Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, 2002
In her photographs and installations,
Ines Doujak stages spaces, which make it possible to examine how norms are set
and to evoke them as structural and constitutive elements of society. In her first
solo exhibition, the artist focuses on the themes of heterosexism and heteronormativity,
which organize not only subjectivity and desire, but also language, knowledge
and culture, family, state and economy. Doujak approaches these themes through
the language of the visual as the dominant force of codification. This approach
seeks a discussion of normativity based on the norm, rather than the deviation.
In her project for the Secession, Ines Doujak shows that it is possible to treat
differences as non-hierarchical relationships and to make the societal structures
of power and violence visible at the same time.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, 2002
The exhibition project will take
place in two locations: Ines Doujak will produce a wagon for the Rainbow Parade
on June 29, 2002. In the Secession, the exhibition will be shown in the Gallery
and in the Grafisches Kabinett.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, 2002
The artist's decision to produce a wagon for the parade follows her interest in
showing that the regulative moments of heterosexism and forms of self-normalization
permeate every section of society - and to this extent, also the parade. Rising
above the hetero norm in oppositional deviation, with which the protagonists set
the scene of the parade, simultaneously reinforces the organization of the Other
on the definitional basis of a heterosexual gender difference.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, Rainbow Parade 2002
Ines Doujak thus shifts the action from the wagon as axis of order to the surroundings:
whereas only photographic figures on the theme of heterosexism are to be seen
on the wagon, around the wagon there are performers and dancers with costumes
and hats made of tires with pictures attached to them.
The Rainbow or Christopher Street Day Parade stands for the public demand for
the equality of lesbians, gays and transsexuals with heterosexuals. It is a memorial
to the events in Christopher Street / New York in 1969, where police harassment
of homosexuals led to open resistance and demonstrations in the street for the
first time in the lesbian and gay movement.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, Rainbow Parade 2002
In the Gallery of the Secession, Ines Doujak picks up the thread of the parade
wagon allegorically. Middle-sized trucks made of wood form a wagon circle in the
middle of the room. This is reminiscent of wild west films, the settling of new
land, and of the mechanisms of social order and demarcation at the same time.
Yet perspectives are shifted because of the size. Visitors look from above at
the wagon circle and its scenarios.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, 2002
Behind the visitors, the entire wall
surface of the first space in the gallery is wallpapered with a series of large-scale
staged scenes of people and animals in nighttime surroundings. The animals are
life-sized, white dummies that are used by taxidermists as mounts. The prepared
(covered) dummies are arranged in gender pairs and heterosexual family structures
for exhibition in museums.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, 2002
In the allegorical settings, the
women and men come together in various constellations, which are reminiscent of
dream landscapes and quotations from complex narratives. As in earlier works,
Ines Doujak composes domesticating, ruling and performative gestures from a perspective
marked by feminism: two women lying close together on the floor of a lifeboat,
people standing with their hands raised and faces to the wall among white animal
dummies, a man trying to open a door, while a child with a bandaged head clings
to his legs, a burning hand being thrust between a woman's legs.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, Rainbow Parade 2002
Whereas visitors cannot enter the inside of the wagon circle either actually or
as the phantasmal, empty center, the zone between the wagon circle - the normed
architecture of order and settlement - and the photo wallpaper - stage of gender
difference - becomes the site of seeing and defining. By repeatedly offering different
perspectives in her installation, even they do not enable a resolution or replacement
for hierarchical structures, Ines Doujak places visitors in a tableau proposing
a discussion of the norm in the process of normalization. At the same time, this
is not a static relationship, but rather a zone of contention in the production
of representations.
Ines Doujak, Vater Arsch, 2002
In the Grafisches Kabinett, long cardboard tubes reaching vertically from the
ceiling to the floor fill the room. Moving strips of 200 photographs, which were
originally attached to the costumes of the dancers, are attached to the tubes.
Whereas the people wearing the pictures made them move at the parade, here they
are set in motion by visitors moving through the room.
INES DOUJAK born 1959, lives and works in Vienna
Exhibitions 2001/2000 (selected): I feel a song coming along, Kunstverein Düsseldorf,
Galerie Hohenlohe & Kalb, Vienna; Du bist die Welt, Wiener Festwochen; Widerstand,
Rhizom, Aarhus; The Subject and Power (the lyrical voice), Haus der Künste,
Moscou; Don't let it in, don't let it out, Galerie Knoll, Budapest; infection
manifesto, Kunstverein Bonn; Gouvernementalität, Expo 2000, Hannover; Erlauf
erinnert sich, Erlauf; Dinge, die wir nicht verstehen, Generali Foundation, Vienna
PUBLICATION
 |
INES DOUJAK
Vater Arsch
40 pages, 32 colored illustrations and book jacket
authors: Antke Engel, Matthias Herrmann, Ruth Noack/Roger M. Buergel
Secession 2002, ISBN 3-90901926-43-7
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available in the
shop |
The exhibition was realized with support from:
Lang & Lang Werbeproduktion
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at