transgression - BEERS London
Transcription
transgression - BEERS London
T R A N S G R E S S I O N JUNE 2 ‒ JULY 3, 2011 21 VYNER ST, LONDON, UK E2 9DG Beers.Lambert contemporary art Sule Kemanci . Silkscreen print on wallpaper . Site-specific installation . 2011 Transgression developed from the desire to curate an exhibi6on that would provide a perspec6ve of sexuality and gender as radical concepts, reframed through a context in which these ubiquitous idea(l)s could be presented as something alterna6ve, poli6cally engaged, or subversive. It was a sinister, macabre but ul6mately empathe6c photographic work from Jakob Lena Knebl that provided the basis for the en6re exhibi6on: It Happened In Broad Daylight sees the transgendered ar6st rigged by what appears to be a horse‐bit, like a sadomasochis6c marioneEe hoist by forceps‐like clamps from her mouth. The photograph lingered like a troubling dream, un6l the remainder of the exhibi6on took shape around this image, the very pulsa6ng heart of Transgression. Presen6ng the exhibi6on in conjunc6on with the University of Kent’s symposium on Aesthe6cs, Art, & Pornography at London’s Ins6tute of Philosophy (June 16‐18) further drove the per6nent ques6ons of how, why, and to what degree would the work in Transgression incorporate or subvert the expecta6ons of an exhibi6on – quite bluntly put – on aberrant sexuality. Largely informed and inspired by the wri6ngs of French theorist Georges Bataille – from whose musings on sexuality, desire, taboo, violence, and ero6cism† the exhibi6on takes its name – we debated the merit and validity of sexually‐informed imagery for inclusion in this exhibi6on: was it necessary to take a more literal approach (and would such literalness in turn translate to work that would be heedlessly graphic in nature and/or crude?); conversely, would viewers feel that an exhibi6on priori6zing allegory and metaphor miss the mark of a show purpor6ng to explore the rich depths of extreme sexuality and its aesthe6c representa6on? †In the remarkable Ero6cism, 1957 Finally, it was a wri6ng by Theodor Adorno on radical representa6on in art that the exhibi6on found its voice; the classic themes: Eros & Thanatos (life/love and death) as envisioned by ar6sts whose work voices these themes from somewhere powerful: with narra6ves lurking beneath their surface, emana6ng as though from a palimpsest of memory. Some6mes evident, some6mes not. Transgression would eventually include 14 extraordinarily talented interna6onal ar6sts, including renowned ar6st Bruce LaBruce, whose work has redefined the status of sexually‐charged imagery in progressive contemporary art. Among those talented individuals included are an ar6st who maintains a contract with his lover permi_ng either to perform a cannibalis6c act upon the first deceased; a performance by a man in drag that would provide both humor and poignancy that I witnessed for the first 6me nearly 2 years previous but remained a haun6ng spectacle; the vic6m of a gay‐bashing incident whose painted self‐portraits exhibit his physical and emo6onal scars; and an HIV‐posi6ve ar6st whose art has literally become his life ‐ and life his art. I call aEen6on to a mere few narra6ves behind, and catalysts for, the work in Transgression, but each ar6cula6on offers a remarkable perspec6ve to a subject about which these ar6sts feel greatly impassioned, and which ‐ in some instances – has defined not just the artwork but also the ar6st. A favorite quote from Bataille reads: “We are everlas6ngly in search of an object outside ourselves...this object answers the very innerness of desire.” An exhibi6on that at one point could have become something much more literal, instead speaks from a core of (not so) silently, inwardly mo6va6ng factors – it would appear that the pulsa6ng heart bleeds. Kurt Beers Director Beers.Lambert Contemporary Art Anja Ronacher . Gold . Polaroid . 2010 A transgression suspends a taboo without suppressing it. Here lies the mainspring of eroticism, seen by objective intelligence as something monstrous. From outside our personal experience, a mechanism intruding on consciousness. We observe the taboo; if we submit to it, we are no longer conscious of it. But in the act of violating it we feel the anguish of mind without which the taboo could not exist: that is the experience of sin. That experience leads to transgression. - Georges Bataille . Eroticism . 1957 Bruce LaBruce . Untitled (Doggie Dick) . C-Print on aluminium . 2000 Luke Turner . The Damoclean Frame . Diasec mounted photograph . 2011 Annabel Frearson . From Frankenstein2 or The Monster of Main Stream . 2010 Pornography is a hot topic in academia. But so far it has drawn the aEen6on of, mainly, moral philosophers, legal scholars, feminist and poli6cal theorists. Much less work has been forthcoming from philosophers of art. This may seem surprising given that it is, undeniably, a very popular genre that cuts across different ar6s6c media and cultural boundaries and boasts an unparalleled output. However, the neglect comes as less of a surprise if one considers the bad aesthe6c reputa6on that much pornography s6ll enjoys. According to the received view, pornographic representa6ons cannot be art or, at best, can only be bad art. But does this claim actually hold up to scru6ny? What underwrites such aesthe6c dismissal? Is ‘pornographic art’ really an oxymoron or does the term rather designate a legi6mate ar6s6c category? To address these issues, we, as members of the Aesthe6cs Research Group at the University of Kent, decided to organize a conference, en6tled Aesthe6cs, Art, & Pornography. It seemed clear to us that one cannot hope to cri6cally examine the middle ground between art and pornography without seriously engaging with current research on the defini6on of art, the nature of aesthe6c value, aesthe6c experience, aesthe6c proper6es, the rela6on between art and morality, the psychology of picture percep6on, and the role of imagina6on in art. For that reason, we invited academic philosophers with different areas of exper6se in aesthe6cs to inves6gate the various relevant aspects of our topic. However, more is involved than just an abstract philosophical problem. In the history of art, and especially also in the contemporary world of art (construed in the broadest sense), there are many pain6ngs, photographs, prints, installa6ons, films, poems, short stories, novels and graphic novels which have been labeled ‘pornographic art’. Any inves6ga6on of the ar6s6c status and poten6al of pornographic representa6ons would not be complete without a careful examina6on of such works that consciously explore the boundaries between art and pornography. In light of this, we decided to also invite art historians, literary scholars, film theorists, and curators to our conference. Moreover, when the opportunity arose to involve actual ar6sts and to have a parallel exhibi6on, organized by Beers.Lambert under the 6tle Transgression, we very much welcomed this ini6a6ve. Aler all, transgression is one of the most obvious links between art and pornography. And, what is more important s6ll, the interac6on between theory and prac6ce, as well as the mul6‐disciplinary set up of the event, will certainly help us to arrive at a more accurate and subtle understanding of the many representa6ons that incorporate explicit sexual imagery and themes, in both high art and demo6c culture, in Western and non‐Western contexts. In eager an6cipa6on, and with sincere thanks to Beers.Lambert, I remain respecmully, Dr. Hans Maes Aesthe6cs Research Group Symposium on Aesthe6cs, Art & Pornography University of Kent Paul Knight . From Last Meal of My Body for My Lover . Polaroids and contract . 2011 Jakob Lena Knebl . It Happened In Broad Daylight . C-Print . 2010 Photo by Georg Petermichl Andrew Salgado . Curse Your Little Heart . Oil on canvas . 2011 Andrew Salgado . Skull . Oil on canvas . 2011 Bloody Faggot (Self Portrait) . Oil on found canvas . 2011 Sarah Derat . Inner Beauties . Silicon implants cast in bronze . 2010 Brian Dawn Chalkley. Performance still . 2010 Regina Nieke . Untitled/Desire 3 . Acrylic, spray paint, oil on canvas. 2010. Untitled/Madame Bovary 2 . Acrylic, spray paint, oil on canvas. 2010. To give language to these spaces is filled with both promise and fear, for these spaces remain unknown, terrifying, monstrous: they are mad, unconscious, profane. - Alice Jardine . Gynesis . 1986 Anja Ronacher . Pelz . C-Print . 2010 TTY . Eternal Heads . Digital Print . 2011 Eternal Flowers . Digital Print . 2011 Apprehensive, desire turns aside; sickened, it rejects - Julia Kristeva . Powers of Horror . 1982 Lucia Pizzani . Inmaculada . Acrylic . 2011 Since 1994 I have been documenting the regular blood test process, a necessary yet still intrusive, skin piercing procedure that one is required to submit to on a three monthly basis, the nurse trying to find the right vein to confirm levels of health or ill health as the case may be. This led to a project where I have had my veins and arteries tattooed onto my body, making the internal external, the invisible visible as a reminder that there still isn t a cure, HIV is permanent, like my tattoo Richard Sawdon-Smith . Still from Blood Test . Digital Film . 2011 Bruce LaBruce . Untitled (Headless Amputee). C-Print on aluminum. 1999 BRUCE LABRUCE (b. 1964, Canada). Bruce LaBruce’s photographs and films have been exhibited interna6onally, including film debuts at Sundance and Berlin Film Fes6vals. LaBruce has wriEen and directed three theatrical produc6ons, the most recent, “Macho Family Romance” (2009), commissioned by Theater Neumarkt in Zurich. LaBruce was a contribu6ng editor and frequent writer and photographer for Index magazine, and he has also been a contributor to Eye and Exclaim magazines, Vice, the Na6onal Post, Inches, BuE magazine, Dazed and Confused, Tetu, Fake, A_tude, Blend, Tokion, Purple Fashion, and the Na6onal Post. LaBruce’s solo exhib6ons include Alleged Gallery, New York, (1999); PiE Gallery, Vancouver; MC MAGMA, Milan; Bailey Fine Arts Gallery, Toronto; Peres Projects, San Francisco; John Connelly Presents, New York. Heterosexuality Is the Opiate of the Masses, Peres Projects, Los Angeles (2005); Polaroid Rage: A Survey of Polaroids, 2000‐2006, Gallery 1313, Toronto (2006). He has also par6cipated in numerous group shows. Recent solo shows include Un6tled Hardcore Zombie Project, Peres Projects, Los Angeles (2009); and his film L.A. Zombie: The Movie That Would Not Die premiered at Peres Projects, Berlin (2010). Recently LaBruce directed a restaging of Schönberg’s melodrama Pierrot Lunaire LaBruce has also made a number of popular music videos in Canada, two of which won him MuchMusic video awards. BRIAN DAWN CHALKLEY (b.1948, UK). Brian Dawn Chalkley’s extensive exhibi6on history includes Der Menschen Klee, Kunst im Tunnel, Dusseldorf (2011); Dandyism and Contempt, London, (2011); Nothing is Forever, South London Gallery, London, 2010; Drawing of the World, Soul Korea(2009); Pilot Nominated, Canal, Venice Biennali, (2007); Peace Show, curated by Bob and Roberta Smith, London; (2006); Drawing from Turner, curated by Stephen Farthing, Tate Britain, London (2006); My Kylie, performance at ICA, London (2004); Eastwing Collec6on, No. 5, Courtauld Ins6tute, London (2001). His publica6ons include A Queer Place and Time, New York University Press, (2005); and Dawn In Wonderland, which featured an introduc6on by Dave Beech/Sadie Murdoch, 84 Drawings and CD Stories, Published by Plamorm Gallery, (2001). In 2000 he received an Honorary Fellow, Manchester Metropolitan University. He holds an MA in Fine Art from the Slade School of Fine Art, London; and a BA Hons Fine Art from Chelsea College of Art. He has been recipient of numerous grants, and has been featured extensively in press and print. Chalkley is Course Director of the Master of Fine Art program at Chelsea College of Art. SARAH DERAT (b. 1984, France). Sarah Derat’s recent solo exhibi6ons include The Birth of Anesthesia, The Cooper Union, New York (2010), Fantasy, Espace L’homond, Paris (2009); Oh Memory!, Paris (2008). Group exhibi6ons include Exmo, Great Hall ‐ Cooper Union, New York (2010), Scenes From The Imaginary Landscape, Helldone, Helsinki (2009) and Echoes, ENSBA, Paris (2008). Derat was awarded a grant in 2010 by the City of Paris to support Near Death Experience (2009), as well as the Maurice Colin‐Lefrancq Exchange Grant at Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York. She holds an MA of Fine Art from Ecole Na6onale Supérieure des Beaux Arts de Paris 2010 ‐ Cooper Union, New York 2008 ‐ BA of Fine Arts, Ecole Na6onale Supérieure des Beaux Arts de Paris 2004 ‐ BA of Art History, Ecole du Louvre, Paris. She lives and works in Paris. ANNABEL FREARSON (b. 1968, UK). Annabel Frearson’s extensive exhibi6on history includes A Theatre to Address, Arnolfini, Bristol (2010); Use & Men6on, Stephen Lawrence Gallery, London (2010); Prints Now: Direc6ons & Defini6ons, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, (2006), and The Whitechapel Open, Whitechapel Gallery, London, (1998), and has been collected by the Frank Cohen Collec6on, Victoria & Albert Museum, and Contemporary Art Society. She is recipient of the Research Support Award, Goldsmiths College AHRC Student Fellowship for PhD in Art Prac6ce (2012); London Arts (2002); Visual Ar6sts Fund (2002); Saatchi & Saatchi (1998); Fitzrovia Open (1998); and numerous other awards. She holds an MA from The Slade School of Fine Art, UCL (1996), and is currently comple6ng a PhD in Art prac6ce at Goldsmiths College, University of London. She is based in London. SULE KEMANCI (b. 1975, Turkey). Sule Kemanci’s 2010 exhibi6ons include: Non Fic6on, Our Space Gallery, London; Private/Public, Gallery 320, London; Hand Joy, Centre for Recent Drawing; London. Recent publica6ons include ZFRD Volume 2: Boxes of Desire (2010) and Cagdas Sanat (2009). Kemanci holds an MFA in Art Prac6ce from Goldsmiths, University of London, as well as a BA (Hons) in Tex6le Design from Central Saint Mar6n’s College of Art and Design and a BTEC Founda6on Diploma in Art and Design. Kemanci lives and works in London. PAUL KNIGHT (b. 1976, Australia). Paul Knight has shown at (among others) the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (Melbourne), Museum of Contemporary Art (Sydney), Chelsea Art Museum (New York) and the Palazzo Delle Ar6 (Naples) and in the Open Space sec6on at the 44th Art Koln (Germany). In 2009 he was selected for the New Contemporaries exhibi6ons (UK) and won the William and Winifred Bowness Photography prize at the Monash gallery of Art (Australia). He graduated from the Victorian college of the Arts (Melbourne, Australia) with a BFA (hons) in photography in 2001. In 2002 he was awarded a 2 year studio at Melbourne's, Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces and in 2007 he was awarded the Ann & Gordon Samstag Traveling Visual Arts Scholarship, which brought him to the MFA course at the Glasgow School of Art, where he graduated in 2009. In 2010 he was awarded the London studio residency by the Australia Council for the Arts. Knight is now based in London. JAKOB LENA KNEBL (b. 1970, Austria). Jakob Lena Knebl’s numerous exhibi6ons and performances include Assigments, Saprohpyt, Vienna (2011); Wunderloch, Berlin (2011); Amore E]ore, Vienna Armair, Vienna (2011); MOFA, Vienna (2011); Sense and Sensibility, Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg (2011); Austrian Cultural Forum, New York (2011); Kunstverein, Düsseldorf (2011); Old Things, in co‐opera6on with Heimo Zobernig, Gallery Nagl, Berlin (2010); Ich 6er‐Du Mensch, Perla Moda, Zürich (2010); Hard To Sell‐Good To Have, Palais Sturany, Vienna (2010); Becoming, Kunstraum Niederösterreich, Vienna (2010); Open up Communica6on, Tanzquar6er Vienna, Vienna (2009); Mode Fraincaise, Les Subsistance, Lyon (2009); and Performance in coopera6on with Heimo Zobernig , Mumok, Vienna (2009). S/he got the Award For Photography from the Cultural Ministry of Austria and the Performance Award Kunstraum Niederösterreich. S/he lives and works in Austria. REGINA NIEKE (b. 1979, Germany). Regina Nieke has exhibited extensively in the United Kingdom, Germany, and Switzerland; including group exhibi6ons Vierunddreißig zu Kleist, Church St. Marien, Frankfurt (Oder) and Gallery Alte Schule, Berlin, 2011; MEETING POINT, Forum Kunst & Architektur, Essen 2011; solo exhibi6ons include Animal Urbanum, Church St. Marien, Frankfurt (Oder), 2010; I Can’t Get No Sa6sfac6on, Gallery Hans Tepe, Damme (Germany), 2008; and New York Pain6ngs; Gallery Miope, Berlin, 2008; and a forthcoming solo exhibi6on, Gallery Carpen6er, Berlin, (2011). Nieke holds a Masters from the University of the Arts (UdK) in Berlin (2010), and she also has a Graduate Degree in Pain6ng (2006), and a degree in Industrial Design from UdK. She lives and works in Berlin. LUCIA PIZZANI (b. 1975, Venezuela). Lucia Pizzani has exhibited in solo and group exhibi6ons at major contemporary art spaces and museums. In 2006 she received the 2nd Na6onal Young Award Salon FIA.Recent Solo Exhibi6ons are: Vessel, Galería Fernando Zubillaga, Centro de Arte Los Galpones Caracas (2009); and Retratos Ausentes HACS Miami ‐ La Carniceria Caracas (2007). Group shows include: 65 Bienal Arturo Michelena, Museo de la Ciudad, Valencia, Venezuela (2010); ArtReach Night of Fes6vals, No_ngham, UK (2010); Beyond Appearances, Lehman College Art Space, Bronx, NY (2009); MOLAA Collects Photo‐Based Art, Museum Of La6n American Art, L.A (2009); Reflect‐Refract, Rich Gallery, London (2008); YO! contemporary self‐ portraits, Solar Gallery NY (2007); III Queens Museum Biennale, NY (2006); Iden6dades, Galería El Museo, Bogota, Colombia (2006); The Drop, Exit Art, NY (2006); Boats, Islip Art Museum NY (2005); Naturalezas Abiertas Galeria de Arte Nacional, Caracas (2003). In 2006 she received the 2nd Na6onal Young Award Salon FIA. She completed a Master in Fine Arts at the Chelsea College of Arts in 2009. Pizzani and husband/ar6st Jaime Gili splits their 6me between London and Caracas. ANJA RONACHER (b. 1979, Austria). Anja Ronacher’s recent exhibi6ons include JCE (Jeune Créa6on Européenne) Plajorm for Young European Ar6sts, Salzburg, Austria (2011); The Body Resembles a Sentence, (with Robert Gruber), Kunstraum Pro Arte Hallein, Austria, (2011); Körpercodes, Museum der Moderne, Salzburg, Austria (2010); Sweet An6cipa6on, curated by Övül Durmusoglu, Salzburger Kunstverein, Austria (2010). Previous exhibi6ons include On various impossible bodies, with Robert Gruber, Austrian Cultural Forum, Warsaw, Poland (2010); Fullframe, Volksgartenpavillon, Graz, Austria (2009); An6realism, Adele C Gallery, Rome, also ERBA, Besançon, France, and Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, Guangzhou China (2008‐2009); LA Video Library, ART LA, Los Angeles, (2009); Det andet rum, NLH space, Copenhagen, Denmark (2008); and Show RCA at Royal College of Art, London (2008). She is recipient of a produc6on grant from the Austrian Minstry of Culture, UK, and numerous grants from the Federal State Government of Salzburg (2008, 2009, 2010). Her work has been published in the Magenta Founda6on’s Flash Forward (2007); and the Leica Photography Prize (2007). She holds an MA in photography from the Royal College of Art, London. She lives and works in Austria. ANDREW SALGADO (b. 1982, Canada). Andrew Salgado has exhibited interna6onally, including the 2010 Merida Venezuela Biennale; The Courtauld Ins6tute Academy Hang IX alongside Gary Hume and Tracy Emin (2010‐11); I Am Solitary, Beers.Lambert, London (2011). Forthcoming solo exhibi6ons include Anxious, Tache Gallery, New York (2011); The Acquaintance, Art Gallery of Regina, Canada (2012); and The Woodsmen, EllioE Louis, Vancouver, Canada (2012); previous solo exhibi6ons include Paint Your Black Heart Red, Galerei Atopia, Oslo, Norway (2010); and Boys’ Night Out, Interurban, Vancouver, Canada (2008). Recent group exhibi6ons include Janus Youth, Griffin Rayne, London (2011); Golden, LePe6t Mort, OEawa, Canada (2011). He was awarded Courvoisier’s Future 500 (2010), and is featured in Channel 4’s The Science of Art (2011) alongside Anish Kapoor and Bridget Riley. He holds an MFA from London’s Chelsea College of Art, (disserta6on with dis6nc6on) (2009) and a BFA from University of Bri6sh Columbia, Vancouver, Canada (2005). He lives and works in London. RICHART SAWDON‐SMITH (b. 1963, UK) . Richard Sawdon‐Smith’s recent exhibi6ons include the Nothing Is In Place at the Brighton Photography Biannual (2010); Street Anatomy, Interna6onal Museum of Surgical Science, Chicago (2010); Nothing Is In Place, Gallery of Contemporary Art Bunkier Sztuki, Krakow, Poland (2010); Act Art, Hidden Gallery, London (2009); Itchy Scratchy Picture Show, Permanent Gallery, Brighton (2008); AIDS in Culture, Comision Nacional de Derechos Humanos, Mexico City (2008); AIDS the Dark Muse: The Impact of AIDS on Gay Culture, Drill Hall, London (2007). His work has been exhibited interna6onally, including The Na6onal Portrait Gallery, ICA, The Photographer’s Gallery, Manchester Art Gallery, the Royal Photographic Society, Museum of Modern Art Oxford, Palais de Tokyo, and the Helsinki Museum of Contemporary Art. His works have appeared in interna6onal publica6ons, including Cultures of Exile (2007) and Exiles of Normality: Photography and the Representa6on of Diseased Bodies (2004). He is based in the UK. LUKE TURNER (b. 1982, UK). Luke Turner’s exhibi6ons include The Outer Limits, James Freeman Gallery, London, (2011) Summer Exhibi6on, Purdy Hicks Gallery, London (2010); Art for Youth, Royal College of Art, London (2010); The Trouble With Women, Menier Gallery, London (2010); Let’s Go Home, S‐KAI, Hamburg, Germany (2009); Systems & Pa]erns at Westbourne Studios, London (2009) and The Whitechapel Gallery (2009). Solo exhibi6ons include Annuncia6ons, 18 HHG, London. He was included in JOTTA’s One’s to Watch (2007); BAFTA Academy Magazine’s Talent Spoong; and is recipient of The Guardian’s Student Media Award (2000). He holds an MA in Photography from the Royal College of Art (disserta6on with dis6nc6on) (2010), and a BA Fine Art from Central Saint Mar6ns, (2008). He lives and works in London. TTY (b. 1972, France). TTY has exhibited at Arendt & Medernach, Luxembourg (2010); Gallery Chan6ersBoitenoire. Montpellier. France (2006); and was included in PREVIEW Berlin (2008). Solo exhibi6ons include Gallery Chan6ersBoitenoire. Montpellier. France (2011, 2008). His work was included in the publica6on Nerveuse Pixels, Mets & Schilt, Amsterdam ‐ Lannoo edi6on (2009). He is recipient of the 2007 Bourse du Talent. Paris; and the 2007 Maison Européenne de la Photographie Paris. He lives and works in Paris. SYMPOSIUM ON AESTHETICS, ART & PORNOGRAPHY THE UNIVERSITY OF KENT AT THE LONDON INSTITUTE OF PHILOSOPHY JUNE 16‒18, 2011 PRESENTED BY hEp://www.kent.ac.uk/arts/hpa/aesthe6csresearchgroup/aesthe6csartporn.html TRANSGRESSION PERFORMANCES & VIDEO SCREENING JUNE 16, 2011 FROM 19h30 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS DR. HANS MAES THE UNIVERSITY OF KENT THE LONDON INSTITUTE OF PHILOSOPHY HOWARD ALLMAN ALISTAIR HUGHES JAVIER PERES NICK KOENIGSKNECHT PERES PROJECTS, BERLIN STEWART HARRINGTON ORANGE ADVERTISING FOR THE PRODUCTION OF THIS CATALOGUE & ESPECIALLY TO ALL PARTICIPATING ARTISTS TRANSGRESSION BRUCE LABRUCE BRIAN DAWN CHALKLEY JAKOB LENA KNEBL SARAH DERAT ANNABEL FREARSON SULE KEMANCI PAUL KNIGHT REGINA NIEKE LUCIA PIZZANI ANJA RONACHER ANDREW SALGADO RICHARD SAWDON-SMITH LUKE TURNER TTY Beers.Lambert contemporary art www.beerslambert.com [email protected]