Showing posts with label Frieze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frieze. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Unzipped Humanities (4): Learn about - Miroslaw Balka

Welcome to the collection of The National Museum of Art, Osaka.

This post is about Miroslaw Balka, a Polish artist whose Blue Gas Eyes cannot forget. The darkness.



Miroslaw Balka, BlueGasEyes, 2004


The absence. The objects left behind the sweat, the tears and the salt.  The lost humanity.

The danger that it would all be forgotten.




Miroslaw Balka photo (2010)




Note:




"The 35th Anniversary: The Allure of the Collection" exhibition opens at The National Museum of Art, Osaka on 21 April 2012.
Our contributions to the Collection exhibition catalogue already went to print. For updates and texts in the Japanese language authored by The Bosa Bosa Review, please check again around April. You can read the English version here on the blog.

Unzipped Humanities (1) covered Marcel Broodthaers and his work La signature. Serie 1. Tirage illimite (1969), while Unzipped Humanities (2) introduced to our readers Jorg Immendorff's Das Bild ruft (letztes Selbstportrait II), also in the museum's collection. Unzipped Humanities (3) discussed Jean-Pierre Raynaud's work Auto Portrait.
We hope you enjoy. Cheers.




Welcome to the museum's collection:



Miroslaw BALKA   φ51x4, 85x43x49  (1998).

We have been working on Miroslaw BALKA's φ51x4, 85x43x49, for the collection catalogue.


watching the chair, the handcuffs, the rope



separating the salt and the wounds


ABOUT THE ARTIST:


Miroslaw Balka was born in 1958 in Poland. In his works he makes use of objets trouves, and with these he brings about collective memories of lost presence. He applies subjective particles: salt, dust and ashes onto materials such as wood, steel, terrazzo and carpeting. In 2009, his installation "How It Is” has been commissioned by Tate Modern for its Turbine Hall. He currently lives and works in his home town, Otwock.




ABOUT THE ARTWORK:




Curatorial Night Beat @ The Bosa Bosa Review


 φ51x4, 85x43x49  is an artwork from 1998 (wood, steel, salt and plastic, φ51x4cm, 85x43x49cm). Courtesy The National Museum of Art, Osaka).

An old chair is hanging from the ceiling with a rope, it is tilted and has a hole in the middle of the seat. Two wheels of the size of handcuffs are placed on the back of the chair. 

 
This image brings back to memory medieval instruments of torture, where the victim would be placed in a chair and the iron restraints would be tightened, usually with a fire heated underneath. The hanging of the chair could imply the hanging of a victim as well. Balka's chair does not touch the floor, and this lack of contact keeping spaces at a distance is a common feature in his works, as it can be seen in the sarcophagus-like works 50x40x1,190x50x40,190x50x40,190x50x40 (1992). The chair does not leave tracesssss.

On the floor, a steel disk covered in salt. The salt spread on top of the disk symbolises human tears and sweat, and it has been previously used to cover a whole bed as night fear. There are two holes in this disk. Two holes in the disk have appeared before in Balka’s work, such as 380x230x13,69x67x13 (1993) , where they were filled with ashes, symbol that something, someone once was/lived/ has been and departed. Balka's works often cross the line between life and death, they belong to a world in-between, which is nothing but dark.

In this particular work the holes are left empty, and empty-filled is one of Balka's key contrast-pairs, presence as absence and absence of presence of the human body. He drills holes into the very idea that something/someone has been removed from existence. All these redefine the intangibility of human traces.

While this work might make think of medieval instruments of torture, Balka did not necessarily show interest in medieval subjects. Most likely this work has a contemporary meaning, that of a living memory. The collective memory of people who have known communist Poland is haunting his works and with this, Balka is celebrating the “living traces” of his own memory.


Balka’s objects filling galleries and museums, white cubes with white salt, and spaces with memories are obviously political, they deal with the politics of change, of a historical reality disappeared quickly from the collective memory as if it had never existed. "Culture is terminally-ill with amnesia", wrote Andreas Huyssen in Twilight Memories: Marking Time in a Culture of Amnesia. With this chair installation again, Balka is sculpting from memory. 



Miroslaw Balka's How It Is at Tate 2009 © Guardian
uploaded by TheGuardian on 10 Nov 2009 


Along with the rapid change, the mass marketing of nostalgia has been pushed forward. While the computerized present is defined by an overflow of information and random-access memory industry bound up with forgetting and therefore producing amnesia, the past belongs to a read-only memory, not re-writable.  No cyberspace crowdedness is used in his works, no super-technology, no dazzling visual effects, no impressive pattern. Balka does not re-write history, yet he recreates a memory of the body in pain. He recreates the emptiness. The deep dark. The helplessness. The meaninglessness of what people have been able to do to other people

Useful English -Japanese glossary:

Miroslaw BALKA     ミロスワフ・バウカ

“How It Is”   あるがままに

Related links:

Miroslaw Balka How It Is installation at Tate Modern (2009-10) 





Topography exhibition at Modern Art Oxford (2009-2010)





Fragment exhibition at the Akademie der Kunste Berlin (2011-12)




Read also Marck Prince's article Miroslaw Balka, published in Frieze in connection with the Nonetheless exhibition at Galerie Nordenhake, Berlin (September 2011).

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Unzipped Humanities (3) : Learn about - Jean-Pierre Raynaud

Welcome to the collection of The National Museum of Art, Osaka.

This post is about Jean-Pierre Raynaud, a French artist working with time shadows and their abstract tendency to shrink into the geometrical perfection of a very spatial void. Raynaud is building walls around himself, filling them with white tiles and with the impossibility of breaking out. He then smashes them and films his self-made-prison break.




Container Zero @ Centre Pompidou Paris
from r.coppola, click here



Why would anyone literally build a Cartesian space as a defence system against the outer world? Is this a new frame of mind? If so, it might look rather sceptical to some. Freeing oneself from the world becomes possible only after having gone underground within the self.



Jean-Pierre Raynaud (1993)


Note:
Unzipped Humanities (1) covered Marcel Broodthaers and his work La signature. Serie 1. Tirage illimite (1969), while Unzipped Humanities (2) introduced to our readers Jorg Immendorff's Das Bild ruft (letztes Selbstportrait II), also in the museum's collection.

We have contributed to the collection catalogue, which is expected to be published in March-April 2012. For updates and texts in the Japanese language authored by The Bosa Bosa Review, please check again around April. Cheers.




Welcome to the museum's collection:



Jean-Pierre RAYNAUD Auto Portrait  (1980).



We have been working on Jean-Pierre Raynaud's Auto Portrait, for the collection catalogue.

 





Field research, digging, digging



Unearthing 19-years old mortuary chamber
- ceramic tiles at the Biennale di Venezia, 1993-



ABOUT THE ARTIST:

Jean-Pierre Raynaud was born in Paris in 1939. He graduated from Horticulture in 1958, had the first group-exhibition in 1964 at “Salon de la Jeune Sculpture”. In 1976 (or 1975?) he created the stained-glass windows for the Noirlac Abbey in France. He held a one-man show at Pompidou Centre, in Paris, in 1979. Later, in 1981 he had his first exhibition in Japan, “Espace Zero” opened at Hara Museum of Contemporary Art. Here he temporarily transformed the whole exhibition space into his work.

ABOUT THE ARTWORK:




Curatorial Night Beat @ The Bosa Bosa Review


Auto Portrait is an artwork from 1980 (tile and cement, 129x46x46cm. Courtesy The National Museum of Art, Osaka). Another frame of mind, perhaps? Raynaud marks his territory with white ceramic tiles set on a grid of 15 by 15 cm, with a black grouting joint (mortar) of 5 mm. The white tiles, along with the red pots and the "Do Not Enter" traffic signs have become his artistic signature.

Auto Portrait, a self-portrait, shows a simple structure of a white ceramic tiled-head on top of a white ceramic tiled-body. A similar work, triple-size, is Stele pour les droits de l'homme, erected in Barcelona (1990)



image Wikipedia


Five years later, in 1985, Raynaud will make Stele + crane neolithique, a sculpture where on top of the white ceramic tiled-body he places not a tiled-head but a skull in a glass case, standard image of an artistic meditation on the subject of life and death.



Stele + crane neolithique (1985)
from Le Fil du regard blog

We know that to Raynaud, the white ceramic tiles are related to the image of a hospital, as well as that of a home.
In 1970 he created Mur sens interdits where he is showing a large-sized monochrome photograph of a patient in a psychiatric institution, surrounded by the typical hospital white ceramic tiles. Raynaud attaches dozens of "Do Not Enter" traffic signs to an inescapable reality, a negation of live within life, a painfully surviving death within life. The photograph itself has been found prior to this date, and chances are that this hospital image is at the root of his choice for a tile-style.


Jean Pierre Raynaud, Mur sens interdits (1970)
© MAMAC (Musee d'art moderne et d'art contemporain) Nice

Shifting from hospital image to home sweet home image. From 1969 until 1993, Raynaud built his home in La Celle Saint-Cloud, covering all surfaces in white ceramic tiles. Then in 1993 he decided to destroy it and save the fragments in buckets as artworks. The destruction has been documented on video camera.



home sweet home
smash-in-progress, 1993
from Henri Jacobs's blog

Art critic Toshio Shimizu argues that the white ceramic tiles define the habit of removing proofs and traces in the 20th century. Tiles are a construction/ decorative material used in hospitals and slaughterhouses, can be easily washed of dirt, and keep no memory of any presence, experience or sign of life.


Therefore, we can regard a space built with white tiles as a person’s territory clearly marked, a Cartesian space, signifying Perfection, the Absolute, a space where one closes oneself, as a defence system against the outside. The body becomes one’s total space, and the space defines itself in strict relation to one’s body. An enclosed space is a place of freedom. 



Useful French-Japanese-English glossary:



Jean-Pierre Raynaud, Auto Portrait (1980)
ジャン=ピエール・レイノー 《自画像》
Selfportrait


Abbaye de Noirlac
ノワルラック・シトー派修道院
Noirlac Abbey


Stele+crane neolithique
《碑+新石器時代の頭蓋骨》
Neolithic Skull

Toshio Shimizu (name)
清水敏男
Toshio Shimizu

Mur sens interdits
《壁・進入禁止》
Do not enter Wall



Related links:

Jean-Pierre Raynaud article by Mark Pimlott, in Frieze Magazine, Issue 13, November-December 1993

Art. Interview Pinceau: Jean-Pierre Raynaud. With Thierry Ardisson, a video from ina.fr (Institut National de l'Audiovisuel), 2010


Seriously funny comments on Raynaud's work Pot Dore, Golden Pot at the Centre Pompidou 1998-2009, Beaubourg area, Paris (listen and have a laugh, for knowing what the audience thinks is essential to the dynamism of the arts)  



uploaded by citysoninfo on 22 August 2008



And check out also some red flower-pots here.