SMART Project Space on Fri, 4 May 2001 16:22:53 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] TAUTOLOGY | Opening Sat. May 5, 21.00 h. |
SMART Project
Space | 1e Constantijn Huygensstraat 20, Amsterdam requests the pleasure of your company at the exhibition opening of: TAUTOLOGY | May 6 - Juni 10, 2001 Work by Caros Bayala, Ulli Knall, Szuper Gallery, Tiago Carneiro da Cunha, Ben Pruskin. Curated by Lennaart van Oldenborgh Opening Reception May 5, 21:00h TAUTOLOGY is not the same exhibition twice. It exhibits work from artists for whom tautology is a strategy, a visual and conceptual device. Tautology in this case is not limited to the strictly semantic sense of a repetition in meaning, but it encompasses 'visual tautologies' (favoured for example by Andy Warhol and René Magritte) and imaginary constructions that rely on duplication or circularity to set up two or more terms with equivalent meanings. In a rhetorical sense, you could say that tautology is an argument that 'explains' itself by restating itself. Carlos Bayala uses visual duplication to address questions of visual and narrative perception. His recent work "Anima" is a four-panelled video projection depicting farm animals that have been dressed up in painterly renditions of themselves. By layering two different media, painting and video, Bayala draws attention to the fact that the horse 'inhabits' its photograhic image (or videographic image) in much the same way that, in this case, it inhabits its own painterly image. Ulli Knall makes ceramic sculptures of Shapeshifters: aliens that can change their shape to take on a human (or humanoid) form. Shapeshifting can be seen as a metaphor for sculpture itself: manipulating an 'alien' material to look human, or at least like something it isn't. But Knall's work also raises quesions about the duplication of identites that are possible in a world in which self-transformation has become the norm. Szuper Gallery has functioned as a free-floating gallery environment since it emerged from the financial ruins of the 'real' Szuper Gallery in Munich a few years ago. It is run by a group of artists who use the gallery name as a metaphor for an art practice within an institutional context; they have become a parasitical gallery-within-a-gallery which sponges off other institutions to examine the function of artists and art institutions in society. Tiago Carneiro da Cunha shows "Monolith", in which he presents the lyrics of Robbie Williams' "Millenium" in the manner of the opening graphics of "Star Wars". With a title that refers to Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey", Carneiro da Cunha invites the viewer to consider the contrasts between contemporary popular culture and the grand visions of the future which the prospect ot the turn of the millenium inspired in the past. Ben Pruskin is showing a new installation that combines classical music with a host of multicoloured monitors in an otherwise bare and sterile space. On one of the monitors words appear one by one in varying speed, forming a text that seems to keep turning back on itself, like a circular story in which the beginning is simultaneously the end. TAUTOLOGY is an exhibition in which repeating something means changing that something. In each of the works in this exhibition, circular or repetitive constructions alter the 'first readings' of the images (and texts) involved, and in doing so put forward questions about the nature of artistic conventions (and by extension about the nature of language). It is one approach to prise open the fabric of language, creating room for voices that otherwise couldn't be heard. Sponsored by: Gemeente Amsterdam, Mondriaan Stichting, Mentrum, Brand Bier SMART Project Space | www.smartprojectspace.net 1e Constantijn Huygensstraat 20, NL-1054 BW Amsterdam Opening times: Tuesday-Sunday 12.00-20.00 hrs. Post Office Box 15004, NL-1001 MA Amsterdam Phone: +31 20 427.5951 / 5952 | Fax.: +31 20 427.5953 Email: info@smartprojectspace.net If this e-mail was forwarded to you by way of someone other then SMART Project Space, and you would appreciate to receive further mailings announcing exhibitions at SMART Project Space, you can send mail to info@smartprojectspace.net with the following command in the body of your email message: "subscribe e-mailing SPS" If you would want to remove yourself from this mailing list, you can send mail to info@smartprojectspace.net with the following command in the body of your email message: "unsubscribe e-mailing SPS" |