Works in the exhibition

Ignasi Aballí, Llistats (Personas III), 1997-2006
Sven Augustijnen, L'École des pickpockets, 2000 (video still)
Sven Augustijnen, L'Histoire belge, 2007
Enrico David, Fait divers, 2007
Enrico David, Interior, 2006 (from Shitty Tantrum, 2006-2007)
David Lamelas, Reading Film from „Knots“ by R. D. Laing, 1970 (film still)
Renzo Martens, Untitled, 2007 (video still)
Gail Pickering, Zulu (Speaking in Radical Tongues), 2005/2008 (photo: Sheila Burnett, courtesy Gail Pickering and Tate Modern)
Emily Wardill, Sick Serena and Dregs and Wreck and Wreck, 2007 (film still)
John Wood & Paul Harrison, Board, 1993 (video still)

Ignasi Aballí, Llistats, 1997-2007
10 digital prints

Ignasi Aballí’s lists are inventories of found text material. Emotionally charged key concepts from our everyday discourses are isolated from their media context, re-combined, and thus formed into abstract indexes. These columns of numbers and terms generate meaning from the pure quantity of “information”, i.e. from the relations that the various elements necessarily enter into with each other. They form clusters of graphical signs, in which meanings continue to echo without becoming manifest.


Sven Augustijnen, L'école des pickpockets, 2000, 52' (loop)
Video installation

In L’École des pickpockets (The school of pickpockets) Augustijnen documents a practice that usually takes place out of the public eye: He observes two professional teaching their craft to an amateur. Despite their obvious professionalism, the viewer inevitably begins to doubt their role: Why should they explain their secret art to the public in this way, given that its success relies on its concealment?


Sven Augustijnen, L'Histoire belge, 2007
10 offset prints

L’Histoire belge (Belgian history) presents episodes in Belgian history that, despite the serious presentation in the style of cultural heritage exhibits, always remain improbable. Names, dates and events come together to form recognisable patterns with unexpected associations and parallels. Down the centuries, everything seems to be conspired with everything else – including coincidence with coincidence.


Enrico David, Fait divers, 2007
10 black-and-white photographs

Fait divers links the objectivity of black-and-white photography with elements of the surreal. In the form of production stills for a play, the piece documents events that can hardly have taken place in this form: A couple has a lawyer convert their legal status to that of mother and adopted daughter. Here photography testifies to the event character of what is visibly presented, while there is a gap between visible and alleged event that can only be filled by means of speculation.


Enrico David, Shitty Tantrum, 2006-2007
6 gouaches on paper (from a series of 22)

The series presents different forms of stage situations – scenes from fictitious plays, set designs, the evening before the performance – executed with the devices of decorative painting. David doubles up the codes and conventions of theatre and the theatrical so as to perform aspects of shame, doubt and uncertainty in these sets: moments of exhibition in which meaning is discontinued and begins to assume other forms.


David Lamelas, Reading Film from „Knots“ by R. D. Laing, 1970, 15' (loop)
16mm film installation

David Lamelas’s film is based on a text by British psychoanalyst R. D. Laing concerning the paradoxes of human action, which he translates into poetically condensed language games. By nesting different media formats and levels of perception, the linearity of our reading becomes inextricably entangled in logical and temporal "knots" and our private readings intertwine with each other in a common physical place.


Renzo Martens, Untitled, 2007, 12' (loop)
Video installation

Untitled is a fragment of a feature-length film to be released this autumn based on Martens’ journeys to Congo. Focusing on the global marketing of images of human poverty, that bring least benefit to those depicted as victims, Martens instructs a number of Congolese photographers in how to produce and market pictures of the poverty of their fellow-countrymen themselves. At the same time he thus questions the ethical standards of reporting on the suffering of other people, thus confronting us with the contradictions of our speaking and looking.


Emily Wardill, Sick Serena and Dregs and Wreck and Wreck, 2007, 10’ (loop)
16mm film installation

Emily Wardill’s film translates allegorical representations on historical church windows into short performative scenes. In pseudo-historical costumes and a set distorted in perspective, five actors recite texts that are as poetic as they are grotesque. Like the coloured splinters of glass of the church windows, aspects of pop and absurd theatre, TV melodrama and transcendental philosophy piece together seamlessly. Their meaning, however, melts away in the overabundance of possible interpretations.


Gail Pickering, Zulu (Speaking in Radical Tongues), 2005/2008
Perfomance and installation

Gail Pickering’s work is based on text fragments from manifestoes of revolutionary groups from the 1960s and 70s. In the performer’s language and gestures, she acts out their political attitudes, bridging the gap in time, at the same time subjecting them to scrutiny in terms of their message and effect. Four life-sized sculptural letters spelling out the word “Zulu” serve as a stage and prop, thus setting her action in an open field of associations with anticolonial resistance, exotism and the symbolic power of signification.


John Wood & Paul Harrison, Board, 1993, 3' (loop)
Video installation

We see the artists in a strictly choreographed interaction with a large white wooden board. In a fluid sequence of synchronous movements they manipulate the physical arrangement of their set: The board becomes a movable wall that divides the visible space, folding it, giving it depth or taking its depth away, making the figures in it visible or invisible. It thus imperceptibly undermines the statics, the physical and ideological foundation of the white cube of the exhibition space in which the work is showcased.










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