2016 Kunsthalle wien Exhibition
© Stephan Wyckoff
One, No One and One Hundred Thousand is an exhibition inspired by Oulipo’s literary strategies based on the idea of a “workshop of potential literature.” According to one of its founders, Raymond Queneau, Oulipo’s objective was to propose new “structures” for writers that are mathematical in nature, or to invent new artificial or mechanical procedures that could contribute to literary activity: props for inspiration or aids for creativity.
This notion of potentiality will be applied to the format of an exhibition – not as an assertion of what an exhibition should be, but as an attempt to uncover what it could be. An exhibition conceived as a “machine” that produces other exhibitions. Nine artists were commissioned to create new works, which will then be presented in a display that can change continually according to the choice of the spectator.
Jason Dodge often places everyday things in the exhibition space. What the living do comprises waste material such as paper, bottle caps or packaging materials that can be situated in the space by the visitors. Handle with handles by Phanos Kyriacou consists of six terracotta casts of plastic water cooler bottles. Adriana Lara’s work Opening Hours is an intangible readymade employing time. Inspired by the versatility that is inherent in the work of Franz West and picking up the idea that art should be used, Jonathan Monk shows – in an act of appropriation – Jonathan Monk presents four chairs and a coat rack by Franz West – five pieces of furniture by Franz West. The artist Marlie Mul has produced the work Hammer: two oversized hammers made of flexible materials. Joy in Paperwork is the title of Amalia Pica’s series of works on paper that have been printed on with office stamps. Lina Viste Grønli provides the exhibition with four wooden letters, mounted on wheels, which she calls AAHHAHAAHAHA. Great versatility and thus almost unlimited presentation possibilities is offered by the work Graffiti Blind of artist Martin Soto Climent. The piece provides many possibilities for transformation and numerous compositions, highlighting the relation between the body and the object as an extension of a movement. Finally Darren Bader’s 8/12 tasks visitors to interpret the work consisting only of the title and to find a way to contribute any 8 and any 12 to the exhibition.
The exhibition will open with a set-up designed by the curator. From the day after on the works will be deinstalled and placed back on top of their respective packaging. The space as such will remain empty, while the art works will be waiting for being installed in a different configuration. Each visitor will thus be invited to mount his or her own exhibition. A member of the Kunsthalle Wien staff will afterwards document the new set- up with a number of photos, which all together will constitute the exhibition catalogue. In addition to that, a single Polaroid with an installation view will be taken to create a visual diary in progress of the exhibitions.
Following Marcel Broodthaers’s motto “Every exhibition is one possibility surrounded by many other possibilities which are worth being explored,” the exhibition potentially presents an unlimited number of possible arrangements of works according to the exhibition’s duration and its number of visitors. It also investigates various aspects related to exhibition making and questions the authorship and authority of today’s curator. The main actor of the exhibition will be the spectator who will not act as a consumer but as a co-producer of the artists and the curator.
The legendary Raymond Queneau book A Hundred Thousand Billion Poems acts as a manifesto for this exhibition. The book consists of 14 groups of 10 lines of poetry each; the groups are ordered and the lines written in such a way that one may select one line from the first group, one line from the second group, and so on until 14 lines are selected. These 14 lines, read in the order of selection, will comprise a sonnet. Since there are 10 options for each of 14 choices, it follows that exactly 1014 (= 100,000,000,000,000) different sonnets may be produced using this method. It would take some 200,000,000 years to read them all when the reading takes place twenty-four hours a day.
© David Avazzadeh, Maximilian Pramatarov
© David Avazzadeh, Maximilian Pramatarov
Curator: Luca Lo Pinto
Artists: Darren Bader, Jason Dodge, Phanos Kyriacou, Adriana Lara, Jonathan Monk, Marlie Mul, Amalia Pica, Martin Soto Climent, Lina Viste Grønli
The foregoing texts and images are provided and copyrighted by: https://kunsthallewien.at
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