Ayse Erkmen, Kein gutes Zeichen, Foyer
In her installations Ayse Erkmen takes the empty spaces and open questions that
architectures and surroundings leave behind and translates them into a minimalist
grammar of forms. The multipart installation for the Secession starts from the
separation between the entrance area and the exhibition space and evolves from
the resulting tension between the different imagined moments of the building and
its surroundings.
Ayse Erkmen, Kein gutes Zeichen, Main Gallery
In the middle section of the main room, beams of light move across the glass ceiling.
They mark the underside of two platforms that are mounted above the ceiling of
the exhibition room and are normally used for cleaning the glass surfaces. By
artistically emphasizing them, Erkmen addresses an intersection of illumination
and daylight that defines the exhibition situation. While the platforms continuously
glide back and forth horizontally across the entire length of the room, Erkmen
introduces a second movement on the left and right in the side sections.
Ayse Erkmen, Kein gutes Zeichen, Main Gallery
Two video projections that are projected onto the glass ceiling from the "off"
as well each display a white circle on a black background, which flashes at a
varying rhythm. While the impulses set a signal on the glass ceiling, at the same
time they also refer to motifs from early avant-garde films and their experiments
with light and perception, which used structural abstraction to pursue a "different
way of seeing".
Ayse Erkmen, Kein gutes Zeichen, Main Gallery
By shifting the action in her installation to the glass ceiling, which is simultaneously
the boundary of the space, Erkmen constructs a situation, in which elements of
avant-garde film and the white cube meet at an imagined and architectural suture:
the myth of a neutral space, the artistic practice of rejecting the logistics
and image language of the commercial (film)industry and introducing the economic,
social and political implications of representations into the aesthetic experience
through abstraction. Parallel to this, Erkmen shifts the motor noise of the moving
platforms into the space itself, thus inserting an acoustic level in addition
to the visual one.
This scene is prefaced by a slide series in the foyer of the Secession, which
again picks up the circular form.
Ayse Erkmen, Kein gutes Zeichen, Foyer
The circle, which is open and abstract in the main room, here shows the surface
of coffee projected onto the rosette above the entrance, a central part of the
architecture characterized by Jugendstil. In the pictures, which leave out the
edge of the coffee cup, the arrangement and the density of the bubbles resulting
from boiling the coffee vary and continuously assume new formations in the successive
sequence of the projection.
Ayse Erkmen, Kein gutes Zeichen, Main Gallery
The subject of "coffee" in the entrance area and the installations in
the main gallery retain the possibility of multiple interpretations in their social
and historical implications. And they are provocative in the way they are combined
with one another, in relation to the title of the project and the interior and
exterior spaces surrounding them, but also in relation to the question of a transfer
of cultural narratives in an exhibition context. At the same time, Erkmen emphasizes
in her work the temporariness: the ephemere of an interpretation, but also of
an artistic practice of site-related installations.
PUBLICATION
In both form and content, this project for the Secession ties into Erkmen's earlier
works. This aspect is explicitly expressed in the exhibition catalogue, which
includes an article by Fatih Özgüven as well as large-format pictures
- including pictures of the works Das Haus (DAAD Galerie, Berlin, 1993), Eingang
(Inclusion/ Exclusion, Künstlerhaus, Graz, 1996), Sculptures on Air (Münster
Sculpture Project, 1997), Shipped Ships (Frankfurt am Main, 2001) - that reflect
cross-references within Erkmen's artistic practice.
 |
AYSE ERKMEN
Kein gutes Zeichen
30 pages, 13 colored illustrations
authors: Matthias Herrmann, Fatih Özgüven
Secession 2002, ISBN 3-901926-42-9
___________________
available in the
shop |
AYSE ERKMEN lives and works in Berlin and Istanbul.
Exhibitions (selected): 2001 Looking at You, Museum Fridericianum, Kassel; Tische
der Kommunikation, Städtischen Galerie im Museum Folkwang, Essen; Berlin
Biennale, Postfuhramt; Shipped Ships, Main, Frankfurt am Main, Kuaförde iki
Kadýn, Chambal, Eudora, Emre ve Dario, Maçka Sanat Galerisi, Istanbul;
2000 Half of, Galerie Deux, Tokyo; Man muss ganz schön viel lernen um hier
zu funktionieren, Frankfurter Kunstverein; Zeitwenden, Museum Moderner Kunst,
20er Haus, Vienna; Biennial of Kwanju, Korea; 1999 Under the Same Sky, Kiasma,
Helsinki; Zeitwenden, Kunstmuseum Bonn; Fireworks, De Appel, Amsterdam; Dream
City, Villa Stuck, Munich
EXHIBITION DISCUSSION
Tuesday, June 18, 2002,
7 p.m. involving
Ayse Erkmen and Brigitte Huck
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