• MODESTY – L�via P�ldi

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    MODESTY

    L�via P�ldi

    Currently, in the seemingly trendless and pluralistic milieu of contemporary
    art making again there is a strong awareness concerning formalistic approaches
    and objectuality – the status, position and presence of the art object in
    the social, aesthetic and commercial triangle. Art in the 1990s was focused more
    on the social context and participatory practices of art, its interactive and
    instrumental potential for grasping the “real.” A wider engagement
    with different social strata and the prevailing conditions of the cultural industry
    have again raised the issue of the materialization of the artwork and led to
    a re-contextualization of aesthetics. Modesty, an international exhibition and
    publication project initiated in Ljubljana (Slovenia), has emerged out of previous
    experiences and already existing collaborations between the participating artists
    and the curators, which developed in smaller group shows and solo exhibitions
    over the last few years and seeks to develop and transform itself with each new
    presentation. Functioning not as a theme but an umbrella term, it gives space
    to diverse artistic practices that nevertheless connect with each other on various
    levels. By tracing the appearance of modesty – as decency, unpretentiousness
    and quietness, but also as understatement – the show inquires into the current
    position of the (art) object, in its formal, stylistic, social and institutional
    aspects, within the selected practices. The participating artists do not abandon
    the “classical” concept of the artwork; on the contrary, they very
    much operate with this notion, with either slight or significant modifications.
    None of them is confined to a specific medium: their work ranges from the production
    of incorporeal and thoroughly mirage-like optical effects through the sculptural
    to the employment or creation of technical devices. The project operates within
    these parameters as it presents work of a transient character dealing with various
    models of perception, the transcription of everyday phenomena into formal (visual)
    language, various self-referential aspects and, last but not least, poetic intimations.
    It makes room for the personal, as well as for a more imagistic and, in many
    cases, quite playful engagement with form drawing the viewer‘s attention
    to the value in primary experience and sensuality – the pleasures of looking
    and finding something out for themselves in the process of encountering / interpreting
    the works.

    The drawings, sound
    installations, video, painting, sculpture and photographic works of 14 artists
    embody contingent states with involving double-takes, shifting points of view,
    repetition or suspense. The definition and appearances of ‘artificial’
    are also in question as we live increasingly telematic lives, where ‘real’
    feelings, behaviours and perception are triggered through abstracted involvements
    with artificial structures, and illusions. The photographs of Attila Csörg’s
    Spherical Vortex (1999), made with consecutive or long exposures, reveal movements
    that is otherwise invisible to the naked eye. Vadim Fishkin’s lenticular
    images Molecule (Marbles) (2002) deceive the eye by playing with the pictorial
    illusion of the artificially (and home made) built ’real’ while Ceal
    Floyer’s 2 Slides (1999), the projection of two identical slides showing
    two almost monochrome surfaces also examines a dialectical tension between the
    literal and the mundane, and an imaginative construction of meaning forcing the
    viewer to renegotiate her perception of the world. The deceptive simplicity of
    the works are informed by the artist’s particular sense of humor and/or
    awareness of the absurd. CM von Hausswolff’s Mobile Unit for the Detection
    of Unknown Entities (2003) catalyzes transformative experiences continuing his
    radar-surveillance investigation to establish contact and communication with
    the supernatural world. Jimmie Durham and Maria Thereza Alves’ Pink Granite
    At Work (1997) – part of the Stone Video series – taking on a deadpan
    stance centers around the stone preceived more as a tool counter-pointing its
    associations with architecture and monument. In their short videos John Wood
    and Paul Harrison perform various moves and exercises with common objects in
    the surrounding space revealing additional layers through the absurdity and humor
    triggered by the confrontation between physical space and their bodies in a mostly
    playful but occasionally painful and stressful situations.

    The eternal drifting
    of the oleaginous bubble through the air against the backdrop of sky and a darkly
    distant landscape of trees in Rivane Neuenschwander’s An Inventory of Small
    Deaths (Blow), a film made in collaboration with Cao Guimaraes, and Alexander
    Gutke’s video installation Caracas (1966-2000) have both built a conversation
    about sensory experience. In Gutke’s piece the animated sky on the found
    postcard depicting the city center of Caracas bridges the evolved time gap and
    continues to represent a reality long after the photo had been taken, sent away
    and found. Joe Bari’s monochrome circle paintings Without title (2002-2003),
    Goran Petercol’s Interspace 2003, or Werner Reiterer’s Star (1999)
    are based on similarly precise observations and the direct interaction between
    spectator and the art object confirming that ”actions do not begin with
    thinking, but with very careful observation.”(Bari) Modesty has been inspired
    by works that convey and dualities – conceptual and material and public
    and private dimensions – weawing them together succeesfully. Seeking connections
    between past and present, fact and fiction Tacita Dean’s Sound Postcard
    (2003) traces an interaction between the objective and private worlds and the
    overlaps of psychic landscapes defined by inner desires and obsessions. Leif
    Elggren As if I was my father (2002), a performance video and a text connect
    a intimacy with his investigations and contemplations about hierarchy and the
    symbolism of power, specifically about the concept of the Monarch, the head of
    family and state. (Modesty was curated by Lívia Páldi and Gregor
    Podnar at Galerija ?kuc / Mala galerija – Ljubljana, 25 March – 3 May,
    2003)

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