, to name but a few.

There was also a large group exhibition, curated on occasion of the event, entitled Predicting Memories, curated by Vienna Art Week’s Artistic Director Robert Punkenhofer and Ursula Maria Probst. Located in the Telegraphic Centre – an empty late 19th century office palace – the unrefurbished rooms however didn’t provide any false pomp, and the art on show was not of the merely pretty or bling-bling type either, in case anyone thought the (indirect) involvement of an auction house would imply that. The title was to be taken literally: art anticipating the working through of historical blind spots and traumas. The duo of Simone Bader and Jo Schmeiser a.k.a. Klub Zwei was included with a film documentary entitled Liebe Geschichte (Love History, 2010) about women whose ancestors were Nazi perpetrators, and whose ways of coming to terms with that fact range from personal introspection to active and public examination. The interviews are impressive, as are the protagonists. Not so convincing, however, is the filmic juxtaposition with public architectural sites where most of the interviews were shot. To film Katrin Himmler – grand niece of Heinrich Himmler and an engaged author addressing the history of her family – in front of the Viennese United Nations building doesn’t bring much to the interview other than a vague reference to post-war history. Refraining from including historical footage isn’t justified by that, neither is the focus solely on female ancestors – if the film was about addressing differences in the way women and men deal with having such ancestors, wouldn’t that have called precisely for the comparison? That said, in a country where the ‘thesis of the first victim’ – still in 2008 Otto von Habsburg received ovations at a commemorative meeting of the ÖDP (the Austrian Conservatives) for arguing that Austria, with the ‘Anschluss’, became Nazi-Germany’s first victim – films such as this are more than just necessary.

Despite the principle historical differences the issue of trauma and stigmatization permeated the exhibition. In Yao Jui-Chungs Long Live (2011), filmed on the Taiwanese military island Kinmen near the coast of mainland China, we see a general in full gear amidst the ruin of a vast cinema and congregation hall – built during the times of ‘White Terror’ (the period of constant martial law in Taiwan 1949 to 1987) – and continuously calls out ‘Wansui’, literally ‘ten thousand year’, the traditional Chinese expression for ‘Long live…’, which was used both for Mao as well as his arch enemy Chiang Kai-Chek. History appears as a ghostly conjuring of the past, present both in denial and critical reflection. Terence Gower also roams the ruins of past dreams, as he sketches with a few images the history of the Austrian inventor of the modern American shopping mall, Victor Gruen – the very Victor Gruen whom in the 1960s built whole districts of Tehran (more expansive on Gruen and the Shopping Mall: Anette Baldauf’s and Katharina Weingartner’s documentary The Gruen Effect). Julieta Aranda’s ‘Memory Newspaper’ provided philosophical insights into the question of memory in the form of a free newspaper, while Kara Walker’ Fall Frum Grace, Miss Pip’s Blue Tale (2011), somewhat similarly to William Kentridge’s animations reminiscent of Chinse shadow play, for the first time transposes Walker’s well-known grotesque silhouette technique to the medium of film. Walker examines again the horrific reality of atrocities committed during times of slavery as a fairy-tale-like grotesque, the castration fear and angstlust of slave-masters towards male slaves, and the murdering of supposed or actual black love rivals; a productive discontent is produced by the ‘inappropriateness’ of presenting historical trauma and injustice with the means of ‘cheap’ shadow play reminiscent of Vaudeville times, including sexually drastic depictions – you may ask yourself how much that activates or numbs ones ability to engage with that history; but in any case one shouldn’t forget that still today people might watch a film like Gone With the Wind (1939) and successfully ignore or even endorse the brutal reality of slavery. And considering the politics of the NRA or the Tea Party today there shouldn’t be any illusions that white suprematism is becoming extinct.

Which brings us to Kerry James Marshall and his exhibition at Secession (which ended earlier this month), a painter whom reformats stereotypical representations of African Americans in his own painterly way. The large main space of the building proved to be the perfect arena for his large canvasses in which ‘Black Aesthetics’ (as Marshall calls it) is the echo chamber for political struggle as well for the micro-social subtleties of everyday reality. My favourite painting is that of a hairdressing salon, probably on a busy Friday afternoon, a veritable School of Beauty School of Culture (2012). In the middle of the picture two small kids play with a strange amorphous colour field – which at an angle turns out to be an anamorphosis of a blond-white girl’s head; the Barby regime appears as the ‘Real’ of the image, as its haunting Vanitas, just as the skull in Hans Hohlbeins The Ambassadors (1533) – certainly an intended reference, just as the mirroring of the photographer’s flashlight in the middle of the painting, alluding to Velsquez’ Las Meninas (1656). Generally speaking there are lots of these kinds of robust painterly references, starting from the show’s title ‘Who’s Afraid of Red, Black and Green’ relating Barnett Newman’s famous Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue (1966) to the colour of the Pan-African flag established in 1920. Gustav Klimt’s world-famous Beethoven frieze, permanently housed in the basement of the building, is commented on with the Robert Johnson Frieze (2012) – the orchestral classic meets the Blues classic. Formalist art discourse and the political questioning of the white cultural canon become directly intertwined.

Just a stone’s throw away, up the street, *Christian Mayer*’s exhibition at gallery Mezzanin: historiography and memory play a central role here as well. But Mayer’s time horizon goes back millions of years. His starting point is the strange story of a see an ice age squirrel buried 32000 years ago in the Siberian perma-frost, and which Russian scientists managed to reanimate today; Mayer uses footage of the little plant resulting from the effort und reproduces it using Dye Transfer – an equally distinct yet reanimated technique. The doubling up of natural history and technology provides a cue to the next piece, involving the idea of the time capsule: Mayer exhibits ‘allochtoons’, petrified trees from Madagascar that are 200 million years old, about as big as a Brancusi sculpture, readymades courtesy of nature; but there is also a series of black and white photographs stemming from newspaper archives, documenting time capsules – containers filled with mementos for later generations – being placed, for example, in the foundations of Chicago office buildings in 1963.

There seems to be a current fascination of contemporary artists – from the perspective of a roughly one hundred years old Duchampian idea of making the contemporary conditions of display an explicit subject of art – to look back towards epochs counting in hundreds, thousands, if not millions of years. Old Masters, stones, crystals. Ed Ruscha captures this fascination with an ironic reversal: ‘The Ancients Stole All Our Great Ideas’ was the title of his exhibition at the Kunsthistorisches Museum which ended earlier in December. The first in a series of shows for which a contemporary artist is invited to curate from the world-famous museum’s collection, here the ‘Great Ideas’ included things not made by human beings: a small meteorite and a huge Aragonite crystal from the vaults of the nearby Natural History Museum, for example. An idiosyncratic Wunderkammer selection, working as comments on Ruscha’s own oeuvre: starting from the inclusion of a coyote and a snake as a reference to the Californian desert, to ladybirds pinned in rows, amounting to what Ruscha describes as ‘Magnificent creatures all in a row, their obsessive cataloguing displays fascination and wonder by the humans that collect them. Here, nature certainly meets art. Their simple arrangements make for an aesthetic triumph’. The description can be taken literally, but at the same time describing ladybirds pinned in rows as an ‘aesthetic triumph’ can be taken as a deadpan remark about the strict geometrical lines of conceptual and minimalist displays. This kind of irony also appears in the way Ruscha includes obscure pieces from the Wunderkammer of Ambras castle in Innsbruck (for example a 16th century Dodecahedron, an object built of pentagons featuring picture puzzles of double faces that can be seen straight forward as well as upside down), or old masters selected according to subjective criteria, such as the Arcimboldo vegetable faces, or a Rubens portrait that Ruscha included because of the blood red sundown sky in the background, reminiscent of some of his own works.

Asking contemporary artists to cast a fresh eye on historical collections has become something of a royal road for many institutions. Not least in the MAK (Museum of Applied Arts), which under its new Director Christoph Thun-Hohenstein wants to return to its ‘core task’ of presenting applied arts and design. At the MAK, it’s Pae White, a Californian like Ruscha. White directs her artmaking towards design issues – or to be more precise, she backhandedly brings the specific, obsessive kind of care for texture and material stemming from the world of functional design to the realm of contemporary art. Accordingly it’s not surprising that rather than putting an emphasis on the iconic chairs, images and names of Wiener Werkstätten – from Josef Hoffmann to Koloman Moser to Klimt – she instead highlights the anonymous designs of wallpaper, gift wrapping, greeting cards or jam jar labels, which feature the typically exalted, partly orientalised, partly geometrical-psychedelic aesthetics, however are not linked with the famous names, and are not even objects in the strict sense but packaging. That is maybe the conceptual, pop-minimalist legacy that Pae White deals with: to reinvigorate such artefacts as the ‘actual’ canonical essence, which otherwise – as in the MAK one floor below – would almost only be defined by way of precious interior decoration objects. However, both with White and Ruscha – both being the first instalment in annual series of contemporary artists being invited to ‘intervene’ in art-historical collections – arises the question how often you can repeat this gesture of the ‘subversive’ or ‘slanting’ glance at an established canon before it itself becomes worn out. In the long run, wouldn’t it be better if contemporary art was present rather as an alien element, following its own logic and thus providing friction with applied and traditional arts ex negativo rather than as a kind of curatorial harvest hand? Either way, I’m curious to see how things develop.

As if in telepathic accordance, the theme of a Californian perspective onto historical applied arts continued at TBA21’s new venue Atelier Augarten. *Sharon Lockhart*’s exhibition (whom like White and Ruscha lives in Los Angeles) is devoted to dance choreographer and textile designer Noa Eshkol, the legacy of whom Lockhart came across during a trip to Israel in 2008. In a five channel video installation we see dancers fluidly performing, to the strict pace of a metronome, Eshkol’s complex abstract movements, with single tapestries of Eskhkol’s design as the only stage element (the tapestries are made in a patchwork technique, from found fabric collected in Kibbutz and from local textile manufacturers). Conceptual centre stone of Eshkol’s work is the Eshkol-Wachman Movement Notation System that she developed with architect Avraham Wachman in 1958; it notates bodily movements in geometrical patterns, a sort of 3D-animated variation on Leonardo’s anthropometric circles. Lockhart translates this into a series of 22 photographic still lives of the spherical wire orbits created by Eshkol and Wachman for didactic purposes, in which curved planes or simple triangles stand for movements of the limbs (Models of Orbits in the System of Reference, Eshkol-Wachman Movement Notation System, 2012). Lockhart, similarly to Pae White, detects what seems like a conceptual-minimalist legacy avant la lettre in all of this, as well as frisking the borderline between abstraction and application. I have to confess I’ve never been much of an enthusiast of faithful artistic reprocessings of pioneering modernist achievements, but doesn’t take anything away from the fact that the artefacts of the anonymous designers of Wiener Werkstätten, just as the choreographies and concepts of Eshkol, fully deserve the attention awarded to them.

Same goes for buildings of Soviet Modernism! A very interesting exhibition at Architekturzentrum Wien, on show until 25 February, documents post-war architecture in non-Russian Soviet republics between 1955 and 1991. In 1990, I was lucky enough to be able to make a trip to Baku, Azerbaijan, and I experienced some of the buildings shown in photographs and film footage from original sources – the grand hotel on town hall square, the Lenin Palace (a concert and congress hall), as well as the bazaar. You don’t have to turn a blind eye to the dictatorial conditions under which all of this was erected, and yet to appreciate the sometimes bizarre politburo-baroque, sometimes strictly functionalist yet modernist-elegant styles, that were in effect between the Baltics and Central Asia. Especially the adaptations of post-constructivist ideals to political and local demands: for example the genre of the ‘wedding palace’, owed to the fact that socialism needed to offer a ceremonial alternative to the Church it had overpowered. Many of these buildings are documented for the first time, at least for a non-local audience, with this meticulously researched exhibition, accompanied by an extensive catalogue – while quite a few of the buildings in question are on the verge of decay.

Dan Flavin, a grand retrospective of whom is on show at neighbouring MUMOK (until 3 February), seems almost early modernist in comparison. An entire floor is reserved for the series of 1964 neon works devoted to Tatlin’s Monument for the Third International (1920). The neons are reminiscent of skyscrapers, white and with no apparent traces of power cables and such: everything is very classically white cube, no fissures, extremely clean. Just as Flavin surely would have wanted it; he is quoted in the exhibition: ‘I can take the ordinary lamp out of use and into a magic that touches ancient mysteries. And yet it is still a lamp that burns to death like any other of its kind.’ The aim of historical self-immortalization is juxtaposed with the noble awareness of future evanescence, anticipated in the present.

Considering the contrast between the jagged post-constructivist legacy of architecture in the Soviet republics and the extremely confident purism of Flavin, a third exhibition in the Museum Quarter completed a shrill triad: ‘*Naked Men*’ at Leopold Museum. Apparently an exhibition on the same subject at Lentos Museum in Linz, on at the same time, had been conceived earlier on, but in any case navigating the Leopold show was fun. Besides curiosa – strongmen in old black and white photographs with their privates covered by studiously attached fig leaves – there were a number of stand-out works. Contemporary classics such as Felix Gonzalez-Torres or Wolfgang Tillmans are well-known; new to me was the great work of painter Franz Gerstl, young lover of Arnold Schoenberg’s wife Mathilde, whom had committed suicide at age 25. A frontal half-naked self-portrait in a white bath towel around the waist, an intense stare of 1904/05, symbolistically of its time yet very of the Facebook now; for me, more exciting than many of the works of Egon Schiele.

How appropriate that two contemporary painters had hung great shows in the city – which couldn’t have been more different though. True antipodes: Michaël Borremans and Norbert Schwontkowski. Borremans at BAWAG Contemporary – a place at which director Christine Kintisch had a string of fantastic shows in recent years – is a super-precisely and sparsely hung show, small old-masterly painted canvasses with an almost suffocating sense controlling gaze onto the performing of gender and body and spirit. Any faint sense of fatherly warmth still present in Richter’s Betty, any glorified Vermeerian romanticism of peeping at female beauty (Borremans mainly depicts young women and girls in bourgeois-avantgardist clothing, some of whom posed for the artist in his Gent studio) has been purged from these canvasses with a pathologist’s precision. Which is not to say that Borremans paints callously; quite the opposite, it’s exactly the awareness of the cruel clichés of representations that make him look so coldly and mercilessly at the profiles and necks.

Norbert Schwontkowksi, showing at the Viennese venue of Innsbruck gallery Elisabeth & Klaus Thoman (on show until 26 February), does the exact opposite in pretty much in any respect, and probably because of that is on a par with Borremans. Instead of eeriness and coldness a humorous, cheeky warmth. Instead of ultra-precise hanging, a consciously sloppy ‘oh, there is another awkward corner here to fit a small painting’, happily ignoring the ideals of balanced exhibition choreography that have long since become a convention. Instead of paint application in the style of the old masters, a cheerful quickness – all paintings were made in the last four months – which, however, how else could it be, testifies to a sure hand and the maturity of decades of painterly exactitude. My favourite picture is Wo Der Mensch Herkommt (Wer Man Comes From, 2012), a naked pair of legs stumbling across the canvas as if through mudflats, feet stuck in diving fins: the story of the origin of terrestrial animals stemming from thalassian ancestors is turned into physical comedy – where we REALLY stem from, there is embarrassment and awkwardness.

What better keywords than ‘embarrassment’ and ‘awkwardness’ could there be to end a blog on Vienna (embarrassing self-praise), because this is where the Viennese are traditionally masters: to explore societal embarrassment with great precision, Borremans and Schwontwoski both at once so to speak. Yet – Vienna Art Week end of November demonstrates it year after year – Viennese institutions and galleries are able to put together a top array of shows, simultaneous and rich in resonance, that few places can rival with, and that is entirely unembarrassing.

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 6

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 6

Continuing our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

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Polly Stapleis director of Chisenhale Gallery, London and a contributing editor of frieze.

2012

Auguste Renoir, Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette (1876) looked electric in the flesh at the Musée D’Orsay. Don’t be fooled by all the frills, that dappled sunlight is ushering in a whole new world.

Ken Lum’s programme at the Banff Centre, ‘Art and the effects of the Real’, with accompanying film screenings, conversation and ping pong.

Brian Jungen & Duane Linklater’s Modest Livelihood (2012), an epic film about silence, self-determination and moose hunting which premiered at the Walter Phillips Gallery, the Banff Centre as part of dOCUMENTA (13).


Tacita Dean, Manhattan Mouse Museum, 2011, film still

Manhattan Mouse Museum (2011), Tacita Dean’s film of Claus Oldenburg dusting his collection of small objects, one part of her exhibition of film portraits ‘Five Americans’ at the New Museum.

‘Topology’ at Tate Modern was a series of keynote lectures and discussion over a 6-month period initiated by Jean Mathee and including speakers such as Eric Alliez, David Harvey, Catherine Malabou, Suely Rolnik and Peter Sloterdijk all exploring topology and transformation. More public programmes like this please.

‘Animism’ at e-flux curated by Anselm Franke, which has been on tour across venues in Europe for several years, is still a stand our group exhibition. A complex, thoughtful project exploring the context of animation at the frontier of colonial modernity, here the works investigated methods of objectification and reification the exact opposite of animation and subjectification

Thomas Hirschorn’s Touching Reality (2012), presented in Okwui Enwezor’s ‘Intense Proximity: The Triennial’, at the Palais de Tokyo, depicts a hand scrolling through graphic images of corpses and destroyed bodies on a touch screen. This work is impossible to look at and absolutely precise about our present moment.

Trisha Donnelly’s work at the Gloria Cinema as part of dOCUMENTA (13) was equally precise about the status of image making and the resistance of linguistic form but here beautifully rendered as site-specific interlude.

2013


Amalia Pica, Some Of That Colour, 2009, bunting, watercolour and dye on paper and chair, dimensions variable. Photograph: Qui Yang.

Nick Relph at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, New York.

Ed Atkins at MoMA PS1 New York and the group exhibition ‘Frozen Lakes’ at Artists Space alongside James Richards, Banu Cennetoglu, Aaron Flint Jamison, Ken Okiishi and Charlotte Prodger.

Aaron Flint Jamison at Cubitt Gallery, London.

Amalia Pica at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and MIT List Visual Arts Center.

Jordan Wolfson at S.M.A.K. Ghent.

Helen Marten at CCS Bard, alongside Haim Steinbach.

The Venice Biennial.

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Timotheus Vermeulenis assistant professor in Cultural Theory at the Radboud University Nijmegen, where he also heads the Centre for New Aesthetics. He is co-founding editor of the academic arts and culture webzine Notes on Metamodernism. He is currently completing two books on metamodernism together with Robin van den Akker.


Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild, 2012, film still

Picks of 2012

Art
Unsurprisingly, given my own field of interest, I was very taken with the ‘Discussing Metamodernism’ group show at Galerie Tanja Wagner, Berlin. Including works by established artists like Mona Hatoum, Monica Bonvicini and Olafur Eliasson alongside emerging performers such as Andy Holden, Ragnar Kjartansson and Annabel Daou, its post-ironic urgency really captured the tense and uncertain spirit of the times. For much the same reason, I also really enjoyed ‘Meer Licht’ at Museum de Fundatie in Zwolle. Then there were Pedro Reyes, Adrian Royas, and Tino Sehgal at dOCUMENTA (13), and Egle Budvytyte’s work Magicians at the Stedelijk, Amsterdam.

Books
In literature, the publication of the first biography of David Foster Wallace (D.T Max, Every Love Story is a Ghost Story) was exciting, as were the oddly entertaining diaries of Peter Sloterdijk, Zeilen und TageI (Suhrkamp); the new edition of Gogol’s masterpiece Dead Souls (New York Review of Books Classics; translated by Donald Rayfield), Natasha Wimmer”s translation of Roberto Bolano’sAntwerp and Zadie Smith’sNW.

Film
The distressing documentaries The Act of Killing (dir. Joshua Oppenheimer), a reenacting of a genocide by the perpetrators, and The Invisible War (dir. Kirby Dick), documenting rape in the US Army, have both stayed with me. Benh Zeitlin’s first feature film Beasts of the Southern Wild was also pretty special, perhaps even trumping his 2008 short Glory at Sea.

Television
Despite the predictable backlash in magazines and blogs, I thought Mad Men was superb again. Treme and Breaking Bad were good. Parks and Recreation consistently offers the best critical comedy since Arrested Development. It really is quite incredible what television is putting out there at the moment.

Reasons to be cheerful in 2013

Looking forward to 2013 is equally exciting. Given that I recently moved to Dusseldorf, I will definitely be present at this year’s Rundgang, the academy’s graduation show. I am curious also to see what Phil Morrison’s new film, Almost Christmas, will be like. His 2005 film Junebug – his only film to date – remains one of the masterpieces in recent art history. Terrence Malick’s sudden mass output will be interesting. And of course the news that R. Kelly is working on a sequel to Trapped in the Closet is a great prospect for all art lovers.

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Charles Reeveis associate professor of art history at OCAD University in Toronto, and a regular contributor to frieze.


Adel Abdessemed, Coup de tête, 2011-2012, bronze, 5.3 × 2.2 × 3.5 m, installation view outside the Centre Pompidou, Paris.

Some highlights from 2012:

‘Edvard Munch: The Modern Eye’, Centre Pompidou. September 21 2011 to January 9 2012
I nearly missed my flight back to Toronto when Pompidou curator Philippe-Alain Michaud invited Atom Egoyan and me to see this show on a Tuesday (when the gallery is closed). Egoyan described the experience of seeing this amazing exhibition in a nearly-empty venue as ‘a revelation’, and he was right. The tiny photographs that Munch took of himself in his studio are absolute gems, themselves worth the embarrassment of being the guy at whom everyone glares for having delayed takeoff.

Gary Taxali Wedding Coin
When the Royal Canadian Mint gave illustrator Gary Taxali (full disclosure: Gary’s a colleague) carte blanche to apply his cartoon-ish style to six quarters, they knew he’d push buttons—as he did, by decorating one coin with two gender-neutral ‘wedding band’ characters, in celebration of Canada being only the fourth country to legalize gay marriage. This coin exemplifies Taxali’s wit and verve and, as he says, the likelihood that this currency is the first produced by a federal government to honour marriage equality makes it even better.

‘In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States’, Musée National des Beaux-Arts du Québec. June 7 to September 3 2012
Organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Museo de Arte Moderno, this show is, as I wrote this summer, a rarity: a blockbuster that, beyond recycling hits, deploys an impressive array of artists, famous and not, to reassess a key movement. Lee Miller’s untitled photograph of mastectomized breasts alone makes the exhibition, but the startlingly contemporary works by Bona, Lola Alvarez Bravao and Francesca Woodman underline the continuing relevance of this perspicuous complement to Surrealism, finally getting its due. Terrific catalogue.


Aung San Suu Kyi accepts 1991 Nobel Peace Prize, June 16, 2012
This moment gets into a round-up of cultural highlights because, as her long-delayed Nobel acceptance speech shows, Aung San Suu Kyi kept her sense of humour despite twenty-plus years of house arrest—and if that doesn’t deserve recognition, nothing does. The use of force against mining protestors in Monywa makes one wonder how deep are President Thein Sein’s reforms, and how permanent. For now, though, Aung San Suu Kyi continues speaking and living freely, so we’re still ahead of where we were twelve months ago.

Adel Abdessemed’s Coup de tête (2011-2012) at the Centre Pompidou for ‘Je Suis Innocent’. (until January 7, 2013.)
At over five metres high, this bronze of Zinedine Zidane headbutting Marco Materazzi near the end of the 2006 World Cup (and of Zidane’s career) exemplifies Abdessemed’s interest in the gap between what we believe is good and what we know is true (as the perceptive artist Tony Scherman said). For example, we believe that colonialism’s aftermath is over despite clear evidence to the contrary around the world—and we get upset Abdessemed confronts us with our knowledge that this is the case.

A few reasons to be cheerful in 2013:

Fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
Most dictators have the decency to portray themselves as the greaseballs they are. But Al-Assad, with his trim suits and medical training (at the University of Damascus and London’s Western Eye Hospital), suggests he’s respectable and right to remain Syria’s president even if it requires waging chemical warfare on his people. However, the once-sympathetic West now backs the rebels, while his Deputy Foreign Minister apparently recently explored exile options in Latin America. I suspect he’ll leave by the summer or be gone à la Mussolini. Either way, good riddance.

‘Thomas Demand: Animations’ at dhc/art, Montreal. January 19, 2013 — May 12, 2013.
Right from its launch five years ago with a landmark exhibition by Marc Quinn, dhc/art established a reputation for ambitious, immaculately-produced shows featuring the world’s most influential contemporary artists. Organized around Thomas Demand’s painstaking stop-motion films and animations, ‘Animations’ will be no exception. Its centerpiece is the astonishing 100-second video Pacific Sun (2012), in which Demand recreates a YouTube clip of the view from a passenger ship’s security camera as the vessel enters a storm.

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Paul Teasdaleis assistant editor of frieze based in Berlin, Germany.


Thomas Schütte, The Life of A Flower, 2012

Highlights of 2012:

Ed Atkins’ film The Trick Brain (2012) installed in a room belonging to the Berlin Magic Circle as part of the group show ‘The Big Inexplicable Paravent Illusion (Part 1)’ at Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin as well as his solo show at the Chisenhale Gallery, London
Tino Sehgal, Omer Fast and Pierre Huyghe’s very different contributions to dOCUMENTA (13)
The first floor of Manifesta 9
The 2nd floor of the Whitney Biennial
• The Jo Spence survey between Studio Voltaire and Space, London
• The Artists Placement Group retrospective at Raven Row, London
• In sad circumstances, but the two-day screening of early Mike Kelley performances at the Tate Tanks

Reasons to be Cheerful in 2013:

Thomas Schütte, ‘With Tears in My Eyes’ at Jarla Partilager, Berlin which runs till June 2013. Containing – and I didn’t think I’d be saying this in early 2013, or perhaps ever for that matter – one of my highlights for the last year and reasons to be cheerful for the next all in one: an astonishingly beautiful series of watercolours!

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Karen Archeyis an art critic and independent curator based in New York, and the 2012-2013 Curator-in-Residence at Abrons Arts Center.

Joan Jonas, Reanimation, performance at dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, Germany
It was after her Reanimation performance at dOCUMENTA (and a couple glasses of wine) that I met Joan Jonas and embarrassingly burst the phrase, “THAT WASTHEBESTPERFORMANCE I HAVEEVERSEEN IN MY ENTIRELIFE.” While surrounding friends and colleagues looked on in utter horror and incredulity at my lack of subtlety, the sentiment rings true. Never before had I seen an artist so expertly intertwine borrowed narrative and the history of her own oeuvre with such inquisitive use of new technology—not to mention Jonas is many decades older than digital natives who are now, beyond comprehension, using anachronistic technology characteristic of the generation of conceptualists of the 60’s and 70’s. Reanimation, a collaboration with jazz pianist Jason Moran, is Jonas’s attempt to reanimate, as the title suggests, past material in a new way, this context being scripted but largely improvised, or “collaged”. Featuring Jonas drawing, dancing, reciting text, and playing musical instruments live and in synch with a double video projection and Moran on piano, Reanimation ranges from the poetic to the shamanistic, its meaning largely felt rather than overtly iterated. My favorite passage from the performance was taken from Icelandic poet laureate Halldór Laxness’s novel Under the Glacier: “Often I think the Almighty is like a snow bunting abandoned in all weathers. Such a bird is about the weight of a postage stamp. Yet he does not blow away when he stands in the open in a tempest…He wields this fragile head against the gale, with his beak to the ground, wings folded close to his sides and his tail pointing upwards; and the wind can get no hold on him, and cleaves.”


Klara Lidén, SAD, 2012, installation view at Reena Spaulings, New York

Klara Lidén, SAD, at Reena Spaulings, New York
Klara Lidén’s SAD stuffed discarded Christmas trees behind a blue plywood construction barrier in Reena Spauling’s Chinatown space. The forest of dessicated trees, reeking of pine and replete with occasional bits of tinsel and leftover Yuletide decoration, prompted viewers to contemplate the inevitable but nonetheless dismal New York ritual of trashing Christmas trees on the city’s curbsides. Similar to the heaps of broken, cheap Chinatown umbrella skeletons that are a staple of Manhattan in early Spring, there’s something elegiac about the practice of tossing out these intimate, once-sacrosanct objects. I think of Lidén’s Charlie Brown arboretum as a metaphor for our collective, worn-out New York bodies, our need to socialize in the face of living in a city as exacerbating as New York. SAD, an acronym for Seasonal Affective Disorder, speaks to the more universal need to come together, to get trashed, as it were, and dry out.

Wade Guyton, OS at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
A friend of mine recently joked that if art criticism and the art market were to divorce in 2013, as per a recent HuffPost spoof, Whitney curator Scott Rothkopf would make a great marriage counselor. Admittedly, my interest in the Rothkopf-curated Wade Guyton solo exhibition at the Whitney stems not from its conceptual or aesthetic prowess, but from its confusing, wildly positive reception by the New York art world. The words of venerated New York critics Peter Schjeldahl and Roberta Smith measure such effusive praise: “The work is ingenious, and also moving,” Schjeldahl writes in the New Yorker, “as a counterattack of the spirit on a culture whose proliferating technical means, by eclipsing the handmade, disembody imagination.” In Smith’s review in the New York Times she describes the show as a “cause for optimism,” quoting Rothkopf, “Wade speaks to the way images travel across our visual culture…He has figured out a way to make work that deals with technology but doesn’t feel tricky or techie, rather it’s intuitive.” Guyton does speak to the way images travels across our visual culture—not that I’m sure we need another artist dealing with such measures—though Guyton arguably speaks with a vernacular endemic to a white male-dominated notion of art in a pre-digitized world, using technology as a “paintbrush” rather than a narrative to inform his work’s content or medium. The praise of Schjeldahl and Smith is particularly perturbing, seeing as they’re generally incisive critics, as this signals the failure of a seasoned pundits to appreciate the swaths of art using actual technological mediums (you know—e-books, web pages, Twitter, etc.), instead mistaking Wade Guyton as a forerunner in the meeting of art and technology.


Ed Fornieles, The Dreamy Awards, 2012, Serpentine Gallery

Ed Fornieles, The Dreamy Awards at the Serpentine, London
Fornieles’s _Dreamy Awards _was undoubtedly my most mind-boggling artistic experience of the year, or perhaps ever. Having gotten lost earlier in Kensington Gardens (protip: don’t let your phone die if you’re a tourist used to parks with over-the-top signage, or gridded American roads), I don’t think I actually ever figured out where I was going or what I was doing that evening. Fornieles had constructed a fictional award ceremony attended by hundreds of fictive and semi-fictive characters with scripted interactions, lubricated by the Serpentine’s open bar. That evening I was Helen Starkey, a character loosely (and embarrassingly) based on an amalgamation of myself and director-screenwriter Lena Dunham. As per my script prompt, I awkwardly pitched a new show to a millionaire investment banker on camera—something I would never normally think of doing in fear of a major ego bruise. Here Fornieles constructs a participatory environment in which the everyman’s relationship with social networking, including her vulnerabilities and base desires, are laid bare in physical reality, cultivating a collective sense of shared empathy.

Further, the Dreamy Awards exemplifies a shift toward participatory performance-based works in the vein of Kaprow’s Happenings that took root in London this year, propagated by artists such as Matthew Drage, Ben Vickers, and Jesse Darling, among others.

Andrea Fraser, ‘There’s No Place Like Home’, Whitney Biennial, New York and ‘L’1%, C’est Moi’, published in Texte zur Kunst no. 83
Andrea Fraser’s essays, ‘There’s no place like home’ and ‘L’1%, C’est Moi’ are game-changing reports for any market-wary artist, critic, or curator. Largely abandoning research in art and cultural theory in favor of sociology, psychoanalysis, and economic research, Fraser explicitly delineates how growing global income inequality has aided the art market and other luxury trades while devastating the rest of the world. It is only when the rich become richer, and have greater expendable income that we see a surge in art prices, she finds. Fraser introduces us to hardline, indispensible, streamlined research such as this excerpt from the 2010 Yale School of Management paper Art and Money, “A one percentage point increase in the share of total income earned by the top 0.1 percent triggers an increase in art prices of 14 percent.” The artist also evinces the problematic growing purchasing power of the 0.1%, citing the 2011 scenario in which billionaire German businessman Reinhold Würth outbid Frankfurt am Main’s Städelschule Kunstinstitut on Hans Holbein the Younger’s Virgin of Mercy, though it had been on display at the Kunstinstitut since 2003. The roughly $70 million sale also became the highest price ever paid for an artwork in Germany.

Fraser positions the ethical quandary as thus: “Any claim that we represent a progressive social force while our activities are directly subsidized by the engines of inequality can only contribute to the justification of that inequality…the only “alternative” today is to recognize our participation in that economy and confront it in a direct and immediate way…” While some may crave a clear-cut answer or course of action to combat much of what Fraser proffers here, the artist wisely offers no simple solution to this inherently complex problem.

HOPE
In recent months, we’ve seen the dormancy of Occupy-related projects, to include Occupy Museums, while in November Sotheby’s and Christie’s have each set new sales records on the auction floor. When I moved to New York in 2008 amidst a very depressed art market, I wondered what the high-octane, bloated art world of years past would feel like. We’re apparently here now, and I can’t help but wonder if the trickling of capital back into the art world, and subsequent creation of new jobs, has some influence on the relative lack of public displays of frustration with the art world, or if Occupy’s time has simply diminished into obscurity. Whatever the answer, I find hope in Fraser’s consciousness-raising, as I find hope in the innovation of Fornieles and his London compatriots, Klara Liden’s poeticism and openness, and the unflinching, longstanding dedication of artists such as Joan Jonas in challenging and reinventing their medium and artistic practices. There’s hope in identifying the positive and negative attributes of our current moment, and banding together to carve the world into a shape we see fit, no matter how herculean the task.

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Simon Reesis the head of curatorial development at the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts/Contemporary Art [MAK] in Vienna.


Heimo Zobernig, Untitled, 2007, acrylic on canvas,1 × 1m

Best of 2012

Jacques Kallis, the South African cricketer who, at age 37, keeps-on-keeping-on. Ricky Ponting and Sachin Tendulkar have fallen. Jacques stands indomitable.

In Eastern Europe: Warsaw does a real gallery weekend. And Poland discovers micro-brewed beer. (Not much of a palliative against the dearth of Eastern European artists in dOCUMENTA (13). The continuing-rise of Poland is proof that Moscow doesn’t hold all the cards.

Hilary Mantel’s Bring Up the Bodies. I want to be Thomas Cromwell, or, at least, Hilary Mantel.

The expansion of Palais de Tokyo, to buttress the all-encompassing influence of Tate, and remind us of the power of the dishabille architecture that we all worked within 20-30 years ago (but lost to the white cube).

In Vienna:Heimo Zobernig at the Reina Sofia (Madrid). Shoa Eskol and Sharon Lockhart at TBA21– the best presentation of this project (formerly at Art Basel and LACMA) so far. Marcel Odenbach Schutzräum at the Friedrichshof: whoever said that group therapy was dead? Scary new double projection cut from the Otto Muehl archive spliced with footage of kids at play in Freud’s office in London (now the Freud Museum).

Missing the Olympics because for not owning a television and finding all the Internet coverage to be ISP-sensitive and blocked.

Finally discovering Breaking Bad. Middle classes be damned.

787 Boeing Dreamliner. Business Class, Seat 2D. Don’t ask. Hope someone invites me back again in 2013.

Looking forward to 2013

Richard Wagner’s bicentennial (born 1813) and all the great programming and music that entails.

Isa Genzken at MoMA starting in November.

The next Hilary Mantel and Thomas Cromwell (we hope). Poor Tom will die—and it’s sure to hurt.

In Vienna: Mathias Poledna at Secession in Vienna and the Austrian Pavilion at Venice.

In Eastern Europe: Finding out what Raimundas Malasauskas dreams for the Lithuanian Pavilion at Venice.


Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

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By Agnieszka Gratza

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

Une vraie jeune fille (Catherine Breillat, 1975)

Programmed alongside features and shorts shown in the international competition at the ‘EntreVues’ film festival in Belfort, now in its 27th year, retrospectives and themed sections have long been a staple of a festival that prides itself in linking emerging filmmakers to the rich history of auteur cinema which has shaped them. One of the themed sections in the 2012 festival, which took place from 24 November to 2 December – ‘Art press: 40 ans de regard’ – was exceptionally curated by ‘art press’ editor-in-chief Catherine Millet.

To mark the 40th anniversary of the influential contemporary art monthly that she co-founded in 1972, Millet was given carte blanche to choose the films she pleased. Her selection of 15 visually ravishing and often sexually explicit films by Catherine Breillat, Bertrand Bonello, Bruno Dumont, Peter Greenaway, João César Monteiro and Pier Paolo Pasolini, among others, were meant to reflect an art magazine’s take on auteur cinema from the 1960s to the present, proved worthy of the author of the best-selling memoir La Vie sexuelle de Catherine M (The Sexual Life of Catherine M, 2001).

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

The Gospel According to St. Matthew (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1964)

In the discussions following some of the screenings and at a roundtable that brought together artists, filmmakers, curators and critics who responded to yet another selection of (this time) brief, artist-made video and film clips, Millet readily admitted to being a visual person. This predominantly visual sensibility comes across in the films she chose, some of which were made by filmmakers who are also painters or artists in their own right. Unsurprisingly, pictorial and art historical references abounded in such films as Pasolini’s The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964), referencing Christian paintings and sculptures across centuries; in Greenaway’s The Draughtsman’s Contract (1982), whose candlelit scenes evoke Caravaggio and Georges de la Tour; or in Alain Cuny’s 1991 L’Annonce faite à Marie (The Annunciation of Marie), with its stunning sets and gorgeous costumes designed by Tal Coat. As Millet points out, each take in Cuny’s film (and the same can be said of the other two) could, and indeed should, be viewed as a tableau.

An adaptation of Paul Claudel’s play-poem by the same title, L’Annonce faite à Marie was emblematic of the theatrical, somewhat affected diction that was another recurring feature of the selected films. Jean-Marie Straub’s 15-minute L’Inconsolable (2011), the first film he has made since the death of his partner and collaborator Danièle Huillet in 2006, features two elderly characters sitting in a forest, amid ferns, declaiming lines from Cesare Pavese’s Dialogues with Leuco, recounting Orpheus’s loss of Eurydice. In Eugène Green’s Le Pont des Arts (2003), which subtly weaves together the destinies of two young couples with the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice as a backdrop, the slow pace of the delivery is matched by rigidly frontal views of the actors’ faces. The combination is deliberately unrealistic, hieratic, even stilted, in keeping with the rarefied atmosphere of the film, whose protagonist, Sarah, sings in a baroque music ensemble.

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

A comedia de Deus (João Cesar Monteiro, 1995)

A certain baroque sensibility underpinned the heady mixture of ritual, eroticism, death, and aesthetic refinement that permeated these films, perhaps best embodied in critic and poet Monteiro’s A comedia de Deus (1995), which sees the lustful aging manager of an ice-cream parlour, João de Deus – a recurrent figure in Monteiro’s films, played by the film director himself – sexually initiate his apprentice Rosarinho. In their frank and at times graphic depiction of sexuality, many of the selected films conformed to what the magazine’s long-standing film collaborator Dominique Païni aptly labels as ‘pornographic experimentation’, in connection with Bruno Dumont’s La Vie de Jésus (1996). Dumont’s award-winning début feature, whose protagonist is subject to occasional bouts of epilepsy and engages in decidedly un-Christ-like behaviour, from copulation to sexual assault to murder, features close-ups of penetration. The same holds true of Catherine Breillat’s first film, Une vraie jeune fille (A Real Young Girl, 1976), starring Charlotte Alexandra as the bored and sexually precocious teen condemned to spending the summer holidays in her family home. Based on Breillat’s novel Le Soupirail, the film was banned until 1999 on account of its obscene portrayal of Alice’s erotic fantasies.

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

La Vie de Jésus (Bruno Dumont, 1996)

If we can speak of ‘pornographic experimentation’ in relation to these films, it’s more to do with their transgressive subject matter than with formal experimentation as such – with one notable exception. Jean Eustache’s Une sale histoire (A Dirty Story, 1977) consists of two short films, a fictive and a documentary account, filmed respectively in 35mm and 16mm, in which a man confides to a largely female audience, rapt in concentration, how he became a voyeur after discovering a hidden hole in women’s toilets that offered a direct view of female genitals. Thanks to it, the protagonist comes to realize that there is no obvious equation between the outward appeal of a woman and that of her sexual parts, which in the end is the only thing that matters. In an unprecedented move, the original tale is retold almost word for word in the second, more stylized version, using a cast of professional actors. There is nothing quite like this doubling effect in the history of cinema.

That Millet should evince an interest in all this was hardly surprising given that, by her own admission, La Vie sexuelle de Catherine M. draws on the methods of pornographic films, when it comes to the framing and close-ups of sexual organs in particular. In fact, Jacques Nolot’s La Chatte à deux têtes (Glowing Eyes, 2002), appropriately shown at one of the late screenings which, courtesy of art press, had more than their fair share of X-rated matter, depicts the closed world of a pornographic cinema near the place Clichy, catering to a homosexual clientèle. What Millet particularly admires about the film are its autobiographical elements and the risk-taking involved in publicly baring oneself, no doubt an implicit comment on what she regards as her own achievement in the literary domain. Nothing if not coherent, the choice of films made by art press for the 27th edition of Belfort’s film festival amounted to a self-portrait.

Agnieszka Gratza

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 5

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 5

Continuing our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

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Jonathan Griffinis a contributing editor of frieze based in Los Angeles, USA.


Alex Israel, ‘Property’, 2010– ongoing, installation view at Museo Civico Diocesano de Santa Maria dei Servi, Citta’ della Pive, Italy, 2012. Courtesy the artist and Il Giardino dei Lauri.

Best of 2012

Two of my favourite recent shows I didn’t even see. Not in person anyway – more’s the pity, because, as it happens, they both took place in Italian Baroque churches. For ‘Treating Shadows as Real Things’, a project by Los Angeles-based Public Fiction (Lauren Mackler, joined by critic Andrew Berardini), the curators placed works by nine artists on a specially installed mirrored floor in Turin’s Church of the Holy Shroud.

Earlier in the year, Alex Israel was invited to produce an edition of his series ‘Property’ (2010– ongoing) in Museo Civico Diocesano di Santa Maria dei Servi, in the Umbrian town of Citta’ della Pieve. Beside the church’s 16th-century statuary, he installed objects including a Virgin Mary, a Greek Kairos and a dirty brown snowman, all made of fibreglass and rented from a Rome movie prop house. In photos, at least, Israel’s interventions look entirely at home.

‘B. Wurtz & Co.’, curated by Matthew Higgs at Richard Telles Gallery, was a rare treat, a tangled web that connected such artists as Vincent Fecteau, Judith Scott and Martin Creed to the underappreciated Wurtz.

A similarly adventurous group show was ‘Out of __________’, curated by Leila Khastoo at Benevento Gallery. (How many curators are brazen enough to put a TV show about an artist in their exhibition? Let alone including a piece of their own work!)


Out of __________’, exhibition view at Benevento Gallery

Pretty much everything The Box does exceeds the ambitions of any other commercial gallery in town.* This year we’ve been treated to important shows by Leigh Ledare, Paul McCarthy and Simone Forti.

In the ambition stakes, Blum & Poe also bowled everyone over with their masterful exhibition ‘Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono Ha’, curated by Mika Yoshitake. Artist Nobuo Sekine somehow balanced a granite monolith on top of a 10-foot tall mirrored plinth.

Some people complained that at Ali Subotnick’s Venice Beach Biennial you couldn’t tell what was art and what wasn’t. That’s why I liked it. Especially the oil-drum trash cans by Mark Grotjahn, painted with a portrait of the artist. Crucified. Crying blood.

Ricky Swallow and Leslie Vance were the first contemporary artists allowed to infiltrate Henry and Arabella Huntington’s Pasadena mansion in its 84-year history. Their joint exhibition at the Huntington Art Gallery reveals the married couple’s profound mutual influence.

Kenneth Tam’s exhibition ‘Two and a Half Hands’ filled artist Mateo Tannatt’s gallery Pauline, which must have been inconvenient for Tannatt because the gallery is also his house. Tam’s sculptures and video made hilarious and uncomfortable viewing.

Things to look forward to in 2013?
Loads. Ali Subotnick’s long-awaited Llyn Foulkes show at the Hammer Museum, James Turrell’s retrospective at LACMA, Piero Golia’s art members’ club Chalet Hollywood (opening at the back of L.A.C.E.), and Laura Owens’ self-curated solo show in an empty church in east Los Angeles (Owens’ first major show in the city since her acclaimed MOCA exhibition of 2003). This January, Night Gallery opens in new premises as a fully fledged commercial gallery. And in late spring, Hannah Hoffman will add to the growing cluster of Los Angeles galleries around Highland Avenue, with a solo show by Mira Schendel.

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Jenna Sutelaworks with words and structures in the fields of design and art. Based in Helsinki, Finland, she is currently preparing a publishing programme on a digital materiality at the Aalto University, among other things.


‘Unbuilt Helsinki’, installation view at The Museum of Finnish Architecture, Helsinki. Photograph: Achim Hatzius

That euphoric feeling from moments of insight into something that still needs to be specified 2012:

- Kimmo Modig and I invited the artists Bill Drummond and Ingo Niermann, and their respective music projects, to Helsinki this autumn. ‘Sounds Like Work’, our event at the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma featured Drummond’s The17, a choir of people that come together to imagine and enact music after the end of recorded music and Niermann’s Madgermany, a musical movement that transcends nations and humanity, possesses nothing and grants its members neither rights nor duties.

- ‘Tõnis Vint and His Aesthetic Universe’, a recent retrospective at the Kumu Art Museum in Tallinn and its accompanying publication present the first thorough survey of the visionary Estonian artist’s oeuvre from graphic works to studies and teachings on visual sign systems.

- During a visit to Index art space in Stockholm in October, I (finally) discovered OEI, a Swedish language magazine for experimental poetry and speculative sociology, among other things, that has been going since 1999. Since much is lost in translation, my reading of the magazine ironically adds to OEI’s preference for “friction over the smooth exchange of communication”. I also felt it in practice while carrying their 1280 page issue #56-57 on the notion of the magazine as an aesthetic medium with me to Helsinki.

- Graphic design collective Åbäke and artist Nene Tsuboi’s ‘Unbuilt Helsinki’ project gives a shape to a fantastic past with the purpose of expanding contemporary imaginations in and for the city. A series of promising yet unrealized architectural proposals and unfinished plans from the archives of the Museum of Finnish Architecture comes to life in a diorama of a Helsinki that should’ve/would’ve/could’ve existed (until February 25).

- This year in Helsinki, I have also been turned into a carrier of information about the key contradictions in the project SALONS: Birthright Palestine?, by Israeli performance group Public Movement for the New Museum’s ‘The Ungovernables’ exhibition. Debriefing Session, a series of performative one-on-one meetings conveyed the complex relations between cultural production, public and private funding bodies, political agendas and activism, as experienced during a mission of counter branding. Me, the receiver of information, and the informant and artist Dana Yahalomi met in a generic Finnish hotel bar, in the distinct presence of a guard, for an illuminating moment of reflection.

- Starting in January 2013, ‘The Anthropocene-Project’ at Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin confronts the “age of man” from an artistic perspective next to that of science. A series of dialogues and performances will be established to reconsider subject and object positions at a time when, according to Anthropocene theory, humanity forms nature. I am expecting more of what Vera Bühlmann, in her research on the design of mediality, describes in terms of ‘euphoric moments of insight into something that still needs to be specified’.

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Mitch Speedis a writer and artist based in Vancouver, Canada where, along with a group of 3 other designers and writers, he runs the publication Setup.

Marian Penner Bancroft, from ‘For Dennis and Susan: Running Arms to a Civil War’, 1977, 24 silver gelatin prints and 1 text panel, 20 × 26 cm each. Courtesy of the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Marian Penner Bancroft – ‘Spiritlands:t/HERE’ Vancouver Art Gallery

This exhibition presented works made by Marian Penner Bancroft between 1977 and 1999. Since seeing it, images from a work entitled ‘For Dennis and Susan: Running Arms to a Civil War have looped in my head’. That work is comprised of twenty-five small scale, black and white photographs focusing on a period during which Penner Bancroft’s sister Susan, and her husband Dennis coped with Dennis’s battle with Leukaemia, and a short, typewritten text that wove together “just the facts” conceptualism with boldly emotive poetics. This is an artist who has bravely chosen affective subject matter, and who has skillfully engineered structures for that subject matter to move through. With their exploratory but determinate presentation formats – photos and graphite rubbings presented as the surfaces of legged blackboard structures and lecturns, for example – many works felt like they could have been produced just the other day.

Lisa Robertson – Nilling (Bookthug)

Nilling is a collection of prose essays released by Canadian publisher Bookthug, in 2012. In the first essay, ‘Time in the Codex’, Robertson uses prose written in point form to articulate her physical and intellectual passages through codex’s, and books. Lastingness: Rége, Lucrèce, Arendt explores the mechanics of Lucretius’s De rerum natura vis a vis various early translations of it, and the thoughts of Pauline Reage and Hannah Arendt. The book is mostly very difficult, but written in beautiful, idiosyncratically structured prose. Self-reflexive meditations on Robertson’s own struggles with reading difficult material are woven into some of the texts, so a willing reader can find the stubborn wanderings of their own mind reflected in those of the author’s. The book is at once an empathetic and a challenging gesture.

Frank Ocean – Channel Orange (Def Jam Records)

Frank Ocean’s voice, self described as a baritone with tenor moments, in swoon-worthy. At the same time, his music can feel languid. In Pyramids, Ocean lazily folds a verse’s narrative trajectory back on itself, by repeating lines at nearly arbitrary points. Delivered in an off kilter hybrid between R & B and slow rap, these kinds of interruptions conspire with the music’s sensuality to produce an uncanny listening experience. The designation uncanny is applicable to Frank Ocean, who as a gay black musician working in an urban milieu often associated with violence, misogyny and homophobia subtly undoes all of the same stereotypes. For more on that, listen to the aforementioned Pyramids which joins the strip club (a fixture setting of the genre) with invocations of Cleopatra – a character come myth whose attributes oscillate freely between the alpha and omega.

Action Bronson – Blue Chips Mixtape (listen here)

No such social functions exist in Action Bronson. You could even say that his music embodies the exact qualities that someone like Frank Ocean works against. Bronson was born in Flushing, Queens to Albanian immigrants. His raps, effortless and laid back, emerge as the collaboration between a brain encased in a skull garnished with a billowing red beard, and a pair of lungs buried beneath a Jabba the Hut physique.

Being that Bronson is also a televised chef, it is unsurprising that lamb, fennel and fettuccine fill out the content of his songs. Most of the tracks on Blue Chips are orgiastic fantasies of food, sex and violence, in which puns and similes snap and bounce over up-tempo beats. Bronson treats words like ingredients – their audible comportments, as they tumble out of his mouth, are the textures, their associations the flavours.

Mark Leckey – ‘BigBoxGreenScreenRefridgeratorActions’, Walter Phillips Gallery – Banff AB

This exhibition was comprised of a state of the art Samsung smart-fridge placed upon a large green screen, a flat screen monitor playing a video, a very large and deadly looking slab of rough-hewn granite propped upright by an iron frame, and a stack of speakers encased in proto-minimal plywood boxes. Now and then, the speaker-box would “talk” to the slab of granite with a crushing wall of bass, mimicking the sound which would accompany the departure of the granite slab from the local mountain whence it came, and (more abstractly) those of the dance culture about which Leckey made his seminal work Fiorucci Made me Hardcore. My favorite work was the video, wherein the fridge was imbued with sentience by a slickly edited montage of its surfaces, and a reverb heavy voice that chanted it’s technical specs like a divine medium.

Oscar Pistorius aka The Blade Runner

Oscar Pistorius is challenging the boundaries that define competitive categories within sport. Dubbed the Blade Runner after the prosthetic limbs that have replaced his legs below the knees, Pistorius is now competing at an Olympic level against able bodied opponents. Mid race, Pistorius’s legs blur into the larger unit of his body. But watch him before the gun goes off. Standing idly, the cyborg-apparatus made from his muscular body and carbon fiber legs could be a 21st century manifestion of a Futurist fantasy. Crouching and setting himself into the blocks, Pistorius’s body appears to extend backwards as the mechanical legs join forces with the machinery of the aluminum starting blocks.

Joaquin Phoenix’s shoulders in The Master

The Master is P.T. Anderson’s loose adaptation of the mad and manipulative methods of Scientology founder El Ron Hubbard. When Anderson’s El Ron, Lancaster Dodd (Phillip Seymour Hoffman), discovers the tortured, alcoholic, violent WWII veteran Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix), he resolves to soothe Quell’s soul. Unfortunately, Dodd happens to be an alcoholic power monger with a mean streak of his own, so it doesn’t take long before everything goes to shit. One of the primary forces that lends the story gravitas is Phoenix’s body. He moves with a brooding gait, neither slumping nor holding a straight posture. Rather, his shoulders make a constant, concave tightening around his chest. They contradict his physical power by shrinking his upper body, and fill out his violence with undertones of broken-ness. The character doesn’t glorify the brooding and violent male, because it is not sensational but real, and really scary. It is the revolutions between psychology and physicality made manifest.

Chris Kraus in Vancouver

On November 1, Chris Kraus’s early experimental films were screened at the Pacific Cinemateque in Vancouver, as part of an event organized by The Western Front Artist Run Centre. The films were short, and structured around stream of consciousness recollections, gender-fucking performances of texts, and stories leading into stories leading into stories. In Foolproof Illusion, Kraus, wearing a dominatrix-ish costume, knelt in the snow and delivered a schizophrenic monologue that segued through accounts of love, murder, and the narrator’s (whose identity I was unsure of, and still am) cosmological links to Artaud. How to Shoot a Crime was organized around footage obtained from a man who worked for New York’s police department creating photo and film documentations of murder scenes. In that work, Kraus provided visceral, visual experiences usually prohibited by basic rules of propriety. She supplemented the films – with their gritty mixture of deep philosophy and critical piss-taking – with candid and sincere conservation.

Garry Neil Kennedy – The Last Art College (MIT)

In 1967, a 32 year old Garry Neil Kennedy became president of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. During his 23 year tenure, he helped to bring the college into step with modern art, and attracted a who’s who list of faculty and guest faculty, who used the college as a site for the production of now canonical works. In 2005, Neil Kennedy was approached by MIT press to edit a history of the school. This book, built over a chronology compiled by Canadian artist David MacWilliam, is the response to that request. Neil Kennedy’s writing* is both informed and readable. I haven’t gotten through nearly the entire thing, and given its scope and detail, would be slightly afraid of anyone who has. The book’s title is both cinematic, and mildly depressing. It is also unfortunately prescient.

Liz Magor, ‘I is being This’, Catriona Jeffries, Vancouver

I is Being This is the first exhibition by Liz Magor at Vancouver’s Catriona Jeffries Gallery. Magor’s work often deals with the desire ridden emotional ether that both separates and links bodies and materials. Recently, she has focused on binges and their by-products – think stacks of empty party platters strewn with candy rappers and the bodies of rodents. This exhibition was the product of the artist’s binge-like accumulation of sculptural materials, which were also the cast off residue of shifting appetites for fashion.

The gallery’s walls had been dressed with a grid of white boxes, overspilling with tissue paper. In each box was a coat, jacket or sweater – from the designer variety to more lowly coverings – decorated with smatterings of sewn on bric a brac – broaches, crests, logos and labels – plucked from the bottom to the top of socio-economic spectra. Some pieces were dressed in layers of slinky mesh, which functioned as carriers for caches of cigarettes and candies. Here, the free and easy use of collage resulted in objects that were often ugly, and were freighted with an aura of gross neurosis. At once large and small, it was probably the best show Vancouver saw in 2012.

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Barbara Casavecchiais a contributing editor of frieze. She lives in Milan, Italy.


Naoya Hatekeyama, Imaizumi area of Kesen-cho, Rikuzen Takata City on April 4, 2011, 2011. Included in ‘Architecture in the Wake of Disaster,’ the Japan Pavilion at the 13th International Architecture Exhibition, Venice Biennale.

Open questions:

The Japanese Pavillion at this year’s Venice Architecture Biennale, curated by Toyo Ito, was awarded the Golden Lion. In a small video near the entrance, Naoya Hatakeyama (whose photographs wrapped up the space at 360 degrees), talked about the experience of taking pictures of what was left of his hometown, entirely wiped out by the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, which also killed his mother. His questions about the sense of producing images (and building architectures), and the possible good of it, kept coming back for a long time.

*Touching Reality* by Thomas Hirschorn at La Triennale in Paris, for its literal brutality.

‘Slideshows’, an exhibition by Massimo Grimaldi held at the reopened Museo di Villa Croce in Genoa (curated by Alessandro Rabottini), brought together for the first time all the works of an ongoing series, started by the artist in 2003. Each slideshow consists of a collection of images (initially web-collected, more recently shot by the artist during his visits at the hospitals run by Emergency, an Italian medical NGO operating in war zones across the globe). Grimaldi presents them on two screens, side by side, on the last Apple model available for purchase at the moment of completion, so that the quick obsolence of the ‘new’ and the commodity fetishism are pushed to the limits. The photos are post-produced to be picture-perfect, sentimental, devoid of violence and visually captivating, like the quintessential Apple ads. Furthermore, Grimaldi uses the slideshows as ‘promotional’ presentations of his work: whenever asked to participate in a prize or to provide a project, he proposes to invest over 90% of his budget on the construction of a new Emergency’s hospital – a conscious ‘moral blackmail’ to push the choice between art and life (and communication).


Bill Bollinger, left: Untitled, 1970 (2002), right: Cyclone Fence, 1968 (2012), installation view at SculptureCenter, New York. Courtesy SculptureCenter; photograph: Jason Mandella.

In no particular order:

dOCUMENTA (13) and the (impossible) Book of Books

Bill Bollinger’s retrospective at SculptureCenter in New York.

Ed Atkins’s solo show ‘Us Dead Talk Love’ at Chisenhale, London, and his reading during frieze week in October.

‘En todo y en todas partes’ at Kurimanzutto, Mexico City, with works by Karla Black, Marieta Chirulescu, Babette Mangolte and Susanne M. Winterling, in response to Edward Krasinski’s legacy.


Carlo Gabriele Tribbioli, from ‘Reperti per il prossimo milione di anni’, (detail), 2012, silver gelatin print, 113 × 56 cm

An Italian round:

Paola Pivi’s recent exhibition ‘Tulkus 1880 to 2018’, at the Castello di Rivoli, Turin (and soon at Witte de With, Rotterdam). Installed in the Manica Lunga, as if mimicking the original quadreria of the castle, it included around 1,000 photographs of tulkus, i.e. powerful Tibetan Buddhist masters who are recognized as reincarnations of previous masters. Tulkus are believed to have the capacity to reveal the place of their next birth. Mysticism aside, this survey on the presence, disappearance and eventual survival of a culture worked quite well also on a non-metaphorical level.

Gina Pane’s great retrospective ‘E’ per amore vostro: l’altro’, curated by Sophie Duplaix at Mart, Rovereto, with an impressive array of works. Pity that Pane’s several exhibitions in Italy and the critical studies they triggered were somehow marginalized. Anyway, chapeau.

‘disegnare disegnare ridisegnare il pensiero immagine che cammina’, Marisa Merz’s exhibition in random order and without labels at the family-run Fondazione Merz in Turin was a brilliant, unguided tour de force of her private world.

Zoloto, Roberto Cuoghi’s monumental, self-critical and at times exhilarating ‘retrospective’ take on the issue of identity, at Massimo De Carlo, Milan.

Luca Vitone’s two joint summer exhibitions: ‘Monocromo Variationen’ at Museion, Bozen, and ‘Natura morta con paesaggi e strumenti musicali’, at the Brodbeck Foundation in Catania, for their subtle reading of the Italian landscape.
Hat tip also to a couple of upcoming Sicilian galleries: Laveronica Arte Contemporanea, Modica, and collicaligreggi, Catania.

Rome-based Nero Magazine just restyled itself as ‘a publication that collects other serial publications in it’. Check it out, free-download: www.neromagazine.it

‘Reperti per il prossimo milione di anni’, the first gallery show by Carlo Gabriele Tribbioli, at Federica Schiavo, in Rome – a very mature exhibition, for an absolute beginner.

As to Milan, my hometown, it shows some signs of recovery from its late atony, nevermind the crisis. In February, artists Mario Airò, Diego Perrone and Stefano Dugnani opened their studios to host ten artists from the last generation, to grant them room and a chance to produce new works. In June, Valentina Sansone from the Swiss Institute curated Bureau for Art Nerds, a lively series of events bringing together a group of young Swiss artists (Fluck / Paulus, Curtat Tunnel, Hannah Weinberger, Hotel Palenque) and Milanese artist-run or independent spaces, such as Anonima Nuotatori, Carrozzeria Margot, Gasconade, Dafne Boggeri’s Full Moon Salon. The list of off-spaces for the local scene now includes also Lucie Fontaine, Marselleria, Spazio Morris, Spazio Cabinet. On the institutional side, Palazzo Reale got back on the map with the solid Fabio Mauri. The End, as well as with a rich, though jumbled survey on the Seventies: Addio Anni Settanta: Arte a Milano 1969-80, curated by Francesco Bonami and Paola Nicolin (the book produced on the occasion, with reproductions of hundreds original catalogues, fanzines, mags was a small treasure. Not so small, in fact: 474 pages, Mousse Publishing). Ongoing is the neat first mid-career show by Alberto Garutti at PAC, Didascalia, co-curated by Nicolin and Hans Ulrich Obrist, which highlights also the artist’s pivotal role as a teacher at Brera art academy. A possible history of Italian art beyond the labels of Arte Povera or Transavaguardia, for a change.

Looking forward to:

The next Venice Biennale, curated by Massimiliano Gioni and – for the first time ever, since its start – even its Italian Pavillion, curated by Bartolomeo Pietromarchi, the current director of MACRO, Rome.

And also the new directorship of Andrea Viliani at the MADRE Museum in Naples, back on track. The times they are a-changing.

Angela Ricci Lucchi & Yervant Gianikian’s new film, coming soon: their exhibition NONNONNON at Hangar Bicocca, Milan, was wonderful.

Giuseppe Gabellone at GAMeC, Bergamo.

The Città delle Culture, set to open in Milan in 2013 (in the ex-Ansaldo factory, redesigned by Chipperfield). More of a ‘Haus der Kulturen der Welt’, than a museum of contemporary art, but maybe getting closer?

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Raphael Gygaxis an art historian and curator at Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Switzerland.

A list of things I’ve seen / heard / read / done in 2012 that lifted my spirits:

Nicole Eisenman, The Breakup, 2011, oil and mixed media on canvas, 142 × 109 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects. Photograph: Robert Wedemeyer

- Sibylle Berg’s novel Vielen Dank für das Leben (Hanser, Munich, 2012); no review will ever be able to catch the spirit of this book.

- Nicole Eisenman’s painting The Breakup (2011) at the Whitney Biennial; after seeing it I was in good mood for the whole day.

- Beach House’s album Bloom (Sub Pop, 2012) has helped me to get over my anxious moments at the airport and other unpleasant situations this year.

- Erna Ómarsdóttir’s dance piece We Saw Monsters; rooooar!

- Willie Doherty’s film Secretion (2012) at dOCUMENTA (13); I watched it twice – and afterwards I left Kassel.

- 7th Berlin Biennale; I really liked the character of this test field (and I didn’t like most of the reviews about it)

- Danny Boyle’s opening ceremony of the London Olympics; what a lovely spectacle.

- Encounters (dinners, studio visits, drinks etc.) with artists including: Ai Weiwei, Patterson Beckwith, Spartacus Chetwynd, Maria Eichhorn, Agnès Geoffray, Teresa Margolles, Nicola Martini, Sara Masüger, Lucy Stein, Julie Verhoeven, Silke Otto-Knapp, Virginia Overton, Loredana Sperini, Lily van der Stokker; thank you all!

- Some shows of dead female artists like: ‘Evelyne Axell. The Great Jouney into Space’ (Broadway 1602, New York) or ‘Sylvia Sleigh’ (Kunst Halle St. Gallen)

- More shows: ‘Carol Rama: Spazio anche piu che tempo’ (Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin), Shana Moulton’s solo presentation at Liste 17 (Galerie Gregor Staiger, Zurich), ‘Rita Ackermann: Fire by Days’ (Hauser & Wirth, London)

- OK – also some shows by male artists: ‘Marc Bauer’ (Freymond-Guth, Zurich / Kunsthaus Baselland, Muttenz), ‘Doug Aitken’ (Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich), Martin Soto Climent (Kunsthalle Winterthur / Karma International, Zurich)

A list of things that I hope to do in 2012 that will cheer me up:


Kelly Nipper, Black Forest, 2012

See the premier of the Ciné-Concert Der Architekt (The Architect) scripted by Marc Bauer and with accompanying music from Kafka (January 18, La Comédie de Clermont, Clermont-Ferrand), the premier of Sibylle Berg’s play Angst reist mit (March 23, Schauspielhaus Stuttgart), the exhibition of Kelly Nipper’s work (including her performance Black Forest, which premiered at Glasgow International Festival in 2012) alongside drawings and watercolours by Rudolf von Laban at Kunsthaus Zurich (April 5 – June 16,); Do the art things in Berlin, London, Paris, New York, Venice, Zurich, Basel plus a research trip to Dublin; Go to Iceland (holidays); Participate at the Second Swiss Congress for Art History (Lausanne); Finish my PHD (fingers crossed)

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Chris Wileyis an artist, writer and curator based in Los Angeles, USA.

Los Angeles

Living in and around New York for my entire life, I never thought I’d be writing high praise of Los Angeles, that much maligned city choked in smog, where I heard tell that pedestrians were shot with impunity for there perambulatory transgressions. LA was, in my mind, nothing but an urban planning nightmare, teeming with New Age yuppies, industry flame-outs, gang bangers, and a terrifying, militaristic police force that seemed to hurt as often as it help. Earthquakes, wild fires, landslides, Charles Manson, race riots, reality television, vegan cafés where your order has be made as a statement of doe-eyed affirmation (“I am vivacious”; “I am dazzling”): surely it was a city that augers the end of days. But, like many of my fellow defectors from New York and elsewhere, the city has gotten its hooks in me. I find that it has afforded me the time a space to think, read, and work, absent the buzz and heat of New York, which, though occasionally stimulating, can too often prove to be an existential merry-go-round—a ride that is loud, colorful and fun, but which spits you out in essentially the same place that you began. This is of course to say nothing of the burgeoning Los Angeles art scene, where the static charge of possibility still hangs in the air. New spaces and new tendencies seem to be springing up here at a quickening pace, and the future looks bright indeed.

Ken Price at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art


Zizi, Ken Price, 2011, fired and painted clay

, 42 × 61 × 43 cm

Though it saddened me to think that Price’s retrospective was only very narrowly posthumous, the exhibition itself was suffused with such lavish and energetic displays of color and form that any hint of dourness was quickly swept away. Price proved in this exhibition (as he had throughout his career) that ceramics could be pulled out of the crafts ghetto and fixed in the firmament of fine art, much as his mentor Peter Voulkos had bade him to. But more importantly, the exhibition also stood as a testament to a figure whose obdurately weird work bucked trends and categorizations, but left next to no one questioning its place in the art world. Price was a consummate insiders’ outsider, and his renegade example is an essential one for an art world that finds itself too often mired in rhetorical and aesthetic feedback loops.

John Houck at Kansas Gallery

In his debut solo exhibition at New York’s Kansas gallery, John Houck proved that investigations into photography’s digital life need not be dry, even when they are strongly analytical. The anchors of the show, were Houck’s beguiling, optically flummoxing works from his ‘Aggregates’ series, in which he exploits his skills as a high-level computer programmer to agglomerate exhaustive, moiré-patterned configurations of colored pixels hewing to a set of pre-determined parameters—sometimes allowing for hundreds of thousands of configurations in a single piece—which are generated in the computer, printed, folded, photographed, and folded yet again, so that the final piece resembles nothing so much as a pieces of Op Art origami. They are beautiful objects, but behind their elegant veneer their exhaustive combinatory logic speaks of the ever-shifting sea of pixels that has become the substrate of our contemporary image world.

Barney Kulok at Nicole Klagsbrun

Kulok’s third solo exhibition at the gallery, which was accompanied by a handsome book published by Aperture, consisted of a collection of stunningly rich black-and-white photographs, taken during the construction of Louis I. Kahn’s great unrealized monument to Franklin D. Roosevelt on Roosevelt Island. (In a cruel twist of architectural fate, Kahn died in the public toilets of reviled, then-recent reboot of New York’s Pennsylvania Station, and is said to have had the plans for the monument in his briefcase.) However, Kulok’s photographs, which, more often than not, take the form of horizonless details of building materials and surfaces, are not mere documentation; they take into obvious account the art historical precedents of Minimalism and Post-Minimalism, with a deftness that has had few parallels since the work of Lewis Baltz. Like Baltz, Kulok reminds us—in light of the recent vogue for self-reflexive investigations of photographic materiality and the emphasis placed on studio practice—that photographs made out in the world at large can still present novel aesthetic propositions, even as they speak, however modestly, of the life outside the darkroom and away from the glare of the studio lights.

The paintings of Tala Madani


Tala Madani, Chinballs with Flag, 2011, oil on linen, 41 × 31 cm

Though I was familiar with her work before, by way of my work on the New Museum’s first Generational Triennial ‘Younger Than Jesus’ in 2009, I have become re-acquainted with it this year as a result of the fortuitous proximity of our Los Angeles homes. Her paintings are a portal onto a world populated exclusively by men, who almost always appear to be of Middle Eastern descent, and who display a gleeful penchant for psychosexual depravity that recalls both the Abu Ghraib prison photographs and childhood games gone horribly awry. Initially characterized by a loose, exuberant facture that verged on the slap-dash, Madani’s restlessness and versatility has led her to further elaborations of her stylistic vocabulary. Recently, this has meant the addition of a more controlled, sharply delineated vein to her painting, with some works coming to resemble demented editorial cartoons. Whatever the manner of their making, however, all her paintings cut close to the bone, reflecting some of the more unseemly, yet undeniably enticing aspects of our collective ideations and desires.

Breaking Bad

Television in the past decade has continued to defy the clichéd notion that it exists only to stupefy the cowed masses, a medium that can be coupled with “real culture” only as an object of campy appreciation, or by way of the winking appropriation by those cultural mandarins who would transmute low culture into high, under the guise of erasing the distinction between the two. Increasingly, it appears that television has entered into its golden age, offering us the moving image equivalent of the 19th century novel: intricate, twisting plots, a complex panoply of characters, high drama, potent social commentary, and popular appeal.

Perhaps the most obvious current exemplar of this turn is AMC’s Breaking Bad, which has, for the last five years, followed the ignominious rise of Walter White (Brian Cranston) from his beginnings as a terminally ill high school science teacher who turned to cooking meth in order to leave an inheritance for his family, to his current incarnation as rapacious, ruthless drug kingpin. This year’s truncated season, which was perhaps the darkest of an already jet black series, has seen the show continue to defy the law of televisual entropy, which the most astute, masterful programs of the past have tended to fall victim to as the years wear on. (Even the faithful must admit that the beloved series The Wire jumped the shark a little in its fifth and final season.) If the show can keep up this momentum, it will stand as significant cultural achievement, a Shakespearian tragedy for our times.

‘New Pictures of Common Objects’ at PS1 MoMA

Recently, the artistic tendencies that have been slowly coalescing around concerns with digital media, branding, corporate culture, and the commoditization of everyday life, have been marked by an obsession with the texture and psychic character of the new world of objects that these technological and cultural phenomena have engendered. PS1’s ‘New Pictures of Common Objects’, which was organized by Christopher Lew, and comprised small solo showings of works by Trisha Bagga, Josh Klein, Lucas Blalock, Margaret Lee, and Helen Marten, represented a modest, yet important step towards pinning down the peculiar, yet strangely consistent artistic response to the material cosmos that we have wrought, which, like the works in the exhibition itself, manages to be both alienating and beguiling all at once.

Things to look forward to in 2013

Owen Kydd at Nicelle Beauchene (January 24 – February 24)

A recent graduate of UCLA’s Masters of Fine Arts program, Owen Kydd will present his first solo exhibition at Nicelle Beauchene’s new space in New York this January. Like Jeff Wall, with whom Kydd worked for many years before moving to UCLA, his work straddles the line between photography and cinema, but in a literal way: his video-photographs are presented on monitors, and shot with a high-end digital video camera. The resulting images, whose subtle movements paradoxically serve to heighten their sense of stillness, are strikingly beautiful and pregnant with mystery.

55th Venice Biennale (June 1- November 24)

Full disclosure: I am working on the next Venice Biennale, both as a curatorial advisor and writer for the catalog. However, as a person with intimate knowledge of the show, and as someone who has worked closely with its curator, Massimiliano Gioni, for many years, I can confidently say that this will be an iteration of Venice that is not to be missed. Unfortunately, I have been informed that I will be summarily executed if I say any more. Mums the word.

Lucas Blalock at White Cube’s ‘Inside the White Cube’, London (May – June)


Lucas Blalock, Gaba with Fans, 2012, chromogenic print, 148 × 118 cm

Though only in his second year of his UCLA Masters of Fine Art, Lucas Blalock has been popping up in group shows all around the world this year, and has had solo presentations of his work at Frieze London and MoMA PS1. Next May, Blalock will be the subject of a solo exhibition at London’s powerhouse gallery White Cube, as a part of their regular ‘Inside the White Cube’ series, which recently gave a sizable boost to the career of another photographic rising star, Elad Lassry. Like Lassry, Blalock is a master of the photographic still life, though he has recently taken his talents to the streets, adding another layer to his already diverse practice. He has also begun to push his energetic digital manipulations in evermore baroque and ambitious directions: ‘Gaba with Fans’ (2012), shown at both PS1 and as a part of his Frame project at Frieze, is a discombobulated nude that could almost hold its ground against Picasso.

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Michelle Cottonis senior curator at Firstsite, Colchester, UK.


Gerard Valcin, Simbis Voyageurs. Courtesy Collection Gallerie D’Art Nader

My picks are as follows:

‘1917’, Centre Pompidou-Metz
Paul Sietsema– both exhibitions at Kunsthalle Basel and the Drawing Room, London
Graham Sutherland, ‘An Unfinished World’ at Modern Art Oxford
‘Kafou: Haiti, Art and Vodou’ at Nottingham Contemporary (until January 6)
Alex Katz, ‘Give Me Tomorrow’ at Tate St Ives and Turner Contemporary, Margate (although I only made it to Margate) (until January 13)
Philip Lai, Stuart Shave, Modern Art, London *Nick Relph, Raining Room, shown at Herald Street as part of Feature, Art Basel* 


Jessica Jackson Hutchins, SAP, 2012. Courtesy the artist and Timothy Taylor Gallery, London

Next year I look forward to seeing:

‘1913: The Shape of Time at Henry Moore Institute, Leeds’– already open but I haven’t made it there yet (until February 17)
Jessica Jackson Hutchins at Hepworth Wakefield (group show with Alice Channer and Linder Sterling; February 16 – May 5)
‘Eduardo Paolozzi: Collaging Culture’ at Pallant House, Chichester (July 6 – October 13)
‘Mark Leckey: The Universal Addresssability of Dumb Things’ at the Bluecoat, Liverpool (February 16 – April 14) Nottingham Contemporary (April 27 – June 30) and the De La Warr Pavillion, Bexhill on Sea (July 12 – October 20)

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

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By Agnieszka Gratza

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

Une vraie jeune fille (Catherine Breillat, 1975)

Programmed alongside features and shorts shown in the international competition at the ‘EntreVues’ film festival in Belfort, now in its 27th year, retrospectives and themed sections have long been a staple of a festival that prides itself in linking emerging filmmakers to the rich history of auteur cinema which has shaped them. One of the themed sections in the 2012 festival, which took place from 24 November to 2 December – ‘Art press: 40 ans de regard’ – was exceptionally curated by ‘art press’ editor-in-chief Catherine Millet.

To mark the 40th anniversary of the influential contemporary art monthly that she co-founded in 1972, Millet was given carte blanche to choose the films she pleased. Her selection of 15 visually ravishing and often sexually explicit films by Catherine Breillat, Bertrand Bonello, Bruno Dumont, Peter Greenaway, João César Monteiro and Pier Paolo Pasolini, among others, was meant to reflect an art magazine’s take on auteur cinema from the 1960s to the present, proved worthy of the author of the best-selling memoir La Vie sexuelle de Catherine M (The Sexual Life of Catherine M, 2001).

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

The Gospel According to St. Matthew (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1964)

In the discussions following some of the screenings and at a roundtable that brought together artists, filmmakers, curators and critics who responded to yet another selection of (this time) brief, artist-made video and film clips, Millet readily admitted to being a visual person. This predominantly visual sensibility comes across in the films she chose, some of which were made by filmmakers who are also painters or artists in their own right. Unsurprisingly, pictorial and art historical references abounded in such films as Pasolini’s The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964), referencing Christian paintings and sculptures across centuries; in Greenaway’s The Draughtsman’s Contract (1982), whose candlelit scenes evoke Caravaggio and Georges de la Tour; or in Alain Cuny’s 1991 L’Annonce faite à Marie (The Annunciation of Marie), with its stunning sets and gorgeous costumes designed by Tal Coat. As Millet points out, each take in Cuny’s film (and the same can be said of the other two) could, and indeed should, be viewed as a tableau.

An adaptation of Paul Claudel’s play-poem by the same title, L’Annonce faite à Marie was emblematic of the theatrical, somewhat affected diction that was another recurring feature of the selected films. Jean-Marie Straub’s 15-minute L’Inconsolable (2011), the first film he has made since the death of his partner and collaborator Danièle Huillet in 2006, features two elderly characters sitting in a forest, amid ferns, declaiming lines from Cesare Pavese’s Dialogues with Leuco, recounting Orpheus’s loss of Eurydice. In Eugène Green’s Le Pont des Arts (2003), which subtly weaves together the destinies of two young couples with the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice as a backdrop, the slow pace of the delivery is matched by rigidly frontal views of the actors’ faces. The combination is deliberately unrealistic, hieratic, even stilted, in keeping with the rarefied atmosphere of the film, whose protagonist, Sarah, sings in a baroque music ensemble.

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

A comedia de Deus (João Cesar Monteiro, 1995)

A certain baroque sensibility underpinned the heady mixture of ritual, eroticism, death, and aesthetic refinement that permeated these films, perhaps best embodied in critic and poet Monteiro’s A comedia de Deus (1995), which sees the lustful aging manager of an ice-cream parlour, João de Deus – a recurrent figure in Monteiro’s films, played by the film director himself – sexually initiate his apprentice Rosarinho. In their frank and at times graphic depiction of sexuality, many of the selected films conformed to what the magazine’s long-standing film collaborator Dominique Païni aptly labels as ‘pornographic experimentation’, in connection with Bruno Dumont’s La Vie de Jésus (1996). Dumont’s award-winning début feature, whose protagonist is subject to occasional bouts of epilepsy and engages in decidedly un-Christ-like behaviour, from copulation to sexual assault to murder, features close-ups of penetration. The same holds true of Catherine Breillat’s first film, Une vraie jeune fille (A Real Young Girl, 1976), starring Charlotte Alexandra as the bored and sexually precocious teen condemned to spending the summer holidays in her family home. Based on Breillat’s novel Le Soupirail, the film was banned until 1999 on account of its obscene portrayal of Alice’s erotic fantasies.

Postcard from the Belfort Film Festival

La Vie de Jésus (Bruno Dumont, 1996)

If we can speak of ‘pornographic experimentation’ in relation to these films, it’s more to do with their transgressive subject matter than with formal experimentation as such – with one notable exception. Jean Eustache’s Une sale histoire (A Dirty Story, 1977) consists of two short films, a fictive and a documentary account, filmed respectively in 35mm and 16mm, in which a man confides to a largely female audience, rapt in concentration, how he became a voyeur after discovering a hidden hole in women’s toilets that offered a direct view of female genitals. Thanks to it, the protagonist comes to realize that there is no obvious equation between the outward appeal of a woman and that of her sexual parts, which in the end is the only thing that matters. In an unprecedented move, the original tale is retold almost word for word in the second, more stylized version, using a cast of professional actors. There is nothing quite like this doubling effect in the history of cinema.

That Millet should evince an interest in all this was hardly surprising given that, by her own admission, La Vie sexuelle de Catherine M. draws on the methods of pornographic films, when it comes to the framing and close-ups of sexual organs in particular. In fact, Jacques Nolot’s La Chatte à deux têtes (Glowing Eyes, 2002), appropriately shown at one of the late screenings which, courtesy of art press, had more than their fair share of X-rated matter, depicts the closed world of a pornographic cinema near the place Clichy, catering to a homosexual clientèle. What Millet particularly admires about the film are its autobiographical elements and the risk-taking involved in publicly baring oneself, no doubt an implicit comment on what she regards as her own achievement in the literary domain. Nothing if not coherent, the choice of films made by art press for the 27th edition of Belfort’s film festival amounted to a self-portrait.

Agnieszka Gratza is a writer based in London.

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 7

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By frieze

Looking Back, Looking Forward: Part 7

The final installment in our series looking back at the highlights of 2012 and thinking ahead to some reasons to be cheerful in 2013, as chosen by frieze editors and contributors.

Geeta Dayalis a writer based in San Francisco, USA. She is a frequent contributor to frieze.


Laila je t’aime: Guitar Music from the Western Sahel recorded by Christopher Kirkley from 2009-2011 (Sahel Sounds and Mississippi Records)

The death of Ravi Shankar loomed large for me near the end of the year. The impact that Shankar had was tremendous–not simply in terms of music, but in his key role in bringing India and its culture into the eyes and ears of the West. It is a great loss.

The death of Lebbeus Woods was another one that I felt deeply. I had the good fortune to meet Woods, briefly, early in 2012 — we spoke on a panel together at Columbia, a meeting orchestrated by my friend (and 2010 Frieze Art Fair co-panelist) Kazys Varnelis. It was a terribleyear for death — Chris Marker, Pete Namlook, Donna Summer, Ray Bradbury, Adam Yauch, Mike Kelley, Maurice Sendak, Etta James, and too many other greats to name.

It was a year of revelatory centennial celebrations for John Cage, and Conlon Nancarrow. I continue to find new resonances, new meanings, in their work. The SFSound group staged several fantastic concerts of Cage’s work in San Francisco. Also of note was Tom Erbe’s inspiring realization of Cage’s “Williams Mix,” which I was lucky to hear in San Diego.

There were many great concerts – I am still thinking about William Basinski’s transfixing performance at the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, which was done completely with delicate tape loops and three vintage tape machines. Fred Frith’s fascinating live reboot of his 1980 album ‘Gravity’ in San Francisco, with an array of young performers, made me re-think retromania. Speaking of retromania, I overdosed on Kraftwerk this year at MoMA, and I’m questioning whether the next eight-night marathon at the Tate Modern really makes sense. Seeing Afrika Bambaataa and Ryuichi Sakamoto bopping their heads in the audience during Kraftwerk’s ‘Trans-Europe Express’ at MoMA was more mesmerizing to me than Kraftwerk itself.

I spent a lot of this year in a computer world, to paraphrase Kraftwerk – it was the Alan Turing centennial this year, as well. The Commodore 64 had its 30th birthday this year. The magnificent reissue of Laurie Spiegel’s The Expanding Universe, made at Bell Labs in the 1970s using a hybrid computer system called GROOVE, was one of my favorite records of 2012.

A few more albums: Bee Mask’s When We Were Eating Unripe Pears, Swans’ The Seer, Andy Stott’s Luxury Problems, Scott Walker’s Bish Bosch. My favorite cover art this year: the glorious hand-lettered Laila je t’aime: Guitar Music from the Western Sahel LP on Mississippi Records.

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Peter J. Russois coordinator of the NY Art Book Fair and director of Triple Canopy, a nonprofit online magazine, workspace, and platform for editorial and curatorial activities based in New York, Los Angeles, and Berlin.

Shinsuke Ogawa, Narita: The Peasants of the Second Fortress, 16mm, 1971, 143 mins

In no particular order:

Roommates with benefits
Of the dozen or more Light Industry screenings I attended this past year, two stuck out as most memorable: Shinsuke Ogawa’s Narita: The Peasants of the Second Fortress (1971), a moving document of Japanese farmers’ resistance to the seizure of their land for the construction of an international airport; and, ‘For Chris Marker,’ a day of screenings in tribute to the filmmaker. To echo Light Industry’s quoting of Chris Marker, “Rarely has reality needed so much to be imagined.” This seems to sum-up both screenings equally well.

The many projects of Project Projects
‘Design firm’ is simply too restrictive a term to account for the vast repertoire of Project Projects. Principles Prem Krishnamurthy and Adam Michaels both hatched notable initiatives this past year: P!, a Chinatown project space where disciplines collide and the conventions of exhibition display are seemingly broken and then reinvented on-the-fly by Krishnamurthy. Michaels, along with historian Jeffrey T. Schnapp, authored The Electric Information Age Book, an invaluable history of 1960s experimental paperback design, with Marshall McLuhan’s The Medium Is the Massage at center.

Gray areas
Poet and Ugly Duckling Presse editor Matvei Yankelevich’s open letter to literary scholar Marjorie Perloff, published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, helped to force a break in the staid conversation around Conceptualism in poetry. Incredibly useful, a must-read: “At its most successful (where it is pure Conceptual writing), it offers no position, no critique. A statement of facts, like a weather report, is just what it says it is; the argument resides in a different place, on the level of classification or canonization: whether or not this is poetry.”

Digital art
On the other hand, Claire Bishop ponders her most closely-held artists’ lack of interest in the affect of our digital age with ‘Digital Divide’– her essay published in a special issue of Artforum dedicated to new media. Bishop suggests that a utopia of unmarketable work or complete obsolescence must be on the way, as she detours through projector-fetish, social practice, and research-driven art, en route to the dead-end “uncreative writing” of Kenny Goldsmith.

Vacuum cleaner user manual
In conjunction with her recent solo exhibition at Greene Naftali, Rachel Harrison created the e-book The Help, A Companion Guide. Published by Badlands Unlimited, Harrison’s working bibliography, process, and deft material sensibility explode underneath the touchscreen in a thousand clashing colors. “Q: Why is there a photograph of a nun on that sculpture?”

Anti-banker anger, riots, and credit crisis
Accompanying Merlin Carptenter’s recent show at Reena Spaulings Fine Art was an 18-page interview with gallery owners John Kelsey and Emily Sundblad. Together, they consider why New York artists aren’t more pissed at their major institutions, as well as the hardships of collaboration with Kelsey and Sundblad’s appropriation of Carpenter’s own work as the sore point.


Gran Fury, Kissing doesn’t kill: Greed and indifference do, 1989

Art, love and politics
Helen Molesworth’s survey of contemporary art’s so-called blind spot (e.g. the 1980s) was as exhilarating as it was exhausting. ‘This Will Have Been’, on view at MCA Chicago before traveling to ICA Boston, neatly organized a decade-plus of rambunctious production into four accessible areas of inquiry—The End is Near, Democracy, Gender Trouble, and Desire and Longing. Included were unmistakable works by David Hammons (How Ya Like Me Now?) and Cady Noland (Chainsaw Cut Cowboy Head), among others. An equally compelling catalogue was produced by MCA’s new publications team, led by former Werkplaats Typografie director James Goggin.

Long diversions
Artists Matthew Porter and Hannah Whitaker’s excellent show The Crystal Chain, organized for Invisible Exports, included work by Boru O’Brien O’Connell and Erin Shirreff as well as lesser-known historical figures, such as the German photographer Ellen Auerbach. Looking at both content and strategy, the exhibition considered what latent concepts in early twentieth-century photography might yet resurface in the work of artists today. Crystal Chain found a printed form as Blind Spot Magazine #45

Severed timelines
Frank Heath’s rigorous debut solo exhibition, presented by Simon Subal Gallery, brought enigmatic subject matter into clear focus: Objects addressed to nonexistent Manhattan addresses, Times classifieds re-run with precision, and _Graffiti Report Form_—an unplaceable video concerned with Morningside Park, where the 1968 student revolts at Columbia University took flight.

Occupy Sandy
In the immediate wake of the hurricane, and long since, the activist-based relief group repaired battered homes and flooded basements while advocating on behalf of residents, many of whom were still without heat or electricity at the time of writing. At its peak, Occupy Sandy was reportedly delivering meals 10,000 meals per day. Inspiring and unparalleled.

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Carol Yinghua Luis a contributing editor of frieze, based in Beijing, China.


Geng Jianyi, Interchange of Light, oil on canvas, 1.4 × 1m, 1993-1996

Simon Sheikh, ‘Instituting the Institution’, speech given as part of No Ground Underneath: Curating On the Nexus of Changes symposium, Times Museum, Guangzhou
A thought-provoking argument on the social and political implications of the act of instituting and the responsibility of arts institutions, which linked artistic practice to a larger social and political imaginary.

‘Ancestral Modern: Australian Aboriginal Art from the Kaplan & Levi Collection’, Seattle Art Museum
A fascinating survey of aboriginal art from Australia. It was an informative and mesmerizing introduction, by way of over 100 artworks from the late 20th to early 21st century—paintings on canvas; ochres on bark; sculptures carved of wood, woven of fiber and cast in bronze – to a significant chapter in the history of art.

‘Wu Zhi’: Geng Jianyi’s Solo Exhibition, Minsheng Museum of Art, Shanghai
It’s a rare opportunity to view a considerable body of works by Geng Jianyi from 1985 to 2008. Most of the works on show had not been seen previously. Based in Hangzhou and teaching in the National Academy of Art in Hangzhou, Geng Jianyi has developed an elastic conceptual practice that resists confirmation with existing historical narratives and categorization of artistic creation.


Minimalism and Beyond: Rasheed Araeen at Tate Britain, (Third Text, 2007)

A visit to Rasheed Araeen’s studio in London
On the occasion of curating the 9th Gwangju Biennale, I made a research trip to London where I visited the studio of Rasheed Araeen to discuss the work that he would be presenting. Rasheed met with me in front of the window in his study overlooking the garden. It was the same image that appeared on the cover of the catalogue of Rasheed Araeen’s retrospective in Tate Britain in 2007.

Inside/Outside: Materialising the Social, South Tank, Tate Modern
This one-day symposium in the South Tank was an excellent example of the remarkable adaptability of a museum space such as that of the Tanks. It was just a matter of overnight that the Tank was transformed into an innovative programme of keynote lectures, conversations, artist talks and performances materialising the fluid boundary between institutions and individual practitioners, institutionalized practice and artistic attempts to escape rules and conventions.

The 8th Taipei Biennale, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei
Curated by Anselm Franke, the biennale was an in-depth and scholarly look into a broad spectrum of human histories, both factual and fictional ones and a re-examination of our common perceptions of modernity. Titled ‘Death and Life of Fiction or the Modern Taowu’, the exhibition took its inspiration from Taiwanese art historian David Der-Wei Wang’s book The Monster That Is History, in which history itself is compared to the ancient Chinese monster Taowu, and sought to give forms to this indefinable being, which Franke compared to “a possible common experience of all modernity.”

Elementary, a new Sherlock Holmes drama series
In this highly addictive TV series, Modern-day Homles is portrayed as a re-habbing crime consultant working in New York outside of the official police system, with a female Watson (played by Lucy Liu). Holmes, played by Johnny Lee Miller, dresses like a free-spirited intellectual with a deliberately ragged and understated sense of fashion, is the perfect embodiment of the art critic. Though working in opposition to crimes and flaws Holmes, with his history of drug addiction, is himself deeply flawed and therefore implicated him in the same sense of guilt that accompanies any kind of addiction, be that crime or art-making. His addiction now is solving mysteries. He believes in first-hand information and being present at the crime scene rather than basing his judgment on assumptions and hearsay. He trusts his own intuition and is extremely perceptive, but also goes to great lengths to prove them right. He maintains his independence and feels that there is no system to fall back on, whilst still working closely with the system.

The private collection of Antonio Dalle Nogare in Bolzano
No labels, no exhibition title. The visit to Antonio Dalle Nogare’s private collection was facilitated by one of his colleagues who could only communicate in Italian. Barely 20 minutes drive into the suburb of Bolzano, we arrived in an unassuming modernist building housing two floors with more than a dozen pieces of intelligent and understated conceptual artworks. We knew next to nothing about the collection but were completely over-awed by the breadth and vision of this collection, a collection that pays no attention either to the tastes of the market or the favorites of the art historians. There is no need to offer any explanation of the works. The undistracted experience of the artworks was honored as the priority here.

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Tom Mortonis a contributing editor of frieze based in London, UK.


Alexander Tovborg, Teenage Jesus (revolt), 2012, acrylic, pastel crayon, and crepe paper on canvas, 2 × 2.5m

Highlights of 2012

EXHIBITIONS:

So much has been written about dOCUMENTA (13) that I’m minded to keep my comments brief: bar a couple of episodes of curatorial incontinence, it was really rather fantastic, with works by Tino Sehgal, Pierre Huyghe, and Lara Favaretto, providing particular high points. In terms of solo shows, Michael Krebber’s almost-but-not-quite a retrospective ‘Les escargots ridiculisés’ at CAPC Bordeaux was an obvious winner, as was Matthew Day Jackson’s ‘In Search Of…’ at the GEM museum in The Hague, while Jess Flood-Paddock impressed with her exhibition ‘X’ at Grimm Gallery, Amsterdam – a strange and beguiling essay on love via the London plane tree, sea crustaceans, and alternative therapy. The young Danish artist Alexander Tovborg has had a run of exciting shows this year (Brand New Gallery, Milan, Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen, and The Hospitalhof, Stuttgart), all of which approached that most unfashionable of subjects, faith, in a way that feels both wide-eyed and curiously wise. At Sheffield’s S1 Gallery, Keith Wilson’s exhibition ‘Calendar’ was open for a single day – those who saw it could count themselves lucky to encounter, briefly, a work by one of the smartest British sculptors of his generation. London treats included Ed Atkin’s ‘Us Dead Talk Love’ at Chisenhale, Roger Hiorns at Corvi-Mora, and Tino Sehgal (again) at Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall.

OTHERTHINGS:

2012 saw the welcome return of two pretty much peerless TV shows – Channel 4’s pitiless sitcom Peep Show, and HBO’s improbably enjoyable fantasy epic Game of Thrones. Albums keeping me company included Miguel’s Kaleidoscope Dream and Frank Ocean’s channel ORANGE, while Ned Beaumann’s The Teleportation Accident and Helen DeWitt’s Lightning Rods (published in 2012 in the UK) were reminders of the novel’s capacity to surprise, and delight. Having failed to see Michael Haneke’s Amour over the Christmas holidays, I’m afraid my default film of 2012 will have to be Joss Whedon’s Marvel Avengers Assemble. Also of note: Stewart Lee’s standup set ‘Carpet Remnant World’, Stanford professor Robert P. Harrison’s podcast Entitled Opinions (essentially Melvyn Bragg’s In Our Time on smart drugs), and the literary websites thewhitereview.org and themillions.com.

REASONS TO BE CHEERFULFOR 2013:

There are some intriguing group shows on the horizon – Massimiliano Gioni’s Venice Biennale, of course, but also Brian Dillon’s ‘Curiosity: Art & The Pleasure of Knowing’, at Turner Contemporary, Margate, and ‘Indifferent Matter: From Object to Sculpture’ at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, both of which promise intellectually stimulating meditations on the fretful business of taxonomy and display. Later in the year, the British artists Cullinan Richards will curate an as-yet-untitled show at dispari&dispari, Reggio Emilia, Italy, that looks likely to push their ongoing explorations into the instability of painting into fascinating new terrain. I’m also looking forward to Dan Coopey bringing his witty and very stylish sculptures to London’s Gallery Vela, Matthew Darbyshire’s solo show at FRAC Nord Pas-de-Calais, Dunkerque, and to picking up a physical copy of Scott King’s recording ‘You’re My Favourite Artist’, a scabrously funny send-up of London art world mores that will be released by Vinyl Factory in early March.

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Jörg Heiser is co-editor frieze, and co-publisher frieze d/e


Richard Gerstl, semi-nude self-portrait, 1904/5

My highlights of 2012, organized by month (mostly including defining moment or favourite single work)

January
Animism, Generali Foundation, Vienna: Stimulating exhibition, curated by Anselm Franke. Animism: the idea that plants or animals are endowed with a soul, and that stones or bones or plastic toys are not dead, or at the very least become animated by our imagination; and how that affects social interactions. The show filled that concept – once considered primitive by positivist science, now reflecting a recent increase in interest as an aesthetic and social concept – with life: animating animism. My favourite part: a 19th century anonymous landscape that forms a face, paired with a somewhat similar piece by Salvador Dalí (Paranoic Visage, 1931): ‘Leaving through a stack of photographs, Dalí found what he thought was an unknown Picasso. Then he saw it was actually an African village’. Both pieces were ‘merely’ presented via illustrations in Stewart Guthrie’s amazing book Faces in the Clouds. A New Theory of Religion (1995), in a vitrine – but still.
(This travelling exhibition started already in 2010, on show first in Antwerp at Extra City Kunsthal and M HKA , then Kunsthalle Bern, but I first saw it in Vienna.)

Susan Hiller, Kunsthalle Nürnberg: I had seen Psi-Girls before – the 1999, 5-screen video installation featuring scenes of telekinetic girls, taken from Hollywood films from the 1970s through ‘80s. But this time I saw it in this survey of Hiller’s video work, together with my daughter of six, and it was great to see her as transfixed as I was; she danced frenetically to the percussive musical interludes. And just to note, Hiller’s work, from the 1970s on, has clairvoyantly anticipated many things that many younger artists are doing today.

February
Isa Genzken, Schinkel-Pavillon, Berlin: My favourite piece in this elegant and hilarious show of combine sculpture could almost be overlooked, hung behind the reception desk: a collage made of wallpaper, foil and lacquer, sketching the outline of a body, the head of which is a 1980s photograph of Genzken with her then-husband Gerhard Richter – a nod, somehow bold and subtle at once, in the direction of Richter’s vast retrospective exhibition that was on show at the same time over at Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie.

Willem de Rooij, Kunstverein München. A show of blissfully gleaming, hand-woven abstract tapestries that dealt with the question whether it is possible to escape what de Rooij calls ‘referential terror’, the tendency of contemporary artists to bathe in the glory of whatever intellectual or art historic sources they cite in their work. Coming from an artist who himself has made work that is all about reference, the tapestries reminiscent of Bauhaus ideals exposed the paradox rather than offering a way out. My favourite title: Taping Precognitive Tribes (2012), an anagram of… well, of what? Was it Perceptive Bigot Straining? Or was it Brave Nice Ego-Trip Spitting? Or Abortive Genetics Tripping? Or Big Painting Retrospective? I can’t remember.

Albert Oehlen, Kunstmuseum Bonn.‘In every good art work, there is a problem and the solution comes as a surprise’, says Oehlen in the catalogue accompanying this concise survey of 40 paintings dating from 1988 to 2012. And indeed a series of recent canvasses pleasantly surprised with a loose, collagey attitude uncharacteristic for Oehlen’s busy, bursting abstractions of previous years. A palette of fresh spring hues spreads across the white picture plane like psychedelic fume – but it is contrasted with stuck-on cut-outs from supermarket ad leaflets, featuring meat filets, garden furniture, or tennis socks with German flag stripes. The problem: painting being too much in love with its own grace; the solution: a surprisingly healthy dose of bad taste.

March
Joel Sternfeld, FOAM, Amsterdam. I thought I had had sort of an idea of what Sternfeld’s photography is about before I realized its depth and scope over four decades in this survey. It seems almost each series he’s done served as a cue for other photographer-artists to later built whole careers on: urban street photography, flash in the face and seen with an eye for staging, anticipating Philip Lorca di Corcia; suburban big format scenes reminiscent of Jeff Wall; vistas avant Andreas Gursky; scene of the crime documentations predating David Goldblatt, to name but a few. The aforementioned artists did manage to unfold their respective, original visual language; still it was striking to see how Sternfeld had sown a good part of the seeds. I especially loved the image of the adolescent son with his father in too tight pants, in front of their suburban house.

April


Tova Mozard, The Big Scene, 2010, film still

Tova Mozard, Hazelblad Center, Gothenburg, Sweden. It’s impressive how this young Swedish artist extracts fresh imagery from seemingly well-trodden ground – the photographic staging of scenes reminiscent of Hollywood Americana, Hitchcock/Lynch, and of (post-)oedipal dramas featuring fatherly figures or the artist’s actual mother and grandmother. Her single-shot video portrait of Cowboy Russ (2008) is striking: he retells in detail a duel scene from The Magnificient Seven (1960) standing in a drab little flat, and she captures his vulnerability, his anxiousness, by simply letting the camera run longer than he thought she would.

Brian O’Doherty, Galerie Thomas Fischer, Berlin. O’Doherty, apart from having written the modern classic Inside the White Cube (1976), is a conceptual artist, a Booker-Prize-nominated novelist, an art critic and art magazine editor, a television presenter, a curator, a former medical doctor, and not least, a bearer of multiple selves. In Berlin he showed a small, concise selection of art work since the 1960s, including a new example from his ongoing series of ‘Rope-Drawings’ (drawings involving geometric patterns applied directly onto a corner of the room which in turn relate to thin white ropes stretched across the room in such a manner that these elements together form a drawing, a painting, a flickering back-and-forth between 2- and 3-dimensionality).

The medical doctor joined the conceptual artist for one of O’Doherty’s most impressive pieces: in 1966, he took an electrocardiogram of Marcel Duchamp. Duchamp’s heartbeat is translated into the dance of a single oscillograph line in a box on the wall, which in Berlin one approached from a distance, at the end of a narrow passage, a bit like a saint’s relics. The concept of the readymade is applied to its own maker (the ‘found’ heartbeat), while its emphasis on the banal object is first disembodied (it’s actually not an object but ‘just’ light) and then re-invested with bodily qualities, in fact with the hauntingly ambivalent aspect of human existence itself: simultaneously triumphal (I’m alive!) and vulnerable (I could be dead any minute…).

Tino Sehgal, Villa Sarasin, Geneva. This was (more than just) the test-run to Sehgal’s much-praised instalment at dOCUMENTA (13). The latter deserves the praise, but it was especially rewarding to see the piece unfold, delicately, with only a few visitors present at a time, in a beautiful old villa on the outskirts of Geneva, with Sehgal’s interpreters finding their way into navigating the long, winding road of the dramaturgy of songs and monologues, gentle gestures and choral humming in the dark.

Dieter Roth, Museum Moderner Kunst, Salzburg. Dieter Roth’s work has been widely shown and discussed in recent years, but there are always and still magic moments to be discovered: here, for me it was a 1979 note that Roth had apparently left for his studio assistant asking him to deal with a couple of invoices – the note in fact being inserted as speech bubbles into a comic panel featuring Batman and Superman, and a villain whose head Roth had quickly painted to look like his own. Now isn’t that a great illustration of the grand idea of merging art and life.

Robert Longo, Capitain Petzel, Berlin. Longo’s large-scale black-and-white drawings are quite impressive, but his 60 minute performance piece shown in the basement of the gallery on the opening night was a real surprise._ 45 People Simultaneously Reading “Moby Dick” by Herman Melville_ (2012) provides what the title suggests, with the performers in black clothes evenly distributed on a large wooden platform with ropes around it, halfway between a ship’s deck and a boxing ring. The sound produced was, as one might assume, at first cacophonous and pretty loud; but once one zoomed in one could experience individuals trying to do their best at reading passionately, or accurately, or impressively from that great bible of the American soul – a virtual menagerie of human talent, ambition and vanity, very similar to the Internet in fact: as said, halfway between a ship’s deck and a boxing ring.

May
In the Whitney Biennial, New York, Nick Mauss’s installation was amongst my favourites. It combined the staging of a remade 1939 interior – an antechamber in a Parisian cosmetic company originally designed by Christian Bérard – with works from the Whitney’s collection, including a beautiful 1940 painted portrait of a hairy-chested man by Marsden Harley, a serial photographic piece by Warhol of a bicycle rider’s crotch, and an image of Helio Oiticica sporting nothing but one of his own ‘Parangolés’ –pieces to be watched and worn, halfway between canvas and cloak – and glancing over his shoulder with eye-lids half closed. The feelings and connotations evoked by the constellation was summed up in Mauss’s title: Concern, Crush, Desire.

Dana Schutz, Petzel, New York. Schutz’s painted figurations always keep me interested, thanks to her bold willingness to explore the dark dungeons of awkwardness and embarrassment, and to constantly rail with the brush against the impossibility of depicting them in a single image thus doing so nevertheless. Here, what cheered me up especially was a series of small canvasses of women yawning.

Lygia Pape, Pinacoteca, Saõ Paulo. This show had been at the Serpentine in London beforehand, but I caught it during a Brazil trip. I had seen Pape’s huge installation of rays of golden strings in Venice, but to see all her visceral video work (close-ups of mouths; musicians and the artist jumping out of paper cubes like jack-out-of-the-box) and her beautiful three-dimensional paper foldings – most of which kept with a 7’’ or 12’’ inch square format, as if to subtly allude to the immense importance of music records for Brazilian culture. I liked that Pape also made trashy-pulpy cinema posters like the one for Nelson Ferreira Dos Santo’s film Mandacaru Vermelho (1961).

Milton Machado, SP-arte, Saõ Paulo. Two amazing drawings by Milton Machado shown by gallery Nara Roessler at SP-arte in Saõ Paulo: (+) x () (1976) is the architectural fantasy of the construction of a convention centre from layers of black and white slices, as if created in a struggle between positive and negative space, sort of half way between Constant’s networks and Oscar Niemeyer’s curves (see my obituary here), which felt apt given the piece was shown in Niemeyer’s Biennial building. The second drawing switches from Macro to Micro-perspective: Evoluçaõ do meu pé chato (Evolution of my flatfoot, 1977), features the artist’s foot print, accompanied by three construction drawings projecting the foot’s mutation from foot to wood plane.

Martin Gostner, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin. A single piece or ‘intervention’ entitled Erker der blauen Pferde (Oriel of the Blue Horses, 2012), as part of Gostner’s ongoing series of works under the header of ‘Erker’ – placements or creations of (sculptural) works in unforeseen sites, unannounced until established, from open rural fields that used to be a battleground in Italy to, as in this case, the sculpture garden platform around Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie. Gostner made resin casts of horse apples dyed in a blue chosen to be as close as possible to the blue in Franz Marc’s Der Turm der Blauen Pferde (The Tower of Blue Horses, 1913), which once was in the collection of Berlin’s National Gallery but had been lost during WWII (its last ‘owner’ was Hermann Göring). The droppings provoked probing shoe-tipping, as well as the image of Marc’s horses, before galloping away, having left an aptly modest, street-level, if fuck-you commentary on the vertical grandiosity and spectacle of any other cultural utterance nearby.

Duncan Campbell, Manifesta, Genk, Belgium. I hadn’t seen Campbell’s film Make it New John (2009) until its inclusion in Manifesta; it’s about the strange story of a car – the DMC-12, a stainless steel sports car best known as time machine in the ‘Back to the Future’ films – built in Northern Ireland in the 1970s on initiative of American entrepreneur John De Lorean: from dreams of prosperity to the grand disillusionment of bankruptcy, with the investor flying home in a Concorde. The documentary footage Campbell excavated from the vaults of television is fascinating to start with, but he increased the fascination by including some of the left-out bits from the cutting-room floor – the awkward moments of, say, politicians inspecting a factory plant normally not made part of a quick newsreel – as well as entirely staged scenes in period style.

June
Superflex, TBA 21, Vienna. The TBA 21 art institute has started its programme at its new site this year: Atelier Augarten, the former studio of the Austrian ‘state sculptor’ Gustinus Ambrosi, whom was a portraitist not only of Mussolini but also championed an overblown triumphal style of sculpture well in tune with the aesthetics favoured by the Nazis (In 1942 Albert Speer commissioned him to do a marble sculpture to be called Maiden with Cow for the new Reich Chancellery in Berlin). As the inaugural show, an appropriate documentary exhibition exploring Ambrosi’s archive was paired with Superflex’ project of a pair of life cows living outside the building for the duration of the exhibition, descendent from the very Tirolian cow that had been the model for Ambrosi, and with whom the sculptor had apparently fallen madly in love with – literally, erotically. There is an image on display of him embracing her head, and once you see it you will understand.


Meshac Gaba, Marriage Room: Museum of Contemporary African Art, 2000-09, dimensions variable, installation view

Meshac Gaba, Paris Triennial. Gaba’s installation Marriage Room: Museum of Contemporary African Art (2000–2009). I had always thought the worst thing any artist could do is to declare an intimate act involving or demanding someone else’s consent – including people who can’t give that consent because they are too young, too sick, or otherwise not enabled to judge the situation – a piece of art: giving birth, putting someone dying on display etc. I just felt that this kind of ‘real-life’ readymade would inevitably be pretentious or cynical or both. All the more was I pleasantly surprised how Gaba’s piece is neither. It’s about his own marriage to his Dutch spouse, and involves objects relating to his and his wife’s respective backgrounds, in a way that plays on both anthropological museum displays as well as flee market stands, transcending the limits of cultural cliché, as well as circumventing the pitfalls of the ‘real life’ readymade.

Mount Fuji doesn’t exist, Le Plateau, Paris. Conceived and installed by Elodie Royer and Yoann Gourmel, this exhibition featured works that are, to quote the curators, ‘free from any ostentation or spectacular quality, in favour of day-to-day actions’, resulting in the art work being ‘embodied everywhere and nowhere at once’. This may sound almost a little over-exaggerated, since even the most ephemeral art work does become embodied in a precise location once it’s made part of a white cube group exhibition such as this, but in any case the show included an array of gentle and pleasurable surprises, from a lost James Lee Byars exhibition being reconstructed by the curators by merely pointing out the points in the room where the respective piece would have been installed, to documentations of the joyous and strangely beautiful actions of the Japanese artist group The Play that was founded in the 1960s and is still occasionally operating. My favourite piece of theirs involves a giant egg being floated on the sea, with them inside.


Trisha Donnelly,Untitled, 2010–ongoing. Commissioned and produced by dOCUMENTA (13). Photograph: Nils Klinger

Jérôme Bel, Trisha Donelly at dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel. Trisha Donelly’s opaquely beautiful, abstract, silent film loop was screened continuously in an ordinary Kassel cinema. Darkly grey flickering and shining patterns suggested, in equal measures, veils in a breeze and digital error, as if one was watching not a film but the ghost of a film. I enjoyed that piece, not only because it managed to strangely mesmerize and puzzle my eyes but also because it also seemed to comment on the demise of cinema without the least bit of sentimentalism or nostalgia.

As for Jérôme Bel’s theatre piece Disabled Theatre (2012) – it just blew my mind (why that was the case I discussed in the second half of my blog response to “documenta“http://blog.frieze.com/documenta13-day-three-off-the-main-sites-central-kassel/ ).

July
In July I was on holidays, seeing no art at all. Instead I read books, watched great television series, and listened to music (not that I don’t do that during the rest of the year, but more of it then). In any case I take this as an excuse to list some of the things I watched, read, and listened to all through this year, and that I enjoyed.

TELEVISION: stand-up comedian Louie C.K.’s show Louie, all three seasons, pushed what Larry David has achieved with Curb Your Enthusiasm in an even more daring, awkward, sardonically self-effacing direction – while Lena Dunham’s Girls’ first season started okay and got better and brilliant, bringing the disarming Judd-Apatow-comedy logic of slapstick colliding with love tribulation to the world of TV sitcom; the first season of Danish-Swedish crime series The Bridge, with its Aspergerish Swedish homicide detective Sofia Helin, was scary/deadpan/uncanny; Homeland, the thriller series about the CIA trying to prevent terrorist attacks, makes me feel uncomfortable about its politics the way ‘24’ did, in fact maybe even more so, because it comes with a veneer of liberal values, but I couldn’t stop watching it nevertheless, with its visual language and storytelling almost as eloquent as that of Breaking Bad; talking about it, the first half of the final season of Breaking Bad ended with a DEA agent sitting on his brother-in-law’s toilet having a huge Eureka moment, and it’s close to torture to let us viewers wait for almost a year to see what the guy does next – now that is a new definition of the cliff hanger: the toilet seater??!; and ok, I admit, me and my partner Sarah also perversely enjoyed watching Downton Abbey– despite of the evil lesbian lady’s maid, the gay valet she manipulates to do evil things, and all the other bullshit politics that presumably play a part in making it the favourite of David Cameron; I guess it’s a bit like watching porn – class porn? Everyone has to know their position…

On a lighter note, I loved Will Ferrell’s appearance on the Jimmy Fallon Show (promoting his great The Campaign movie; I didn’t get much to the cinema this year, something I want to change…), with his instant hit ‘I got my tight pants on’. “Don’t wake the Snake!!!”)
MUSIC: It was the year, for me, of a surprise return of HipHop/R&B. I thought everything had been rapped and done, but then came, of course, Frank Ocean with his channel Orange album, and the epic close to 10 minutes masterpiece ‘Pyramids’: check out the incredible psychedelic Synth-break 4.30 minutes into it. ‘Bad Religion’ is another favourite track. Other highlights in that vein include Miguel’sKaleidoscope Dream album, especially the dramatic synth-cascades of ‘Don’t look back’; Canadian The Weeknd’s album Trilogy; and the haunted minimal R&B of How to Dress Well, especially the track ‘Cold Nites’.

As for HipHop, Kendrick Lamar’s album good kid, m.A.A.d. city on Dr. Dre’s aftermath label stood out, but really it was the year of female rappers: ‘Werkin’ Girls’ by Angel Haze is a fantastic rap track; Azealia Banks rocked with her enthusiastically raunchy ‘212’ track, as well as with ‘Atlantis’; and Nicki Minaj is always fun (especially if she puts on what I know must be annoying to anyone living in the UK, her ‘Werkin’ Girls’ by Angel Haze is a fantastic rap track; Brit accent), and she can even persuade me to listen to cheesy Euro Trash beats thanks to her funny and inventive raps, but if the music is daringly minimal and inventive as well as with her ‘Come on a Cone’, then indeed, to quote Minaj, her ‘shit is so cold it belong in Alaska’.

Otherwise, I rediscovered Brazilian music after my first trip to the country in May. Seminal albums mostly from the early 1970s I heard for the first time this year include Jorge Ben’sA Tabua de Esmeralda (1974), Joaõ Bosco’s 1973 debut album, and Acabou Chorare by Novos Baianos from 1972. I knew quite a bit by Chico Buarque, but strangely I had missed his stunning ‘Construção’ (1971). So also counting in Caetano Veloso’s 1972 Transa, within just three years, all these masterpieces came out (and there are more). But not that there’s no new stuff, even by the veterans: Recanto by Bahian singer Gal Costa, its subtle mixture of minimal electronics and soft guitar produced by her long-time fellow Veloso, is the best comeback album in a long long time (watch her goose-bump-amazing live singing on television). Lucas Santtana’s 2012 album O Deus Que Devasta Mas Também Cura shows there are innovative, new approaches to the old Tropicalia formula.

My bet for a future pop star: Ariel Pink. Seeing Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti live in Berlin made be a believer: how the band translated lo-fi sardonic dreamer pop into energetic life mode, while Pink would sing the first three songs from backstage, via projected video – and did so as an elegant Bowie, an abrasively cheerful Cobain, a deadpan Jarvis Cocker all at the same time.

BOOKS: John Ajvide Lindqvist’sHarbour (of 2010) is one of the best mystery thrillers I’ve came across in recent years (Lindqvist is the same author on whose eponymous book the Swedish vampire film ‘Let The Right One In’ is based). It features two Zombie-like creatures whom exclusively speak in quotes from Morrissey lyrics. My kinda Stephen King. You might mistake Patrick Rothfuss’sKingkiller Chronicle for cheesy Tolkin fantasy stuff, set as it is in some magic middle ages, but apart from the fact that it’s great suspense, where do you get that kind of stuff reflecting the hero’s troubles at raising his university tuitions? Sheila Heti’sHow Should a Person Be? is the kind of novel that we need more of – not caring much about all these tired expectations of the ‘well-crafted’ story, while not giving in to all too easy concepts of meta-(non)-fiction doodling either, really probing the literary exploration of contemporary young female (but not only female) experience. I’ve started reading Lynne Tillman’s fiction this year, and loved her short story collection Some Day This Will Be Funny (2011). Most of the non-fiction stuff I read this year was not of this year: Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger’sThe Invention of Tradition (2000) makes a clear point that most nationalist traditions were in fact invented in the 19th century; I started to read Vladimir Majakovsky’s collected works, and was amazed how fresh and daring his early poetry is; Caetano Veloso’s memoir Tropical Truth (2003) is a brilliant account of the Tropicalia movement; Leon Festinger’sA Theory of Cognitive Dissonance (1957) helps to understand contemporary collective fantasy’s such as the Mayan end of the world, as much as it helps to understand contemporary art.

August
I’m running out of time and space with this round-up, so I’ll hurry up a bit. Alexandra Bircken’s solo at Kunstverein Hamburg offered great sculptural inventiveness.

And August brought the appalling verdict against Pussy Riot, which shows Russia on the verge of becoming a Fascist state – or is it already? Sending two young mothers to two years of penal colony in rural Ural for being intelligent, political and rebellious is pointing in the direction, in any case. Which leaves Westerners with the task to show solidarity while not taking themselves too seriously doing so (as if they could bathe in the glory of rebellion remotely). Indie-rock-dadism is annoying and needs to be fought against, and there is persistent sexism in the music industry, but Pussy Riot are – bravely – about taking on even bigger opponents: the state church, dictatorial leaders; therefore it’s questionable to take Pussy Riot’s aesthetics – the masks, the punk rock, the Foucault quotes – as an excuse for desperate attempts to get marketable attention. More generally speaking, what is brave in one place might be complacent in another.

September


Monica Bonvicini, exhibition view at Collection Falckenberg/Deichtorhallen

Again, Hamburg: Monica Bonvicini’s show of work in drawings from 25 years at Collection Falckenberg/Deichtorhallen made clear to me how that medium actually for her is ‘more’ than just a space for sketching and modelling sculptures and installation, but a medium of humour and grace in its own right.

Sharyar Nashat, Silberkuppe, Berlin: eloquent abstraction, spandex body suits in greenscreen green.

Rodney Graham’s ‘Super-Heavy Flute’ record edition, which I came across at Jörg Johnen Gallery in Berlin, is really enjoyable!

Mike Nelson, Galerie Neugerriemschneider. In a temporary location at Gartenstraße, Nelson transformed an empty old building by almost not transforming it. An inserted staircase, a wooden stage, a single spotlight, and not much else, created a precise, haunting, moving experience.

October

Fort, Galerie Crone, Berlin: the young artist group re-invigorated the seemingly tired idea of the supermarket readymade by transplanting an entire interior of a ‘Schlecker’ pharmacy – a chain that recently had gone bankrupt, bringing up issues of exploitation of low-paid female workers in the aftermath – to the gallery. The crucial point was how they did it: as you entered the gallery you just saw a freestanding wall – the back of the shelves, which dawned on you only after traversing the entire space, finally seeing the empty shelves and cashier. From abstraction to bleak reality literally within one short walk.

Tino Sehgal, Tate Modern, London: I was quite sceptical because I knew what a problem crowds are to Sehgal’s work. In fact I remember him saying in the early 2000s how much he disliked exhibition openings, because he felt the presence of a crowd made the proper experience of his work – the encounter with his ‘interpreters’ or protagonists enacting the piece, whether it involves movements or verbal exchange or both – impossible. Surprisingly, not so, even in the train-station-like atmosphere of the Turbine Hall. The answer to the problem was to make the protagonists a crowd themselves – a crowd with its own logic of movement and exchange, unison or not. And then to have individuals peel away from it and approach random visitors to engage them in conversations that were sometimes a little silly, sometimes sad, but in any case disarming, probing ones willingness to test where the conversation could lead to.

Some critics furrow their brows harbouring strong reservations against Sehgal’s supposed fetishization of the body and dialogical activity of his protagonists, at times of exploitation in the neo-liberal service industries – which to me is as laughable as saying that, say, Édouard Manet by painting bourgeois gentlemen with top hats was a sinister supporter of the fierce exploitation of the working class.

Oliver Laric, online. Laric showed some of his work at the Frieze Talks. I had seen quite a bit of his work ‘live’, but this presentation made me realize what a treasure chest his website is, leading you in all sorts of different directions. For example with the many versions, made by online users, of his green screen version of a Mariah Carey video clip. How contemporary art can go viral.

Alessio delli Castelli, gallery Dan Gunn, Berlin. What a smart debut show for this new gallery. Especially loved the Warburgian collages.

November
Real fun at the ‘Naked Men’ exhibition at Leopold Museum in Vienna (there was also an exhibition called ‘The Naked Man’ at Lentos museum in Linz, Austria, but apparently no direction connection, apart from the theme itself). An absolute highlight was a semi-nude self-portrait of 1904/5 by Richard Gerstl, a young Viennese painter who had been the lover of Arnold Schoenberg’s wife Mathilde and committed suicide in 1908, at the age of 25.


Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam. Photograph: John Lewis Marshall

Re-opened Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam: two paintings shown across from each other in the corner captured my attention: Nola Hatterman’s portrait, in the style of Neue Sachlichkeit, of the Surinamese boxer, barman and carbaret artist Jimmy van der Lak, sitting Gentleman-style on the terrace of a café (On The Terrace, 1930, acquired by the Stedeliijk in 1931). And Johan van Hell’sMusical Saw of 1934 (acquired in 1935), which shows two street musicians, with a policeman in the background, and the musical saw bent between the legs of the seated fellow being an obvious and ironic allusion to a phallus, and the persecution of homosexuals. Two great paintings of Dutch artists I had never heard of before, reminding me that museum collections are still full of stuff waiting to be rediscovered.

December
I finally managed to see all three Caravaggios in Naples in three different locations: The Seven Works of Mercy (1607) at a chapel, The Flagellation of Christ (1607) at Capo di Monte Museum, and his very last painting, The Matyrdom of Saint Ursula (1610), at a former bank. Can’t get enough of it.

Reasons to be cheerful in 2013:
Thomas Bayrle at WIELS, Brussels, February; Franz West at MUMOK, Vienna, in February; Werner Büttner, ZKM, Karlsruhe, April; Anri Sala in the German Pavilion, which will in fact be the French Pavilion, at the Venice Biennale; Louise Lawler at Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Isa Genzken at MoMA, New York, and Laura Lima at Migros Museum, Zurich, in November. In February, the release of Azealia Banks’ debut album. The second season of Girls, and the last eight episodes of Breaking Bad. Can’t wait.

An Interview with James Langdon on the Legacy of designer Norman Potter

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By Annie Godfrey Larmon

An Interview with James Langdon on the Legacy of designer Norman Potter

James Langdon's re-staging of Norman Potter's 1974 play, 'In:quest of Icarus', at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, December 2012. Photo: Courtesy James Langdon

The opening pages of the script for Norman Potter’s 1974 play ‘In:quest of Icarus’ inform audience members that the first characters that will appear on stage are themselves. A slide projector, a light bulb, a drum, and the hall that contains the audience are likewise listed as players in the event.

In 1964, Potter, an English designer and educator, co-founded the Construction School, an experimental design programme at the West of England College of Art in Bristol. His unconventional approach to design pedagogy favoured interdisciplinarity and collaboration, and was met by institutional resistance, which fuelled his increasingly anti-authoritarian ethos. In:quest of Icarus, an allegorical meditation on Potter’s struggles against the institution, diverges substantially in tone from his other more pragmatic writings, and includes dense and convoluted appropriations of Greek myth and original poetry. It has been staged only once before, by Potter’s students, on 5 December 1974.

Nearly 40 years later, graphic designer James Langdon has begun an extensive research project on Potter and his teachings. With a methodology that might align with Potter’s, Langdon has taken an experiential approach to his re-staging of Icarus at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, in collaboration with a group of students from Werkplaats Typografie in Arnhem. In fidelity to the original production, Langdon and the students constructed the isomorphic set and rehearsed in the theatre for three days prior to the performance. These days of preparation, together with the performance – all of which were open to an audience – constituted the work.

On 2 December 2012, at the Stedelijk’s Teijin Auditorium, the character ‘Speaker’, played by a student from Werkplaats, introduced the show with the announcement: ‘Ladies and Gentleman … I am the Speaker and I shall have a few things to say, but don’t twist your heads off looking. As you can see, I’m one of yourselves and, therefore, one of the same people in this carry-on …’ The audience he addressed was seated among the other performers, each on a grid of circular black carpet samples that together mimicked the keys of a typewriter. At the fore of the stage, slides featuring typographical forms and Pieter Bruegel’s Landscape with the Fall of Icarus (c. 1590–95) were projected onto a constructed white wall that doubled as a sheet of paper feeding into the larger apparatus.

Langdon and his students delivered their lines with scripts in hand and a sort of measured clumsiness that emphasized that the centre of the production’s gravity was not a spectacle, but rather the relational networks produced by the process of the performance. The expanded cast of the play (the projector, the audience), the unpolished delivery, and the unfolding durational nature of the public rehearsals are among the various de-centralizations that illustrate Potter’s methodological investments.

The staging ran alongside an exhibition at the Kunstverein in Amsterdam that featured Landgon’s archival research and constructions based on Potter’s pedagogical methods by artists Daniel Hofstede and Benjamin Roth. Both are part of Langdon’s larger, unfolding project, which has manifested and will manifest in several venues, eventually culminating in a publication. In December 2012 I spoke to Langdon about Norman Potter’s legacy.

How did you come across Norman Potter, and what about his practice initially resonated with you?

Around 2000, I discovered his first book, What is a Designer, through the reputation of its current publisher Hyphen Press, an independent design publisher in London. I had just graduated from art school and was working as a graphic designer. I remember feeling the book was rather boring, not a sexy idea of design – it famously has no pictures. But that was part of Potter’s philosophy. He might have said that design students shouldn’t be looking at small pictures of designed objects – they should be trying to understand those objects as the products of forces beyond aesthetics. What I find important about Potter’s teaching is his emphasis on communication in design processes, on asking questions and understanding a given situation to the fullest degree possible. It’s a more fluid and negotiable idea of design, and a system of values based on seeing a work of design as a response to a specific set of circumstances.

An Interview with James Langdon on the Legacy of designer Norman Potter

Norman Potter’s ‘What is a Designer’, originally published in 1969.

Two years ago I was invited to do a project at Spike Island, a studio and gallery space in Bristol, England, and I remembered a chapter in Potter’s book about the Construction School, which he co-founded in Bristol in 1964. Prompted by this invitation, I reread the book and began contacting students and teachers from the school. I was given generous help in that process by Robin Kinross, the publisher of Potter’s books at Hyphen Press. Jim Wood, one of Potter’s assistants at the school, had a large collection of documents, as did Robin, and gradually other students and teachers have contributed things. When I started I thought the project would just be this research, but I’ve since been asked to present it in various contexts. Earlier in the summer there was an event in Zurich, and now Amsterdam. There will be two final presentations in Bristol in 2013. As I’ve done these events in Europe I’ve been surprised that Potter isn’t very well known by the current generation of students. He was a prominent designer in a certain scene that informed my early perspective on design, in particular through the journal Dot Dot Dot. That unfamiliarity has forced an emphasis on the storytelling part of my project, and that is exciting to me.

Are you compiling an archive?

Yes, although the archive will inevitably be incomplete. But people have given me documents, so now I have a responsibility to the material. The exhibition at Kunstverein in Amsterdam was about introducing Potter and his teaching to an audience, but my motivation to study this material is more particular. What interests me isn’t so much displaying the work of the school’s students, but rather considering Potter’s ideas about how the school would be organized – the spatial questions, and the ‘staging’ of design education.

In the later phase of the school, Potter instituted The Arena. Instead of organizing students by year or discipline they formed ‘family groups’. Each informal family would include students from different years and interests who would collaborate on projects and were free to configure their studios and structure their programmes and time as they wanted. The Arena united these families through a space of ‘critical disputation’. The important idea was that the Arena represented the institution, but that it should be thought of as providing a critical service to the family groups.

What is it about Potter’s approach to interdisciplinary and experimental pedagogies that seems particularly relevant to re-examine today?

Potter’s project was radical in spirit. Experimentation with the organization of education was flourishing internationally, particularly in California, so it was not novel in that sense, but for Potter to attempt something of this nature in a provincial English context was very bold. For a bit of background: in the early 1960s in England, there was a political feeling that art and design education outside of London were too variable in standard, and that there should be a new national qualification that would bring courses to university standard. The Chairman of the National Advisory Council on Art Education, William Coldstream, issued the Coldstream Report, and every college that wanted to offer the new standard, called the Diploma in Art and Design (Dip.AD), had to apply for accreditation. Potter came to Bristol from the Royal College of Art in London at this time, as a result of the West of England College of Art (at Bristol) failing to gain accreditation. He wanted to call the programme ‘Construction’, which immediately conflicted with the national guidelines under which the course had to be called ‘Interior Design’, a term Potter would probably have hated.

An Interview with James Langdon on the Legacy of designer Norman Potter

‘In:quest of Icarus’ performed at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Photo by Ernst van Deursen

I noticed that Potter was interested in flattened hierarchies when the script was distributed at the performance. He listed the mundane aspects of the set and the audience as participants within this event. Have you read much about his theoretical investments at the time?

In 1968 there was a significant student protest at Hornsey College of Art in London. Potter attended the Hornsey sit-in, where the students took over the college. This protest was important because of its very constructive nature. The students self-organized their own programme of visiting speakers, occupying the main hall and inviting guests to lecture there. This lasted several months, but authority was eventually restored and the old administration came back and took control again. Potter writes in his correspondence about being profoundly moved by what he saw at Hornsey. That experience seemed to be the main impetus for the play. He presents Icarus as this idealist embodiment of that student energy – it’s about resistance, but also about naïveté and vulnerability. The suppression of that energy is what the play covers.

An Interview with James Langdon on the Legacy of designer Norman Potter

‘In:quest of Icarus’, photo courtesy James Langdon

It seems there is a tension between a desire to remain faithful to the documentation of the original performance (and the control that is required to make sure that happens) and a methodology that is specifically anti-authoritarian, as the project was originally navigated. Were you able to cede some of the authorship function to the students or did you still feel like a gatekeeper trying to maintain certain parameters that pursued a loyalty to Potter’s production?

I definitely thought we shouldn’t change anything about the script. When I agreed to present the play in the Stedelijk Museum, I hadn’t anticipated what that would mean. I liked the idea of performing in a gallery rather than in a school – the original performance was at the Construction School. I thought that re-framing was enough to suggest the impossibility of doing it quite in the sprit of the original. But the Stedelijk is necessarily bureaucratic, since it is a large public organization. It actually served as a brilliant casting of the labyrinth – our presence there required such a complicated effort on behalf of the museum staff that it really suited the production wonderfully. For me the purpose of the re-staging was to try to make a full representation of Potter’s most significant work as a poet, purely for the purposes of accessing it, being able to consider it as a performance and not only a text. I told the students we were doing it as an experiment, to try to get to an understanding of the work. I think it was easier for them to relate to that than to cast them in the same spirit as the original performers of the work, for whom the events of 1968 were much more immediately relevant.

An Interview with James Langdon on the Legacy of designer Norman Potter

Ticket to Norman Potter’s ‘In:quest of Icarus’

Potter’s second book, ‘Models and Constructs’, contains largely pragmatic chapters – ‘Wall Units for Production’, ‘The Work-Station’ – but then there are love poems towards the end, ‘Retrospects of Love’, and this play, ‘In:quest of Icarus’. How do you see his poetry as contradicting, estranging or fitting into Potter’s larger project?*

He spoke of his career as being characterized by phases of intense concentration on particular activities; the main three being designing, teaching and writing. I suppose the thing that unites these is Potter’s sense of the gravity of the age that he lived in, a kind of disgust at the trivial aspects of culture. He was intensely aware of what was at stake in design and technology in the 20th century. In 1969 he wrote, ‘I have always seen our central experiences as twofold: technology on the one hand, and our twentieth century experience of Auschwitz, of supreme suffering, on the other. I believe that every aspect of our working assumptions must respect, and in some sense face up to, those facts of experience, and we ignore them at peril of irrelevance or infantilism.’ I don’t think poetry for him was a form of relief from his other work; rather, he seemed to consider all of his creative production with the same seriousness, as part of the same effort.

Postcard from Tehran

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By Daria Kirsanova

Postcard from Tehran

Tehran is a strange city: a huge metropolis of 12 million people with an impressive network of highways hosting overwhelmingly unruly traffic, it is at the same time the capital of a religious state hell bent on restraining its society with the straitjacket of tradition. Contradictory and against the odds are terms that can be equally applied to Tehran as a city, Iran as a country and the Iranian contemporary art world as a social phenomenon. A multitude of difficulties – lack of funding, lack of public institutional structure, unpropitious university curricula (neither contemporary art nor related theory are welcomed as topics of academic research), have not prevented the emergence of a vibrant and diverse contemporary art scene, including a growing gallery system that aspires to the ‘professional’ status it holds in the West.

Postcard from Tehran

Mural on a street in Tehran

I first went to Iran in 2010, after having heard a lot about the censorship and other troubles that artists and filmmakers encounter in the country, and was surprised to discover a number of galleries showing interesting and sophisticated conceptual art works charged with a political message. It was exactly a year after the suppression of the groundbreaking ‘Green Movement’ uprising of 2009 and artists including Amir Mobed, Shahab Fotouhi, Barbad Golshiri, Neda Razavipour, Mahmoud Bakhshi and Rozita Sharafjahan were trying to make sense of what happened during the months of protests. It was a moment both of reflection on the events and mourning for the individual victims, though not for the Green Movement as a political force.

This freedom of expression was – and very much remains – possible because of the marginal position of the visual arts in Iran; it is pretty much a world of its own. The galleries’ audience consists primarily of people involved in the arts in one way or another. Even now, the general public remains unaware of the existence of the galleries and to a large extent finds conceptual art practices unapproachable. Oddly, this position of contemporary art within the Iranian social context has been a huge advantage; it has allowed artists and galleries to work with degree of creative freedom. But things are changing.

My most recent trip to Tehran, last autumn, was my third and the longest so far. I stayed for a month and had a chance to observe the art scene in action. Though the political and economic situation in the country was noticeably more difficult, and Western media hysteria meant there were fewer foreign visitors, there as still a lot going on. In the two years since my first trip there, Tehran’s gallery scene had become both more prominent and more bourgeois.

Postcard from Tehran

Artist talk by Anahita Razmi at Sazmanab Platform for Contemporary Arts

The artist community’s response has seen a rise of not-for-profit project spaces, workshops and lively panel discussions. One of the oldest artist-run project spaces is Parking Gallery, which was founded by artist and curator Amirali Ghasemi. Since opening in 1998, it has become active internationally as well as in Iran. Another independent art space, Sazmanab, established in 2009, has developed a very strong programme of exhibitions, talks, screenings and international residencies. Its programme indicates a clear commitment to keep Tehran connected to international art networks and vice versa. One of the latest projects at the space was the exhibition ‘Hidden Screenplays’, put together by a young curator in residence from Turkey, Nesli Gül, with works by Kardelen Fincanci and Ismail Egler. The works specifically produced for this show were focused around the notion of obedience within different social structures, including the art world itself.

Postcard from Tehran

Daniel Kötter, ‘state-theatre Lagos/Tehran/Berlin’ (2011), installation view, Raf Gallery

The newly opened Raf gallery’s second show was an exhibition by German video artist and experimental filmmaker Daniel Kötter (also an artist-in-residence at Sazmanab). His three-part film state-theatre Lagos/Tehran/Berlin (2011) considered the architectural structures and uneasy histories of the spectacular opera theatre buildings in these three cities. During the exhibition, the gallery also hosted a talk on the role of cultural institutions within the urban context.

Postcard from Tehran

Rybon International Artists’ Workshop

Another fascinating collaboration, the Rybon International Artists’ Workshop, saw a commercial gallery – Mohsen Gallery – assume some of the features of a public space. This initiative, organized by Rybon Art Centre in collaboration with Sazmanab, saw artists from Iran, India, China, Lebanon and South Africa work together, buttressed by a series of talks, artist presentations and open studios. All this work culminated in the final two-week show. One of the most surprising works produced during the workshop was a minimalist painting collage by a photographer Katayoun Karami who until now has worked mainly in self-portraiture. It was refreshing to witness all these events and initiatives happening in Tehran in an attempt to fill the vacuum left by the lack of appropriate institutional structure.

Any conversation about art institutions in Iran is impossible without mentioning the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, which holds a great collection of Western art from Post-Impressionism to 1970s Minimalism and also used to be involved in the development of contemporary art practices in the country. Inaugurated in 1977, two years before the revolution of 1979, the museum was the first purpose built contemporary art museum in the world. In recent years, however, its activities have been curtailed dramatically and at present it seems to have no interaction with the actual contemporary art scene in Iran. At the time of my visit, the museum was showing a major exhibition of Günther Uecker, organised in collaboration with the German Embassy.

Postcard from Tehran

Sara Asefi, installation view of the group show ‘Out of Time’, Azad Gallery

The gallery scene in Tehran is tremendously dynamic, with the shows changing every one or two weeks art spaces here work at a different pace comparing to their Western counterparts who rotate their exhibitions every six or eight weeks. One of the highlights of my trip was seeing a solo show by Shahla Hosseini, a female artist not widely known internationally and who doesn’t show frequently even in Iran, but whose practice is fundamental to contemporary Iranian art discourse. Hosseini’s mixed media paintings and Joseph Beuys-inspired collages in glass vitrines were filled with personal, even sentimental, narratives. One of the most beautiful spaces in Tehran, the Aun Gallery, had a group show entitled ‘Extraterrestrial’, curated by Bobak Etminani and focused on painterly and sculptural abstraction.

Postcard from Tehran

‘Extraterrestrial’, installation view, curated by Bobak Etminani, Aun Gallery

Politics is present in every aspect of the urban life in Iran and artists are constantly seeking new points of engagement with political debates. Mojtaba Amini takes as his starting point the deeper controversies of Iranian society, looking beyond the most prominent issues of gender relations, war and nuclear ambition. His first solo show, at the Aaran gallery, reflected on the current situation in the country in work charged with anxiety about the future. The Azad gallery is probably the most experimental and open-minded commercial space in Tehran. I couldn’t help coming back there again to see, first, a brilliant exhibition by photographer Mehran Mohajer, whose practice is an ongoing enquiry in the possibilities of the medium. Just few hours before I left for the airport, I stopped by the gallery again to see ‘Out of Time’, a group show of exceptional quality by 18 recent art graduates. The exhibition asserted that the new generation of artists in Iran has a potential to take this art scene further, to develop more sophisticated language of artistic expression while keeping loyal to the social commitment. I look forward to be back in Iran to witness this happening.

Discursive Interventions into Russian Art

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By Andrey Shental

Discursive Interventions into Russian Art

George Loukomski, Factory Party Committee Meeting (1937), depicting a discussion between workers

During the last two years, several major projects have taken place in Moscow that challenged the traditional concept of the contemporary art exhibition by cross-pollinating it with different forms of collective experience: social clubs, excursions, local history museums, art schools, communal kitchens and Marxist meet-up groups.

Auditorium Moscow, E-flux Time/Food, Pedagogical Poem and Theoretical Studies of Cultural Anthropology: all of these projects, each in its own way, are examples of what amounts to a turn towards ‘discursive interventions’. They make one think that artists, critics, curators and philosophers decided to, using the words of German curator Marion von Osten, ‘create a space to pause, to hold on for a moment, take a breath and to think’ before making a step further. Even though this discursive turn is a critique of the usual succession of non-engaging mainstream exhibitions, it is also a reaction to particular social, political, and cultural conditions in Russia that should be elucidated.

Discursive Interventions into Russian Art

Roundtable with Ekaterina Degot and David Riff at the Belie Palaty museum (Photo by Maria Kushnir for Afisha magazine)

Critic Ekaterina Degot once said regarding the Russian art system: ‘…we don’t have anything completely. So far we only have artists, that’s what surprises me!’ Notwithstanding her ironic exaggeration, she is correct: there is no financial support system for artists, nor a developed art education comparable to European or American standards. Even recently opened independent art schools are nothing more than ‘Potemkin villages’, or, as Degot puts it, ‘palliative compromise options’. Art students are not properly taught how to conduct relevant research, how to speak and write about their own works, how to argue their case. After recent changes in Russian educational policy, one could lose all hope that the situation may ever improve. The new minister of culture Vladimir Medinsky – notorious for his xenophobic novels –decided to close or reform those universities that are not ‘effective’. Whereas he did not bother to properly explain what kind of effectiveness he’s after, we all know that an ‘effective’ university is the one that trains ‘cultural managers’ suitable for a capitalist service economy.

Apart from the deficiencies of art education, there is an even more serious problem: the absence of public spaces where artists could share their ideas. In the early 1990s when the Soviet art system collapsed, the so-called ‘Moscow Actionists’ – Oleg Kulik, Anatoly Osmolovsky and Alexander Brener – made their works in the streets of Moscow or even in the Red Square, while the main TV-channels willingly broadcasted these radical performances as ‘scandals’. The last twenty years, however, have witnessed a drastic consolidation of media control by the State. The streets and speech are increasingly controlled and monitored by police and censorship, respectively. It is especially strict when critique, art and activism are made from a leftist point of view, so this paradoxical situation has even been dubbed Russian ‘McCarthyism’ (a term used by Degot during one of the e-flux discussions). The shift towards a neoliberal market economy in the 1990s has also brought about the establishment of new galleries and museums exhibiting, selling and institutionalizing art works that previously had not been publicly shown. Discursive practices, in turn, were considered as a supplement to the shows and had to take the back seat. Talks, discussions and other ways of communication happened mostly in academic settings, serving to historise and institutionalise art.

It was against this background that artists, critics and curators started to look for other ways of producing and sharing knowledge. Museums, art galleries and foundations –less structured and stifling than universities or archaic Soviet academies of fine arts – seemed the most suitable sites for a shift towards the discursive. In these places it seemed possible to produce what British theorist Irit Rogoff calls ‘knowledge as disruption, knowledge as counter-subjugation, knowledge as constant exhortation on its own, often uncomfortable implications’. Three strategies can be distinguished: the first involves an ‘entryist’ policy – leftist cultural workers join private neo-liberal art-centers or small galleries in order to radicalise their political stance for a short period of time (‘E-flux Time/food’). The second strategy is to settle down in state-funded ‘non-artistic’ places such as historical museums, and to revitalize their moribund modus operandi, radicalizing its content and context (‘Pedagogical Poem’, ‘Auditorium Moscow’). The third strategy is a seemingly more classical one: to curate series of free public discussions in state art centers (‘Theoretical Studies for Cultural Anthropology’).

One of the first projects of this kind was Auditorium Moscow. A Sketch for a Public Space curated by Ekaterina Degot, Joanna Mytkowska and David Riff in 2011 during the 4th Moscow Biennale . Opposed to a spectacular and conventional biennale, it was conceived as a ‘dense program of workshops, screenings, and roundtables with artists and theoreticians… examining the question of public spaces and the constituencies that inhabit them, in both urbanism and art’. The result was very consistent: even the act of watching a film (for example, Hito Steyerl’s Die leere Mitte, the Empty Centre, 1998) mainly became a cue for the ensuing debates. Auditorium Moscow could also be characterized as a ‘site-specific’ transformative project since it took place at Belie Palati, a 17th century townhouse, and referred to the problems of gentrifications especially relevant for the local district (the so-called ‘Golden Mile’). As curators ironically noted about this site, ‘a Friedrich Engels monument sadly peers over to the reconstruction of the Christ the Savior Church, in the place where the Palace of the Soviets was never realized’. ‘And where Pussy Riot performed their famous prayer’ – one could add now.

Discursive Interventions into Russian Art

E-flux/time food: Boris Groys (left) and Anton Vidokle talking at the Stella Art Foundation

Last year, the Russian-born artist Anton Vidokle, after taking part in the Moscow Symposium organized by Boris Groys and immortalized in a book of the same name, returned to Moscow with his nomadic project E-flux Time/Food (made in collaboration with Julieta Aranda and Ekaterina Degot). During several days the participants of the program consumed food cooked by the artists and gave lectures that triggered discussions on Russia’s current political situation. For example, poet and activist Pavel Arseniev read a paper arguing that Facebook impedes the actual physical presence of people in protests and gatherings, which sounded quite contradictory in this context. The point is that E-flux Time/Food was held in an ivory tower – a comfortable private ‘bourgeois’ foundation, at a time when thousands of people joined the Moscow Occupy movement (Occupy Abay). However, Ekaterina Degot in her essay Rebellion against hamburgers argues against the reproach for being hypocritical: ‘contemporary art indirectly gives the owners of such foundations the opportunity to improve their karma and reputation in society, which, I’m sure, will be counted to their credit after our victory. So art is fulfilling its social function of helping people to become better’. And, finally, this does not mean that the participants did not join the streets protest after the discussions.

Discursive Interventions into Russian Art

Pedagogical Poem: Iya Budraytskis during one of his lectures on history at the Presnya Museum

Pedagogical poem was a more substantial and promising project that took place in one of the traditional historical museums, Presnya , in the center of Moscow. Its title refers to a book written by famous Soviet pedagogue Anton Makarenko, who developed the theory and methodology of self-governing child collectives. Although Makarenko writes about his educational work with underage criminal orphans, this project used his book more as a metaphor for a specific form of education based on horizontality, involvement and collective creativity. Usually curators open shows and only then organize series of discussions in order to support their projects. In the case of ‘Pedagogical poem’, artist and writer Arseniy Zhilyaev and historian Ilya Budraytskis , both members of the Russian Socialist Movement , decided to try a reversed model. Refusing to function as ‘curators’, they were rather initiators who ignited a series of lectures and artists’ presentations that took place every Thursday as well as Marxist reading groups led by Vlad Sofronov on Sundays. It was supposed that the consequent collective rearrangement of the museum’s display would become a kind of summary or a material manifestation of their meetings. The exhibition was supposed to become something between Fred Wilson’s deconstruction of traditional museum displays highlighting its limitations, and Group Material experiments inviting people to contribute their personal precious objects as a part of the show. However, because of a misunderstanding with the directorship they had to pile all the artifacts, books and videos in one room. Nevertheless, the series of around 100 discussions was no less important than its end product. For instance, Budraytskis, in his ‘triptych’ of lectures, deduced a theoretical proposition regarding conservative, liberal and socialist consciousness and theirs self-positioning within history. According to him, socialism, compared to liberalism, is a melancholic and historical model that is trying to find an alternative to the currently dominant system in the past. Thus a museum dedicated to Russian revolutions is the most suitable place for a leftist exhibition.

Discursive Interventions into Russian Art

E-flux Time/Food: Keti Chukhrov at the Stella Art Foundation

The Philosopher, poet and art theorist Keti Chukhrov organized another discursive project at the National Centre for Contemporary Arts under the conditional title Theoretical Studies of Cultural Anthropology . It may have initially appeared to have been a traditional, rigid and even academic series of discussions. However, it is important to emphasize that, in fact, it is not typical for a Russian museum to carry out such long-lasting, substantial and well-selected series of events, especially when they have no direct connection with the on-going shows. Apart from the invitation of several major German and Balkan thinkers, including Slavoj Zizek, it is more important that this program brings together emerging prominent representatives of Russian critical thought such as art critic Maria Chekhonadskikh, sociologist Alexander Bikbov, specialist in post-colonial studies Madina Tlostanova, Marxist Vlad Sofronov, literary theorist Igor Chubarov, and philosopher Oxana Timofeeva. Even though this event is not being discussed as much in the art community as the aforementioned projects, Theoretical Studies signifies a crucial moment in art and education history in Russia, because it brings together for the first time a number of major, like-minded proponents of critical theory, opens up their research for the art scene and the general public and will be preserved in the form of an online archive.

I tend to think positively about these changes in Russian art. In an overall situation characterized by the public sphere being under threat and shrinking, of the gradual commercialization of education, of the elimination of critical thinking and of the stigmatization of everything ‘left-wing’ with the pejorative word ‘Soviet’, the aforementioned events are especially significant as the sites of self-organized open source models of education, emancipation and the production of ‘unframed’ knowledge, countering the critical vacuum of the official discourse. Intervening into the private and the restricted public sphere, they bring ‘discoursivity’ and criticality into different communities. They become counter-hegemonic alternative spaces that attack the dominant ideology not in such a direct and openly confrontational as social unrest, mobilisation and ‘corporeal’ street protests, but precisely because of that go hand in hand with it. The fact that these practices are primarily immaterial gives them one privilege: counter to paintings or the printed word, they leave no evidence for forensic investigation. Notwithstanding that they are localized within the realm of contemporary art (even when occupying historical museums), they function as a crucible for the politicisation of art, making it more useful for society.

Thinking of these projects, one could recall Boris Groys’s controversial book The Communist Postscript (2009, German edition 2006) where he developed a theory that capitalist society is transcribed into the medium of money, while the communist society – into the medium of language. Looking at communism dialectically, he foresees the possibility of its repetition, but in a new guise and in different circumstances. Maybe it is too naive or idealist, but it is tempting to consider these discursive projects as a first step towards a “re-linguification” of Russian society.


Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

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By Vivian Sky Rehberg

Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

Film still from Nathaniel Mellors, "The Saprophage" (2012) at the IFFR 2013

When I moved from Paris to Rotterdam last February, the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) was in full swing and I completely missed it, so I was determined to make up for lost time this year by squeezing in as many screenings as I could. For two weeks each dreary Dutch winter, the film festival takes over the blustery port city. The De Doelen concert hall becomes the main hub for the industry’s artistic and economic business of producing, distributing, financing and launching films, while cinemas and art spaces all over town hum with screenings, panel discussions, exhibitions, Q&As and of course, parties, from morning to night.

The programme is announced well in advance, so one can gain a decent overview of the feature-length to short, art-house to mainstream cinema that will be on offer, and films are categorized into sections and sub-sections. In theory, one could, for example, choose to only attend European and World Premieres, or just the films in competition for one of the awards schemes, or films by directors from one of the focus countries (this year Iran). In practice, targeted choices are difficult to make since the programme timetable is only available one week prior to the opening, and tickets for public screenings tend to go like hotcakes the minute online booking starts. Over and over again veteran festival-goers told me I should just leave my viewing up to fate.

Since I only had one weekend I could devote to the IFFR and was a total film-festival neophyte, I decided to call upon the expert advice of Rotterdam-based film programmer Peter Taylor and artist Maaike Gouwenberg, both of whom were members of the editorial committee for this year’s ‘Spectrum Shorts’ section of the festival. One of the hallmarks of the IFFR is the attention it grants to short films. They have their own competition, ‘The Canon Tiger Awards, ’and this year Beatrice Gibson, Zachary Formwalt and Rotterdam’s own Erik van Lieshout – for his film Janus (2012), filmed in South Rotterdam where Van Lieshout has a studio – shared the prize.

Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

Erik van Lieshout, “Janus” (2012)

A separate section, the ‘Spectrum Shorts’ was comprised of themed compilation programmes with titles like ‘Hauntological Futures’, ‘F for Fake’, ‘Looking Glass Self’, or ‘Close Encounters: Peripheral Images and Histories of the Present’ (with a focus on the Middle East, compiled by Omar Kholeif, curator of the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology in Liverpool, and IFFR programmer Peter Van Hoof). According to Gouwenberg, the Spectrum Shorts editorial committee received over 3,000 entries and culled the selection to a manageable 199 by dividing the films between the programmers according to geographical region.

Not only did some of the programme themes resonate strongly with trends in contemporary art and curatorial practice, there were a striking number of films by contemporary artists in the selection as a whole, many of which were produced by contemporary art platforms or had already been screened in exhibition contexts. This naturally raised questions in both formal post-screening discussions and in casual conversation about the position of the ‘artist’ vis-à-vis that of the film ‘director’. It also led to comparisons between the exhibition and the cinema as screening environments for artists’ films, and commentaries about the passive cinema viewer versus active exhibition spectator. I hold no illusions that the cinema is a neutral space, and I don’t know if it was the linearity of the temporal experience and sedentary nature of the spatial one, or the stable frame of the screen and beam of the projector, but it felt like an utter luxury to be able to sit and focus on the images and sounds materializing before me without the discursive or contextual interference of an exhibition.

Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

The Otolith Group, “The Radiant” (2012)

Watching films back to back for two straight days helped me formulate connections I had not made previously between the Otolith Group’s The Radiant (2012) and Canon Tiger Award nominee Willie Doherty’s Secretion (2012), both of which were commissioned for dOCUMENTA (13) last year. The Radiant documents Japan’s relationship to nuclear power in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, while Secretion examines the toxic remnants of the Holocaust in Germany. Doherty’s narrator uses a neutral, technocratic language that is as ripe with innuendo as the mildew-blossomed walls and dewy mushroom caps he shoots close-up. His language is akin to some of the documentary-speak the Otolith Group alternates with more anecdotal witness accounts. The ambiguity of language along with the potential unreliability of evidence emerge as powerful elements of both films. Although vastly different in their visual approaches, they both situate the viewer in the timeframe of the aftermath while considering the seepage and ramifications of human and ecological catastrophes on geographical, geological and cellular levels. With their focus on the visible and the invisible effects of disaster, and so on trauma, it seemed to me they signalled a potential, fertile and critical revitalization of the age-old landscape genre, and a welcome one at that.

Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

Willie Doherty, “Secretion” (2012)

Canon Tiger Award nominee Kerry Tribe’s Greystone (2012) and John Menick’s Starring Sigmund Freud (2012), amongst others, attested that the appropriation of dialogue, use of visual fragments or locations from the history of cinema are full-fledged commonplace strategies in artists’ films. Then there are those films crafted from hours spent googling footage to string together, which I recognize is part and partial of the digital revolution, but which I find tedious to watch, probably because I spend far too much time on the Internet already. Constant Dullaart is a deserved stand-out for his work with the internet as medium, but his Crystal Pillars (2013), a heavy-handed, sickly-voiced-over short about the narrator’s fraught relationship to facebook won my award for most irritating film. Please no more films, texts or art works about how facebook ruined your relationships? In the same compilation programme, ‘Present Tense’, I much preferred Katarina Zdjelar’s moving postcolonial portrait of musicians from the National Symphony Orchestra in Ghana (My Lifetime [Malaika], 2012) and Nathaniel Mellors’s jauntily schizoid trip to the ‘permanent present’ (The Saprophage, 2012), which was shot entirely on an iPhone.

Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

Katarina Zdjelar, “My Lifetime (Malaika)” (2012)

The interaction and intersection between contemporary art and the film industry extended beyond the cinema and into art spaces like TENT, which featured Mika Taanila’s three-channel video installation The Most Electrified Town in Finland (2004–12); Printroom, which hosted Jason Simon’s publication and stills from Festschrift for an Archive along with Martha Colburn’s animation Spin and a flipbook collection; and WORM, our local ‘Institute for Avant-Garde Recreation’, which mounted ‘Mind the Gap Nights’, with audio-visual performances for late-night revellers.

Postcard from the 42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam

Michael Snow, “Slidelength” (1971)

But the most stimulating interaction and intersection, for me, took place in a session conceived by Edwin Carels, titled ‘Single Frame Snow’, which was devoted to Michael Snow’s early work. Snow was an active participant in this year’s festival – as was Tony Conrad – and both were present and approachable. ‘Single Frame Snow’ included A Casing Shelved (1970), a fixed shot of a shelf whose contents are meticulously described by Snow for 45 minutes; Side Seat Paintings Slides Sound Film (1970), a film of slides of Snow’s paintings; and Slidelength (1971). Snow operated the slide projectors for Slidelength himself, deciding on the spur of the moment to break with the conventional 15-second intervals between the different, occasionally obscure images simply in order to watch each slide for as long as he wanted to. In the post-screening conversation with Carels, Snow described this as a ‘performance variation’, and one couldn’t help but sense that something unique and perhaps even historic had just taken place. In fact, something else Snow said about his work pretty much sums up my experience, albeit limited, of the IFFR: ‘A certain amount of attention can be rewarding.’

Controversy at Santralistanbul

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By Nazli Gurlek

Controversy at Santralistanbul

I am writing as part of an independent group composed of artists, curators and critics working in Istanbul that set out to take action against Istanbul Bilgi University’s decision to auction off part of its collection.

The Santralistanbul complex, part of the Istanbul Bilgi University campus, was set up in 2007 in a former power plant in the city’s Eyüp neighbourhood. The complex featured a museum of contemporary art, an energy museum and a cultural and educational centre. The government had rented the power plant to Bilgi University on the condition that the building be used as an energy museum and contemporary art museum. It hosted exhibitions from Centre Pompidou, ZKM in Karlsruhe and MUSAC in León, among others, as well as ambitious local exhibitions.

Controversy at Santralistanbul

However, after a rather combative change of ownership the university has recently decided to dissolve its Santralistanbul Museum of Contemporary Art, and to liquidate its collection. The local auction house Maçka Mezat, which has taken up the sale scheduled on February 17, makes no reference to the origin of the works, only referring to them as: ‘The private collection comprises important works by prominent Turkish modern and contemporary artists.’ This sale includes part of the museum collection with important pieces by Sarkis, Yuksel Arslan, Kemal Onsoy, Alaeddin Aksoy, Canan Tolon, Selma Gurbuz, Burhan Uygur, Mehmet Guleryuz, Nil Yalter, Mithat Sen and Ayse Erkmen.

Controversy at Santralistanbul

We believe that this is not a simple case of deaccession. The issue is whether works donated or sold to a museum that set out to provide public access to a collection of 20th-century art in Turkey, while ensuring its preservation, could be reverted to the private domain. The collection was formed for a public institution that would not only act as a depository of the country’s recent art history but also provide scholarship in the context of an academic institution. Unfortunately, neither has materialized.

We are reaching out to promote an ethical debate around the university’s decision, and to seek means of keeping the collection in the public domain. You can show your support for the case through signing the petition and sharing it. Please see here for more information.

Controversy at Santralistanbul

$
0
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By Nazli Gurlek

Controversy at Santralistanbul

I am writing as part of an independent group composed of artists, curators and critics working in Istanbul that set out to take action against Istanbul Bilgi University’s decision to auction off part of its collection.

The Santralistanbul complex, part of the Istanbul Bilgi University campus, was set up in 2007 in a former power plant in the city’s Eyüp neighbourhood. The complex featured a museum of contemporary art, an energy museum and a cultural and educational centre. The government had rented the power plant to Bilgi University on the condition that the building be used as an energy museum and contemporary art museum. It hosted exhibitions from Centre Pompidou, ZKM in Karlsruhe and MUSAC in León, among others, as well as ambitious local exhibitions.

Controversy at Santralistanbul

However, after a rather combative change of ownership the university has recently decided to dissolve its Santralistanbul Museum of Contemporary Art, and to liquidate its collection. The local auction house Maçka Mezat, which has taken up the sale scheduled on February 17, makes no reference to the origin of the works, only referring to them as: ‘The private collection comprises important works by prominent Turkish modern and contemporary artists.’ This sale includes part of the museum collection with important pieces by Sarkis, Yuksel Arslan, Kemal Onsoy, Alaeddin Aksoy, Canan Tolon, Selma Gurbuz, Burhan Uygur, Mehmet Guleryuz, Nil Yalter, Mithat Sen and Ayse Erkmen.

Controversy at Santralistanbul

We believe that this is not a simple case of deaccession. The issue is whether works donated or sold to a museum that set out to provide public access to a collection of 20th-century art in Turkey, while ensuring its preservation, could be reverted to the private domain. The collection was formed for a public institution that would not only act as a depository of the country’s recent art history but also provide scholarship in the context of an academic institution. Unfortunately, neither has materialized.

We are reaching out to promote an ethical debate around the university’s decision, and to seek means of keeping the collection in the public domain. You can show your support for the case through signing the petition and sharing it. Please see here for more information.

Office Killer

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By Dahlia Schweitzer

Office Killer

Cindy Sherman, 'Office Killer,' 1997

Last year, the Museum of Modern Art in New York presented a retrospective of the works of American photographer Cindy Sherman that then made its way to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Best known for her Untitled Film Stills, Sherman’s work since the 1970s that is judged to be some of the most successful work produced by any American photographer. She has quietly uprooted conventional understandings of portraiture and art, questioning a range of issues from identity to feminism. Critics around the world have examined Sherman’s photographs in great depth. However, when it comes to discussing Office Killer (1997) – which, as her only film, arguably plays a significant role in Sherman’s body of work – there is only silence. Not only does a close analysis of the film allow us to appreciate the messages underlying all of Sherman’s work, but a survey of Sherman’s work leading up to the release of Office Killer demonstrates an evolution which demands the insertion of her feature film in its rightful place.

The story of a lowly and modest copywriter who wreaks havoc on her workplace at Constant Consumer magazine, killing off those who upset her (or the status quo), Office Killer is truly the tale of underdog makes good. However, on a much more complex level, Office Killer also reflects the major cultural and social shifts which were taking place in America during the late 1990s, combining our fears of technology and contagion with the noir aesthetic. The film’s noir-ish opening credits blend violins with modem dialing tones, projections of names over printing presses and office paraphernalia, ashtrays, marked up articles, and computer keyboards, interspersed with bits of indeterminate red goo, the lurid type rippling across the screen, as if a projection from a copy machine. The lettering doubles and mirrors, fading away and lighting up, shifting and swirling beneath red liquid. The sequence here is tense and lurid, with a definite sense of drama and foreboding, ‘as if the titles themselves were on the hunt for yuppie prey’ as critic David Geffner put it. Right from the start, the titles are indicative of contagion, as well, morphing like a virus adapting to a new host. They may not preview the plot, as some titles do, but rather, they act as a preface, setting the tone for the rest of the film.

Office Killer

Poster for ‘Office Killer’ (1997)

Office Killer shares many characteristics with noir, but it is not stereotypical of the genre. If 1940s noir represented insecurity about people’s places in the workforce and at home during a time of great transition, in the 1990s things were even more dire. Bodies were literally and metaphorically disappearing as a result of AIDS and technological developments. Communication became abstract, anonymous. A pervasive sense of isolation began to spread, exacerbated by a growing realization of the vulnerability of human boundaries to contagion and contamination. What makes Office Killer a noir film is not only its tale of exploited workers and a vengeful protagonist in a bleak and oppressive urban environment, but its depiction of a complex anti-hero searching for her place in the world, avenging the wrongs done to the things and people she cares about, preserving and rearranging bodies in an environment that speaks to warmth, nurture, and order rather than cold, productive, anonymous uncertainty.

Sherman uses these same motifs of noir to depict the troubled world of Constant Consumer magazine, and, by proxy, America of the late 1990s. We have the skewed angles, the dominant darkness and shadow, and, lastly, the intoxicating lure of crime. It is not just any kind of crime, though, but one common to film noir, a crime perpetrated by an antagonist who commandeers funds at the expense of the exploited worker. In Office Killer, Norah, the magazine’s manager, is the antagonist embezzling funds from the magazine as the staff is laid off and downsized, workers disappearing into their cubicles or their ‘home offices.’

Office Killer

Cindy Sherman, ‘Office Killer,’ 1997

Before the 1990s Sherman had already built an important body of work examining the fundamentals of appropriation, identity, and gender. By the time she reached 1997, her work had not only explored certain elements of femininity and physicality, but she had grown comfortable enough with these elements to remove and destroy them, to toy with and manipulate them. Sherman, like an expert puppeteer, controls and plays with these fundamental aspects of society and behaviour in order to explore our core dynamics. Her first major series, the Untitled Film Stills, examines 1950s female iconography from the viewpoint of the 1970s. The 1950s were a decade of significant change and cultural shift, defined by issues ranging from civil rights to women’s liberation, the Cold War and the Korean War, and a climate of general conservatism and fear, so it is of no surprise that it would play such a pivotal role in her artistic development.

Born in New Jersey in 1954, Sherman spent her childhood in Long Island, immersed in the television and culture of the era. The 1950s combined worries of nuclear war with dreams of a better life, conformity with capitalism, amidst a growing blitzkrieg of images that sold everything from washing machines to cigarettes, bras to Cadillacs. What better time to be watching (and absorbing) television? What better to way to understand the constant consuming at the heart of American life? What better way to sow the seeds that would germinate into the Untitled Film Stills? The context of her early years not only influenced the Untitled Film Stills but also all of Sherman’s later work. Key aspects of what it means to be a woman – established in our cultural vernacular in the 1950s – are evident in Sherman’s work today.

In 1980, Sherman’s aesthetic underwent two significant changes. She began shooting in colour, and she began using projected images of locations behind her, rather than shooting in actual physical locations. The effect of the projections not only created a shallower depth of field, thus flattening the image, but it also began Sherman’s move towards isolation and alienation, another trend which would surface later in Office Killer. Her women were no longer allowed outside, much as the characters in Office Killer also appeared trapped indoors.

A year later, another significant change occurred – Sherman’s images went horizontal, like a movie screen. Commissioned by Artforum magazine, this series was called the ‘Centerfolds.’ These images were explicitly internal and indoors, claustrophobic and dramatically lit. There was no pretense of an outside world, however artificially implied. Sherman’s facial expressions throughout the series were also more intense and more emotional than in her earlier work. Unlike our conventional expectations for centerfold-type imagery, Sherman often looked lonely, upset, afraid. A darkness was creeping in.

This darkness would take a firm hold in her next series, a set of fashion images commissioned by fashion designer Dianne Benson for Interview magazine and by French fashion house Dorothée Bis for French Vogue. These images were also atypical for their intended use. Described as ‘silly, angry, dejected, exhausted, abused, scarred, grimy and psychologically disturbed,’ they were a response by Sherman to the confines and expectations placed on women by the fashion world. Sherman herself says about the experience: ‘From the beginning there was something that didn’t work with me, like there was friction. I picked out some clothes I wanted to use. I was sent completely different clothes that I found boring to use. I really started to make fun, not of the clothes, but much more of the fashion. I was starting to put scar tissue on my face to become really ugly.’

It is not simply that the photographs were shot with overly bright, unflattering light, or that the poses were awkward and sometimes angry. What makes this series stand out is the model herself. Sherman’s role, the characters she was playing, was evolving. Not only did she grotesquely parody the kind of image normally found in fashion magazines, subverting restrictions commonly imposed on women in terms of their appearance and behaviour, but she began to suggest that the perfect body which had appeared in her earlier work, the perfect body on the pages of every fashion magazine, was only one half of the equation. The other half was the other extreme – the grotesque, the disgusting, the imperfect — the internal. The faces we normally see on the cover of Vogue, the models in their editorial spreads, Photoshopped and styled to perfection, are nothing more than a shell concealing what lies beneath. This surface, still present in Sherman’s early photographs, was now ‘dissolving to reveal a monstrous otherness behind the cosmetic facade.’ In Sherman’s own notes to herself for the series, she wrote phrases the opposite of what we would expect to find in connection with a fashion spread, like ‘throwing-up, drooling, snot running down nose, bag-lady like; end of bad night; fat person; shooting up, snorting coke; bleeding, dying, etc.; but clothes perfect looking.’ It is clear that Sherman’s fascination is with the tension between extremes, between the messy and the neat, between the impeccable outside and the bloody inside, with the struggle to conceal our humanness with fashion and cosmetics.

The journey that began in the 1970s would take a pronounced turn with the ‘Disasters’ series, as Sherman abandoned the figure completely in favor of ‘the disgust of sexual detritus, decaying food, vomit, slime, menstrual blood, hair. These traces represent the end of the road, the secret stuff of bodily fluids that the cosmetic is designed to conceal.’ The body had deteriorated, the façade had been destroyed, the internal made fully external. Sherman had finally exposed the messy reality of not only what it meant to be a woman, but what it meant to be human. Sherman had removed the mask, chipped away at the armour, and taken a hard look at the wounds, guts, and gore that make us real.

This, in so many words, is the road to Office Killer. A journey that began with the neat black and white 8×10s of the Untitled Film Stills grew more and more graphic as the images got larger and larger, until they filled an actual movie screen. Insides were turned outside as we moved from depictions of heartbreak, loneliness, and longing to body parts and gore. Bodies were sliced open to expose the reality of their insides. The cosmetic facades evident in Sherman’s earlier work are eviscerated in order to reveal the raw authenticity beneath. Sherman not only moved from the outside in, but from the abstract and conceptual to the real and tangible, from the metaphoric equivalencies of femalehood to a literal depiction of the body’s collapse, from frozen moments in time to eighty-two minutes of narrative, character, and metamorphosis.

The decaying corpses in Office Killer are bodies literally turning inside out, the ultimate internal exposed without the pretense of perfection, an uncomfortable confrontation with everything we hope to conceal and avoid. It is not only that the bodies got bigger, but that in Office Killer we get the sound and the movement, the before, during, and after – and we get to watch the decay.

Silence, Sound, and Tabu

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By Tom von Logue Newth

Silence, Sound, and Tabu

Pablo Berger, 'Blancanieves' (2012)

For all its meretriciousness, the 2011 film ‘The Artist’ prompted thoughts about how silent cinema works, and how and why its techniques might be related to modern technology and film-making custom. Nostalgia and wonder increase along with distance in time, as silent cinema ascends to the status of a lost art. It’s in the air: the ecstatic cinematic evangelism of Martin Scorcese’s ‘Hugo’ (2011) reached many; the 2013 Goya nominations are mostly dedicated to a (less than successful but handsomely-mounted) retelling of Snow White, ‘Blancanieves’ (2012); and a mostly silent, slick and expensive Valentino biopic starring Isabella Rossellini (not as Valentino, sadly) is due to wind up its years-long production within months.

The spectacle of Méliès’ silent magic has never really left the cinema: the dumbest, dialogue-free, digitally-created action sequence of today (anytime, really) could easily, probably preferably, have its stock movie score and library explosions replaced by a vigorous organ player. The point is to excite through adventure and fantasy. As such, cinema remains cinema, with or without synch sound. Vast swathes of experimental film-makers have felt no need for a soundtrack. It is a formal consideration like any other. Plenty of so-to-speak arthouse film-makers pare their dialogue to a minimum or, like Marguerite Duras (India Song) divorce sound and image entirely. The earliest semi-mainstream experiment along these lines had Ray Milland suffer torments as a secret-selling nuclear physicist, whilst footfall, phone bells, and whatnot are heard, but not a line of dialogue, in the intermittently effective but largely off-putting 1952 independent The Thief.

Silence, Sound, and Tabu

Russell Rouse, ‘The Thief’ (1952)

Mostly, though, it’s comedians who embrace the absence of dialogue. Jacques Tati’s bubbling soundtracks are the appropriately banal white noise of the quotidian, but he’d be no less funny with an out-of-tune upright accompaniment. The association of silent cinema with comedy, however, has mostly been because of a widespread discrepancy in frame rates. In anything as low as 16fps, uniformly projected at 24, people just scurry. No wonder then that Silent Movie (1976) was the first high-profile sound-era silent feature, nor that the sped-up parts actually made Mel Brooks funny.

Silence, Sound, and Tabu

Poster for Mel Brooks’ ‘Silent Movie’ (1976)

No dialogue is one thing, but no synch sound at all is another. It’s interesting as Silent Movie opens with a complete lack of sound how disconcerting it is – it plays like a spoof of the avant-garde. That’s in part because it’s in color. For the ghostly visual aura of silent cinema, one need look no further than Guy Maddin, but there have been others who’ve gone the whole homage hog. Most intriguingly, there’s Jérôme Savary’s 1975 semi-pornographic circus movie, La fille du garde-barrière, in look and sound if not quite in content, a recreation of silent cinema; Aki Kaurismaki made his typically downplayed Juha (1999) as a traditional silent, more to evoke an era than to throw shadows over everything; and the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society’s Call of Cthulhu (2005) is a largely successful exercise in both. These films, as with The Artist and Blancanieves, do capture some of the beauty of silent cinema, the seeming magic of wordless communication, and the transport to another time. But the straight recreations, even the more satisfying examples, seem designed to amaze that they have even stood on their hindlegs at all – silent cinema as a fetish.

There’s room for more interrogation of silent cinema’s sound and image disjunction, and the different significances of direct and synch sound, or lack thereof. Some synching of music and sound effects in Blancanieves, for example, feels like flashy cheating rather than as a considered device. On the other hand, Hsiao-hsien Hou uses intertitles and soundless, moving lips in the 1911-set section of Three Times (2005), but shoots in rich, deep colour and natural light to avoid the straitjacket of stylistic recreation. The conceit is persuasive in conjuring a bygone time, but Hou also bends the rules in a highly effective fashion, by privileging his main character with synch sound, as she sings to her own melancholy lute accompaniment, inevitably drawing us closer.

Silence, Sound, and Tabu

Poster for Miguel Gomes’ ‘Tabu’ (2012)

The most intriguing recent experiment with the form and effectiveness of silent cinema occupies the whole second half of Miguel Gomes’ strange and beautiful Tabu (2012). A voiceover relates the events of 50 years previously, in the shadow of (the fictitious) Mount Tabu, in an unnamed Portuguese colony in Africa. Black and white 16mm photography provides a silvery sheen of agedness; the story of forbidden love evokes the Tabu of F.W. Murnau (1931); and grasses rustle, cicadas cheep, but the characters’ lips move soundlessly. The project is not one of recreation, nor a nostalgic evocation of silent cinema, but an attempt to use characteristics of silent cinema to evoke nostalgia itself, the bittersweet mourning for a lost time (in this instance, labeled “Paradise”). This is pretty much a case of saudade, as Portuguese as can be, an emotion to feel but not describe, just as one cannot quite describe how the distance of years, and the absence of sound, makes silent cinema feel like a dream.

Direct and synch sound make us feel present; their noticeable absence is an immediate distancing device; and more complex relationships to the film before us can be conjured by a mixture of the two. Withholding of dialogue aside, Tabu is free from an over-strict schema, either literal or symbolic. It is as though Gomes is feeling his way in each scene, deciding which sounds, dialogue aside, will best bolster the images. It’s disarming enough when, half way through the film, words cease to emerge from the characters’ mouths; more so even, when the splashes of a swimming pool suddenly go unheard. In fact, Gomes might have benefitted from further erasures of direct sound; the more we hear of the world around them, the less comfortable the characters’ silence becomes.

Silence, Sound, and Tabu

Miguel Gomes, ‘Tabu’ (2012)

But this is an experiment – there is no correct formal approach. In straight recreations of silent cinema one can point out cheats, but here the cheats are the point. No self-regarding replication, the wonder of Tabu is how it investigates the formal properties of pre-sound film in an attempt to channel its particular emotional power. The sense of distance in time comes easily, of course, but less so the emotional relationship between audience and characters whom they cannot hear. In Blancanieves, for example, that step of removal is a barrier; in Tabu, as in the best silent films, it is wonderland looking glass – we can both see though it, and see ourselves reflected in it.

Gomes’ smartest move, in fact, is relating his formal decisions as much to silent cinema as to home movies. His characters’ 16mm footage is made to look distinct from the story around it, but there’s no incontrovertible reason why it should. There is a built-in nostalgia to this too, for most people’s experience of home movies is direct-sound video; but the form of the home movie, from mid-century to mid-1980s, is recognizable and familiar – a less pristine image than that which we expect on a cinema screen, and an absence of sound. There’s a sense of intimacy, and a sense of loss – the faces can straddle the distance of years, but where have the voices gone? They were so sweet once, but they remain beyond our reach, locked away in the past. It sounds a lot like silent cinema.

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