Symposium October 15 + 16, 2004
THE ARTIST AS PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL?
An Event
of the Academy of Fine Arts and the
Friends of the Secession
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
Where and how can we position critical
artistic practice today? What possibilities do conceptual strategies and methods
offer in reestablishing a capacity for critique? Silvia Kolbowski is a key representative
of those contemporary artists who take their cue from the conceptual methods of
the 1960s and '70s, radically questioning claims to objectivity in projects -
including pictures, sounds, or gestures - that recognize the political nature
of art. Her artistic practice began with an engagement with feminism, feminist
film theory, avant-garde film, and psychoanalysis, and subsequently Conceptual
Art. In her installations, she focuses on paradigmatic phenomena of a current
zeitgeist: the fascination with shopping, the historicization of Conceptual Art,
and the symbolic force of power all represent realms of experience underexamined
by mass culture. Silvia Kolbowski counters dominant, monological voices with altered
interview situations that showcase both a multiplicity of voices and an "ethic
of failure" (Jacqueline Rose), but without individualizing through personalization
or first-person narrative.
Silvia Kolbowski, an inadequate history of conceptual art (1998-1999)
For the first time, three of the
artist's large-scale installations are on view in the Secession's Main Room:
an
inadequate history of conceptual art (1998-1999),
Like Looking Away
(2000-2002) and
Proximity to Power: American Style (2003-2004),
a project developed especially for the Secession.
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
The sound and video installation
an inadequate history of conceptual art was a reaction to the revival of
concept art in the mid-1990s. The resurgent interest in Conceptual Art in Europe,
the United States, Asia, and Latin America led to its abrupt historicization and
marketing. With this observation as her starting point, Kolbowski invited 22 artists
to describe from memory an artwork of the period between 1965 and 1975, which
they had personally witnessed at the time. The stories, which include neither
the names of the artists nor the titles of the works, offer insights into a multitude
of details and peripheral locations, as molded by experience and memory. Repetitions,
mix-ups, gaps, and diverging subjective assessments render an "inadequate"
picture. The historical knowledge presented here is characterized by the past
tense, the unconscious and the subjective, a lack of unanimity, and a failure
to put into words, which, in turn, disturbs the official flow of historiography.
When transferring the work to the gallery, Kolbowski separated the sound from
the pictures: the interviews are heard in one room, while a video projection in
a second room shows only the hands of the interviewees. The picture and sound
elements are not synchronized, but instead point to the ethical-political dimension
of "inadequacy."
Silvia Kolbowski, Like Looking Away (2000-2002)
In
Like Looking Away Silvia Kolbowski asks young women ages 18-34 about
their reflections on shopping. Here too, the installation features only the interviewees'
answers and not the artist's questions. In addition, all linguistic references
to "shopping" are edited out. Kolbowski then had an actress record the
edited version of the young women's statements. Although she approximates the
specific qualities and intonations of the women's voices, the use of an actress
creates a tension between the accounts and their first-person voices. The installation
also includes 31 photographs, portraits of the 30 women taken while they listened
to the playback of their sound recordings. The 31st photograph shows the actress
in the sound studio. In a related space is a projected video loop containing excerpts
from a Hollywood blockbuster, with all images except the most violent edited out.
Like Looking Away is about the sublimation of personal and public experience,
highlighting the role of the unconscious as a driving cultural force.
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
The third installation,
Proximity to Power: American Style, which was created
especially for the Secession, questions men from the spheres of business, politics
and media/entertainment, who work in close relation to powerful men. For Silvia
Kolbowski, the relational aspects of power are illuminating with regard to American
and other global impositions of force and culture. The edited interview sequences
were spoken by actors and interspersed with music based on the soundtrack of a
well-known movie about the Vietnam War to form the voiceover for two series of
slides. One series consists entirely of details from the famous etching
The
Dream/Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters (1796-1797) by Francisco Goya, with
the picture's metaphorical and culturally critical idiom turned to abstraction.
Juxtaposed with this, as a form of dialogue, the second series presents a contrasting
visual idiom: images illustrating the responses of about 40 young boys between
the ages of seven and eleven (in Freudian terms, the period of latency), to a
question Kolbowski posed: "What most represents power to you?"
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
Silvia Kolbowski was a co-editor of
October journal between 1993 and 2000;
she collaborated in the 1990s with architects such as Peter Eisenman; taught at
The Whitney Independent Study Program (1988-1996); and now teaches in the CCC
program at the Ecole Superieure d'Art Visuel, Geneva, and in the architecture
department of Parsons School of Design, NY. Silvia Kolbowski produced the architecture for this exhibition together with the
architect Ali Tayar (parallel design, New York). The score of
Proximity to Power: American Style has been digitally composed by Maxim Kolbowski-Frampton.
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
PUBLICATION
 |
SILVIA KOLBOWSKI
176 pages, 49 colored illustrations, 50 b/w illustrations
authors: Rosalyn Deutsche, Mignon Nixon, Stephan Schmidt-Wulffen, Interview von Hal Foster mit Silvia Kolbowski
Secession 2004, ISBN 3-88375-894-9
Distribution: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König
___________________
available in the shop |
Silvia Kolbowski, Proximity to Power: American Style (2003-2004)
SILVIA KOLBOWSKI , born 1953 in Buenos Aires, lives and works
in New York
Exhibitions (Selection): 2004 Rapture, Barbican Art Gallery, London; The Last
Picture Show, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; 2002 Like Looking Away, American
Fine Arts Gallery, New York (S); 2000 The Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of
American Art, New York; an inadequate history of conceptual art, Western Front,
Vancouver (S); 1999 an inadequate history of conceptual art, American Fine Arts
Gallery, New York (S); 1997 Closed Circuit, Postmasters Gallery, New York (S)
Silvia Kolbowski, inadequate...Like... Power, In-Situ: Hannes Böck
The exhibition is supported by:
Bang
& Olufsen Flich (1010 Wien)
Hanno
Dicht- und Dämmsysteme
The exhibitions are realized through support of:
Erste Bank - Partner of the Secession
Bundesministerium für Unterricht, Kunst und Kultur
Wien Kultur
Friends of the Secession
HS Art Service, Kunsttransporteur der Secession
For
further information and photographic material please contact:
Pia Leydolt
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at