Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

The new dungeon of London

   
The Tanks at Tate Modern in London opened to the public last month. Three old oil tanks of the former power station have been transformed into new spaces dedicated to installation, video, and performance pieces. These concrete cylinders are not visible from the outside, accessed only via underground connection from the Turbine Hall.

It’s pretty dark inside. You feel an atmosphere unlike a white cube gallery, nor a black box theater. It’s more like a secret dungeon where any crazy sh*t can happen – a perfect cool place for experimental art. I am not sure about the choice of Sung Hwan Kim, who has divided one tank into rooms for different videos. But the other tank that is left empty for performance programs reveals the full dimension: 30 meters in diameter and 7 meters in height.
Remember that joke about revision clouds?

The Tanks are the first stage of the Tate Modern extension project by Herzog & de Meuron. Here, the architects’ intervention is quite subtle. Instead of fixing it up to a posh gallery with white walls and wooden floors, they decided to just leave it in its raw industrial status with rough concrete texture. They also let the massive voids speak for themselves – there’s no need to dramatize what’s already impressive.

In an interview with Sonntags Zeitung, Jacques Herzog said, “We have avoided the dialectics of old and new, as preferred by many architects from Modernism up to today.” This is an important conceptual shift. It’s so easy to put a sleek glass skylight or entrance and make it a distinct feature in the new romantic galleries. But HdM resisted the temptation. They chose to think about what was already there before forcing anything new. This approach matches the philosophy behind their Serpentine pavilion this year, just in this case they work with more physical existence, not only ghosts. They have cleaned the dirty parts, patched up the damaged parts, and the only new element is probably the diagonal concrete columns that support the extended galleries above. The result is a continuation, or even reinforcement of history; a composition of the present and the past, where the junction of the two become blurry and uncertain.


Outside in the Turbine Hall, Tino Sehgal is the star of this year’s edition of Unilever Series. The massive Turbine Hall is turned into a stage for Sehgal’s crew, who are walking, running, humming, chanting, singing, and telling stories all over the place. Lighting in the space has also been coordinated with the loosely choreographed performance. This simple but brilliant live piece brings in very special energies, interacting closely with the visitors. Strangely, it reminds me of the Occupy movement. It also reminds me that happiness does not necessarily rely on materialism. I am glad to see the intangible form of art, as the Tanks are promoting, has gained more recognition in the recent years.
   

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Scoping in Scope

     
Once again, I found myself enjoying the smaller shows parallel to Art Basel, especially the Scope show in Karserne. The participants here were no big-shot galleries and artists. But it was still interesting to see David Middlebrook’s appropriation of Magritte and Duchamp, Ellen Urselmann’s cute blown glass objects, Ralf Kaspers’ cloud-swimming people, and Kyoeng Sub Yue’s super nice paper cut-out with uncanny details – just to name a few. Traditional paintings usually don’t get my attention easily. But Italian artist Troilo’s powerful image painted by fingers was truly impressive.
David Middlebrook, Congress (front), Breath of Fresh Air (back)
Ellen Urselmann, No Title, 2009
Ellen Urselmann, No Title, 2011
Ralf Kaspers, Summerland III Tokyo, 2011
Kyoeng Sub Yue, Cut Out
Patrick Tschudi, Chinese Faith, 2012
Troilo, Untitled, 2012
Alexandre and John Gailla, No One Gets Hurt, 2012 (front), Chrysalide 12 (back)
Bome, Oni-Musume, 2009
Kathy Mueller-Moser, Friends
Idán Zareski, Big Foot, 2011

Compared to Art Basel, I felt I saw more fresh ideas and new media here in Scope. MARCK’s video installations synthesized film and physical objects into a new art form. Anna Tas used lenticular printing techniques to create a cute 3D version of Magritte. Alessandro Brighetti demonstrated electromagnetic manipulation of oil-based ferrofluids on a dark skull. Kenji Sugiyama created fascinating mini universes within pasta boxes. This series of dioramas explored the notions of consumerism and voyeurism.
MARCK, New Freedom (Bath II) Silver, 2011
MARCK, Mutterglück LEGO II, 2012
Anna Tas, Son of Man
Alessandro Brighetti, Schizophrenia
Kenji Sugiyama, Institute of Intimate Museums

The most impressive was Claire Shegog’s Busby series. Inspired by Busby Berkeley’s films and choreographic work, Shegog painstakingly handmade thousands of miniature figures with matching costume and accessories, and arranged them in circular forms. The result was dazzling. Here we saw order and repetition, patterns created with attention to details in both design and craftsmanship.
Claire Shegog, Busby series
Claire Shegog, Busby’s Chandelier, 2012
Claire Shegog, Busby’s Folly (left), Busby’s Showgirls (right), 2012

At Scope, I also saw more critical concepts behind the artworks. Satch Hoyt’s award-winning installation was a podium made from art books both found and donated from around the world. Who has the right to speech? This piece served as a critique on the contemporary art world, commemorating those who are not yet enshrined in the “legitimate” history of art. Deborah Sengl’s graphic installation reminded us of the pretentiousness in our culture, which completely gave way to consumerism, as Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre revealed in their photographic work. Even the ¥€$ regime is facing crises and paper bank notes themselves could be dispensable. Political corruptions? Jiao Xingtao’s marble sculpture was a critique of Bo Xilai’s extravaganza in Dalian. (He built a huabiao – traditional ornamental column – in Dalian that was twice as big as the ones in Tian’anmen Square.) Maybe we are better off living through special pills of hugs and love, as Edie Nadelhaft suggested. Or we could stand up to things, like what Ruby Anemic put in a neon sign: No Guts No Glory.
Satch Hoyt, Say It Loud: Recreating the Canon, 2012
Deborah Sengl, And Cut!, 2012
Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre, Gotham Theater, above and below. New York, NY, USA, 2009
Zevs, Liquidated Yes, 2011
Paul Rousso, Big Money
Edie Nadelhaft, Better Living Thru Chemistry, 2012
Edie Nadelhaft, Chill, 2012
Jiao Xingtao, White Marble, 2010
Ruby Anemic, No Guts No Glory, 2012