Friday, 28 October 2011
The Alienation Effect | Savage Presents Jean Michel Jarre and Cezary Bodzianowski's Tea Back | Spike Island | Bristol
Text by Regina Papachlimitzou
Two exhibitions currently run parallel to each other in Spike Island, with a variety of motifs exploring themes common in both exhibitions: alienation caused by displacement, by repetition, by betraying the incidental circumstantial nature of context and its undeniable significance in the creation/destruction of meaning.
In his first UK solo show, Tea Back, Cezary Bodzianowski explores the theme of alienation by removing a series of objects from their ordinary context and re-introducing them in an alternate set of circumstances, setting in motion absurdist situations in the process. Tea takes central place in the works exhibited: a quintessential feature of daily life in Britain, tea is also, more specifically, employed as a leitmotif in direct reference to Spike Island’s previous incarnation as a tea-packing factory.
The eponymous Tea Back consists of a looped film sequence showing the artist donning a giant teabag and wondering aimlessly around familiar Bristol locations. Bodzianowski engages in a range of everyday activities including crossing a street, sitting at a bus stop ostensibly waiting for a bus, mingling with the crowd and enjoying a riverside stroll. Apart from the occasional heckle, Bodzianowski performs these actions unnoticed; this further intensifies the effect of alienation originally created by the removal of a generally unnoticed item of nutrition from its usual surroundings and the subsequent (dis-)placement of this object, in exaggerated dimensions, into the streets of a busy city. By drawing our attention to the incongruity this displacement causes, Bodzianowski makes a poignant remark on the colonial/industrial circumstances on which a city’s prosperity is built, and the way these can be potentially swept out of view through the re-appropriation of previously industrial buildings and their enlistment to the cause of urban regeneration.
The alienation effect is enhanced by the introduction of an ordinary household door into the entrance of the main Spike Island gallery; the door creates an inappropriate sense of homeliness, and the placement of an usher next to it, responsible for opening the door and showing the visitors in, further extends the idea of being welcomed into someone’s home. Any notions of warmth and domesticity are quickly shattered however, when the same door makes a re-appearance in the smaller, adjacent gallery, this time as a projected image on a wall, two-dimensional and hermetically closed, in Stirring the Tea Doesn’t Make It Sweeter But It Helps The Earth to Turn.
Alienation and the breakdown of communication are also explored in Savage’s works I Didn’t Know Anything Then and I Still Don’t Know Anything Now and I Asked You A Thousand Times. The former work consists of a nine-metre long display of a collection of beginners’ guides, covering a wide range of themes: painting, Photoshop, aliens amongst us, flora, black women, criminal psychology, oriental rugs, mathematics, photographing moles, Georgian (with 2 audio CDs), changing the world, and the list goes on –there is virtually no subject, no aspect of human experience that is not, in one way or another, referred to or touched upon by the guides displayed. Savage’s preoccupation with humans’ motivation for learning brings with it an inevitable bitterness, a unshakeable sense of failure: the very fact that there probably are beginners’ guides for anything you could come up with should be uplifting and encouraging, but in the event it only serves to underline the superficiality of contemporary pursuit of knowledge, the lack of a genuinely heartfelt motivation behind it. Only too often, the work seems to suggest, once people get past that initial stage of learning, only too often are they content with a smatter of understanding.
I Asked You A Thousand Times is a filmic collage made up of segments from various films in which the phrase ‘What do you want from me?’ is repeated under differing sets of circumstances. The tone in which the phrase is uttered serves to communicate a genuinely surprising range of emotions, from confusion, frustration, and anger, to sadness, sexual allure, fear, or giving up; the segments show characters using the phrase to address an equally wide range of audiences, from mentors, friends, or strangers, to aliens, lovers, enemies, and everything in between. The gamut of human experience expressed by that innocuous phrase is remarkable; yet the whole point of the work (which lasts for 24m) is to have the phrase repeated ad absurdum – to have it repeated to the point when we begin to realise that, really, the occurrence of the words ‘Want do you want from me?’ in such an incredible variety of films betrays the phrase’s provenance as a Hollywood cliché, an utterance empty of meaning. If you think about it, when do people, in a real life situation, ever say What do you want from me? It sounds unrealistic because it is unrealistic, a Hollywood soundbite recycled and rehashed enough times to numb the audience’s realisation to the fact it carries no meaning.
In Savage Presents Jean Michel Jarre and Tea Back, Savage and Bodzianowski showcase a series of intriguing works, in the heart of which lies a fascination with the absurd, and a simultaneous desire to draw attention to the creeping alienation finding its way into everyday life.
Savage Presents Jean Michel Jarre & Cezary Bodzianowski: Tea Back continue until 27 November. If you are visiting Bristol from 16 - 20 November you might also want to check out Encounters, the UK's longest running competitive short film and animation festival. The 2011 Programme is online now and with Bafta Masterclasses from the likes of Sam Taylor-Wood, it's looking very good!
spikeisland.org.uk
encounters-festival.org.uk
WHAT ARE YOU DOING NEXT WEEKEND?
The Aesthetica Short Film Festival is the first film festival ever to be hosted in the historic city of York. The festival is a celebration of independent film from across the world with 150 films being screened from 30 countries. ASFF opens 3 November and continues until 6 November. For tickets and further information visit the website www.asff.co.uk or call (+44) (0) 1904 629 137.
Thursday, 27 October 2011
onedotzero presents adventures in motion festival | 23 - 27 November | BFI Southbank
onedotzero isn't just one of the leading authorities in contemporary digital arts, they are one of our favourites, so when we heard that their adventures in motion festival was set to return to BFI Southbank we were more than excited. Running from 23 - 27 November, the festival will present short films and animation, music videos, interactivity, digital art and everything in between.
The festival programme is diverse and celebrates the coming together of artists and creatives working with an array of practises that have a relationship with moving image, the consequent creative exchange is at the heart of the festival. It's incredibly difficult to pick out any festival highlights as there's nothing we wouldn't want to see. We have selected the best of the best below:
The Spirit of Apollo
USA 2011. Dir Syd Garon/Sam Spiegel. 60min
This in-depth documentary of the making of N.A.S.A.'s (North America/South America) globetrotting, multi-collaborative, debut album includes animation slices and choice footage of George Clinton's altered consciousness session, Method Man performing magic tricks, Sizzla and Amanda Blank and Judgement Yard, Jamaica and features Kanye West, M.I.A, Chuck D, David Byrne and Tom Waits.
Sufferrosa: Interactive Movie (Directors Cut)
Poland/UK 2010. Dir Dawid Marcinkowski
A special live version by Marcinowski of his critically acclaimed interactive neo-noir film. Sufferrosa is an interactive web-based film, what happens in the film depends entirely on the viewer's choice, resulting in a totally non-linear story. The film combines video, animation, literature, music with the web and is considered as one of the biggest interactive storytelling projects ever made (110 scenes, 3 alternative endings, 20 locations and 25 actors). The soundtrack to the film is particularly special, featuring Sonic Youth, Glass Candy, Memory Tapes and Exploding Star Orchestra.
This year's festival will also explore a wealth of new themes and creative strands, including, amongst others, screenings of 'New British Talent', a captivating showcase of fresh works by the UK's brightest sparks and styles in animation and indie filmmaking today, 'J-Star 11', a rare chance to overdose on contemporary Japanese moving image magic, and 'Future Cities', an eclectic selection of short films, animations and motion graphics presenting evocative visions of our future cities and urban destinies.
BOOK NOW!
bfi.org.uk/onedotzero
onedotzero.com
LIKE FILM?
The Aesthetica Short Film Festival is the first film festival ever to be hosted in the historic city of York. The festival is a celebration of independent film from across the world with 150 films being screened from 30 countries. ASFF opens 3 November and continues until 6 November. For tickets and further information visit the website www.asff.co.uk or call (+44) (0) 1904 629 137.
Image:
Jimmy yuan - Shift [from the wow + flutter 11 programme]
The Artist's Playground | Carsten Höller: Experience | New Museum | New York.
This autumn, the New Museum will present the first New York survey exhibition of the work of German artist Carsten Höller (b.1961). Over the past twenty years, Höller has created a world that is equal parts laboratory and test site, exploring such themes as childhood, safety, love, the future and doubt. Höller left his early career as a scientist in 1993 to devote himself exclusively to art making, and his work is often reminiscent of research experiments. His pieces are designed to explore the limits of human sensorial perception and logic through carefully controlled participatory experiences.
The New Museum’s exhibition will include work produced over the past eighteen years in an immersive, interactive installation choreographed in collaboration with the artist. Höller will actively engage the Museum’s architecture, with each of the three main gallery floors and lobby of the building presenting a focused selection of pieces that demonstrate different experiential dimensions of his work. Functioning as an alternative transportation system within the Museum, one of Höller’s signature slide installations will run from the fourth floor to the second, perforating ceilings and floors, to shuttle viewers through the exhibition as a giant 102-foot-long pneumatic mailing system. The exhibition features a new light installation; disorienting architectural environments; a spectacular mirrored carousel; and a sensory deprivation pool, among others. Also included will be a recreation of Höller’s Experience Corridor, where viewers are invited to undertake simple but affecting tests on themselves.
The selected works emphasize the experimental quality of Höller’s work and reveal the complex universe of one of the most significant European artists to emerge in the past twenty years. Höller came to prominence alongside a group of artists in the 1990s including Maurizio Cattelan, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Pierre Huyghe, Philippe Parreno, and Rirkrit Tiravanija who worked across disciplines to re-imagine the experience and the space of art. Höller stands out among this group for the manner in which his installations drew on the history and method of scientific experimentation to destabilize the viewer’s perception of space, time, and the concept of self.
Carsten Höller: Experience will be on view from until 15 January 2012.
newmuseum.org
Images (top to bottom):
Carsten Höller, Psycho Tank, 1999. Installation view, “Une exposition a Marseille,” Musee d’Art Contemporain, Marseille, France, 2004. Photo: © Attilio Maranzano
Carsten Höller, Giant Psycho Tank, 1999. Installation view, “The Vincent,” Bonnefanten Museum, Maastricht, 2000. Photo courtesy Esther Schipper, Berlin
Carsten Höller, Maison Ronquières (The Laboratory of Doubt), 2000. Installation view,“Divided Divided,” Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, 2010 Courtesy Fondazione Prada, Milan. Photo: © Atillio Maranzano
Carsten Höller, Umkehrbrille (Upside Down Goggles), 1994/2001. Installation view, “Une exposition a Marseille,” Musee d’Art Contemporain, Marsaille, France, 2004. Photo: © Attilio Maranzano
Carsten Höller, Infrared Room, 2004. Installation view, “Une exposition a Marseille,” Musee d’Art Contemporain, Marseille, France, 2004. Courtesy Photo: © Attilio Maranzano
Carsten Höller, Lichtraum (Light Room), 2008. Installation view, “Carrousel,” Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria, 2008. Photo: © Markus Tretter
Carsten Höller, Giant Triple Mushrooms, 2009. Installation view, “Divided Divided,” Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, 2010. Photo: © Attilio Maranzano
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