Static Friction - The Propeller Group
Transcription
Static Friction - The Propeller Group
Static Friction 2012 Multimedia installation including the following works: 1967 Collision The Dream Portraits of Mechanical Reproduction Chasing Inertia ‘Static Friction’ takes as its point of departure the ubiquitous motorbike as it is experienced in Vietnam – as an icon of social and economic mobility; a vehicle for individual identity amid social collectivity; a machine for a lawless subculture obsessed with speed and violence; and as a classic symbol of an historical era. Though the exhibition is rooted in the context of Vietnam where over 85% of the population use motorbikes as their chief mode of transport, the central theme highlights broader issues related to globalism, identity, transgression, urban and economic growth. www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] 3 Me Linh, District Binh Thanh Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam Static Friction 1967: April 28 2012 Honda ss50 [Honda ‘67], modified wheel spokes, metal frame 190 x 116 x 130 cm Honda classics such as the Dream and the ’67 are significant icons in the Vietnamese landscape, and in this exhibition both models are explored as cultural, historical, and aesthetic objects. A Honda ‘67 is caught and caged in mid-wheelie position by a web of spokes, formally foregrounding action and mechanism. Inspired by the posture of the rearing steed in Jacques-Louis David’s portrait of Napoleon crossing the Alps, ‘1967’ pointedly references a revolutionary year in history that is indelibly branded onto the collective, global conscience. www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction 1967: April 28 2012 Honda ss50 [Honda ‘67], modified wheel spokes, metal frame 190 x 116 x 130 cm 1967 was a monumental year in history. It was the year that US troops launched the largest offense during the war in Viet Nam. It was also the year that Muhammed Ali was imprisoned for refusing military service, The Beatles released their hit song “All You Need Is Love”, Nguyen Van Thieu became president of South Viet Nam, Aretha Franklin released her hit song, “Respect”, Robert McNamara announced his resignation as U.S. Secretary of Defense, Chu Guevara is captured and executed in Bolivia and Elvis Presley marries Priscilla Beaulieu. It was also the year that Honda released and exported its ss50 to Viet Nam. The ss50, was a sport inspired moped, with a top speed of 90km/h. Although it wasn’t as fast as its competitors, the ss50, was more reliable and offered a stronger pulling capacity. This solidified the bike’s stronghold in the landscape of south Viet Nam, visually, socially and culturally, making it an icon that has lasted throughout those intense years of war to this day, almost 45 years later. It has been known in Vietnamese vernacular as the ’67 for almost as long. It is the collapsing of this year in history and this particular symbol of mobility that catalyzed the inception of this work. The ss50/’67 not only carries with it the weight of its passenger and payload, it carries with it moments in our global and social fabric; moments that have frozen themselves in our psychic landscape. www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction 1967: April 28 2012 Honda ss50 [Honda ‘67], modified wheel spokes, metal frame 190 x 116 x 130 cm www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction 1967: April 28 2012 Honda ss50 [Honda ‘67], modified wheel spokes, metal frame 190 x 116 x 130 cm www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction Collision: Combustion 2012 vinyl sticker decals on aluminum panel, polyurethane varnish 100 x 178 cm x 3 mm Motorbikes are unquestionably a means of demonstrating social status in Vietnam today. A complicated but universally understood hierarchy of brands and specifications exists, with Piaggios and Vespas at the top and so-called “Chinese” bikes at the bottom.v Those who cannot afford the new high status models can “upgrade” their old bikes by having new-style farings, stickers and colour schemes applied to them by businesses that have sprung up to serve precisely this need. In the “Collision” series, vinyl stickers are used to create vibrant and surprising compositions that celebrate the rish aesthetics and complexities of motorbike culture. These colorful and glossy graphics are also the symbols of the rider’s subcultural and countercultural associations. www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction Collision: Mio Future Wave 2012 vinyl sticker decals on aluminum panel, polyurethane varnish 100 x 178 cm x 3 mm www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction The Dream 2012 Frame of Honda Dream, single channel video [04:20] 154 x 180 cm x 120 cm This video installation features a Honda Dream left as prey on a random Ho Chi Minh City street. As the night moves forward, thieves move in to pillage the machine of all desirable parts. The new day yields a “fallen” dream, stripped down and vulnerable yet still standing, a skeleton of its former self. The Honda Dream has lived up to its name as the icon of Vietnamese transportation and economic mobility since it was first introduced to the country in 1985. Only manufactured for export outside of Japan, the Honda Dream at certain points in history have become an icon, seen as the most sought after motorbike of the masses, the symbol of class and economic mobility, and a symbol of durability and reliability; making it literally a dream by many to own one. Conversely, it is also the motorbike that is most sought after by thieves, who sell the ubiquitous parts on the black market [parts from the Dream can be used on many other bikes]. This video & sculptural installation features a fallen Honda Dream, in a random location in Sai Gon. The video documents the events as the Dream lies there, in the middle of an abandoned street. Unbeknownst to passers-by, the motorbike frame is attached to the foundation. Thieves come and begin to strip it of its parts. And by the end of the night, the Dream is almost naked, a skeleton of what it used to be. Static Friction The Dream 2012 Frame of Honda Dream, single channel video [04:20] 154 x 180 cm x 120 cm Static Friction Portraits of Mechanical Reproduction Thành Dat, Racing Boy, November 10, 2011 (Canon PowerShot G11) 2012 graphite on paper 104 x 128 cm In contrast to the bold and colorful Collision pieces, the realistic black and white graphite drawings of racing motorbikes explore the connection between a rider and his bike, and the broader notion of identity. The subjects of these large-scale drawings are the bikes of well-known illegal street racers in and around Ho Chi Minh City. Serving as portraits of their owners, the souped up bikes also reveal the racers’ desire to assert their individuality amid the social collective. The works, based on images of the racing bikes sent by their owners via email, also touch on contentious issues surrounding reproduction, appropriation and authenticity. Static Friction Portraits of Mechanical Reproduction Underground, February 14, 2012 (Nokia N95) 2012 graphite on paper 104 x 128 cm Static Friction Portraits of Mechanical Reproduction Daytona, February 14, 2012 (Nokia N95) 2012 graphite on paper www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction Portraits of Mechanical Reproduction Polini, February 14, 2012 (Nokia N95) 2012 graphite on paper 104 x 128 cm www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction Portraits of Mechanical Reproduction Thành Dat, Racing Boy, March 2, 2012 (Canon PowerShot A710 IS) 2012 graphite on paper 104 x 128 cm www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction Chasing Inertia 2012 approximately 50 black tire inner tubes [sized 2l25/2.50 - 17] 120 x 100 x 120 cm Like “1967”, “Chasing Inertia” is another phantasmagoric object produced from leftover motorbike parts. Approximately 50 motorbike tire innertubes, all of them in the most common size used in Viet Nam [2.25/2.50 - 17], were cut and reconfigured into into one large, abstract, inflated, and interconnected system of rubber tubing that has semblance to a an infinite knot or a mass of entangled intestines, possibly even a cloud of smoke or a twisted dragon. Only one air-valve is found on the object. This object was created using techniques learned form motorbike repairmen, found on almost every other street corner in large urban areas, patching tires and doing quick fixes for motorbike riders, and recalls a time, after the “reunification of Viet Nam”, between the ’80′s and early ’90s where the majority of the population were forced to patch different used tires together in order to be able to use their bicycles, the main means of transportation at that time. Although the viewer can’t help but to relate the floating object to something otherworldly, possibly from the realms of science fiction; the reference to the layered histories are undeniable – the resourcefulness of those in the midst of economic reform and trade embargos is intertwined with a history of a raw material, i.e. rubber, that has its own economic significance to the region. www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected] Static Friction Chasing Inertia 2012 approximately 50 black tire inner tubes [sized 2l25/2.50 - 17] 120 x 100 x 120 cm www.the-propeller-group.com [email protected]