Zeitschrift Umělec 2003/1 >> Terror = Décor: Art Now Übersicht aller Ausgaben
Zeitschrift Umělec
Jahrgang 2003, 1
6,50 EUR
7 USD
Die Printausgabe schicken an:
Abo bestellen

Terror = Décor: Art Now

Zeitschrift Umělec 2003/1

01.01.2003

Zuzana Štefková | venice biennale | en cs

Despite the fact that the Slovenian exposition Terror = décor: art now in Venice cam away with no prizes, it ranks alongside some of the most interesting projects in this summer’s Biennale. Žiga Kariž works with the theme of the commodification of violence in his project, with the viewpoint that artwork comes back to the viewer.
The equation Terror = décor contains different possible readings for this project. The first interpretation deals with the way in which art appropriates drastic subjects and transforms them into objects of esthetic interest. Most of the pictures/objects capture scenes whose violent content is subordinate to the cold esthetics of luxurious design, suggestive of the screen surfaces of a home cinema. (The presence of one image with a light Mondrianesque composition neutralizes the portrayal of violence, and allows the abstract quality to emerge.) On the other hand we could reverse the formula and interpret the result (Décor = terror) as a warning against the trap in which the pictures/objects are hiding: the fisheye of the camera films everything happening in front of the pictures.
Thus it is impossible to reduce the whole project to the objects physically present in the gallery. The indivisible component he creates is more than anything a system beyond the picture (in the metaphorical and factual meaning of the word), which casts the viewer in the role of the observed. We are able to understand the theme of the reciprocal view, in which image captures the viewer, in the context of art history (in the catalogue the curator of the pavilion, Jurij Krpan, mentions, for example, work by Velázquez and Manet), but at the same time purely contemporary associations of a somewhat sociological nature emerge. The viewer knows that his movement in the gallery is being monitored, and at the same time he watches several screens broadcasting events in Venice homes, in which other pictures/objects were placed. The project Terror = décor then opens up the theme of medialization of privacy, and at the same time the extent of the control which the average citizen exhibits as he moves through public space. Privacy in our time has become a very touchy subject, whether it is at the center of attention in the voyeurism of nosey journalists, the sensational audience that compliments the total exhibitionism of participants in television contests like Big Brother, or in the possibilities of taking advantage of the camera industries and other technologies intended for our protection.
Uncovering the mechanism of pictures/objects leads the viewer to reconsider his own role in the entire system, where in place of the traditional economic view the viewer/picture functions with a certain ambiguity.
The viewer becomes a participant in a scene observed by the invisible eyes of someone else. Aside from these interactive aspects, we also find in the exposition artifacts dealing with the problem of the commodification of artwork, its reduction to being merely an object on the market, especially characterized by market value. His map of world art centers with the listed number of galleries, collections, artists and art market turnover is (like the entire Slovenian exposition) a part of the wider intention to map out “what causes the movement of pictures” (see the catalogue for the Slovenian pavilion, text by Blaž Križnik), in other words, what are the rules of law at play in art in its socio-political, economic and historical contexts.
However the key question the Slovenian exposition asks is whether pictures can be something more than mere decoration in a world of terror, and it seems that the work of Žiga Kariž offers a positive response by means of deconstructing the mechanisms of the art market and the function of representation, or as we can read in Igor Zabel’s Bomba v obraze (Bomb in the Picture), published in the catalogue for the Venice exposition: Art can “overcomes its own limitations only by uncovering its own situation.”





Kommentar

Der Artikel ist bisher nicht kommentiert worden

Neuen Kommentar einfügen

Empfohlene Artikel

Ein Interview mit Mike Hollands Ein Interview mit Mike Hollands
„Man muss die Hand von jemandem dreimal schütteln und der Person dabei fest in die Augen sehen. So schafft man es, sich den Namen von jemandem mit Sicherheit zu merken. Ich hab’ mir auf diese Art die Namen von 5.000 Leuten im Horse Hospital gemerkt”, erzählte mir Jim Hollands. Hollands ist ein experimenteller Filmemacher, Musiker und Kurator. In seiner Kindheit litt er unter harten sozialen…
Meine Karriere in der Poesie oder:  Wie ich gelernt habe, mir keine Sorgen  zu machen und die Institution zu lieben Meine Karriere in der Poesie oder: Wie ich gelernt habe, mir keine Sorgen zu machen und die Institution zu lieben
Der Amerikanische Dichter wurde ins Weiße Haus eingeladet, um seine kontroverse, ausstehlerische Poesie vorzulesen. Geschniegelt und bereit, für sich selber zu handeln, gelangt er zu einer skandalösen Feststellung: dass sich keiner mehr wegen Poesie aufregt, und dass es viel besser ist, eigene Wände oder wenigstens kleinere Mauern zu bauen, statt gegen allgemeine Wänden zu stoßen.
Magda Tóthová Magda Tóthová
Mit Anleihen aus Märchen, Fabeln und Science-Fiction drehen sich die Arbeiten von Magda Tóthová um moderne Utopien, Gesellschaftsentwürfe und deren Scheitern. Persönliche und gesellschaftliche Fragen, Privates und Politisches werden behandelt. Die Personifizierung ist das zentrale Stilmittel für die in den Arbeiten stets mitschwingende Gesellschaftskritik und das Verhandeln von Begriffen, auf…
Afrikanische Vampire im Zeitalter der Globalisierung Afrikanische Vampire im Zeitalter der Globalisierung
"In Kamerun wimmelt es von Gerüchten über Zombie-Arbeiter, die sich auf unsichtbaren Plantagen in obskurer Nachtschicht-Ökonomie plagen."