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Architecture de survie
04/12/2008 - 14/12/2008
Related Artists :
Aline Bouvy / John Gillis, Andrea Winkler, David Evrard, Francisco Camacho, Frédéric Plateus aka Recto, Ivan Argote, Jaro Straub, Jean-Philippe Convert, Jim Skuldt, Kurt Ryslavy, Matthew Burbidge, Messieurs Delmotte, Michael Van Den Abeele, Michalis Pichler, Michelle Naismith, NG, Pauline Bastard, Simona Denicolai & Ivo Provoost, The Centre Of Attention, Yona Friedman
Komplot continues the project Architectures Of Survival started in Zagreb and Berlin, on the occasion of Yona Friedman's visit to Los Angeles.
With the support of the Commissariat général aux relations internationales, the Ministère de la Culture de la Communauté française de Belgique, the Belgian and French Consulates in Los Angeles ![]() NG, drawing, 2008 Photos of the performances in Los Angeles and Yona Friedman's studio Launch evening organised with ART2102 25th November, 8pm, at Mandrake
PERFORMANCES: Exhibition at Outpost for Contemporary art, 4-20 December ![]() Messieurs Delmotte performing at the opening. Messieurs Delmotte (*B 1967) shows his new video The Mental Reason and performs in his most unfamous “infra-mince” style. The deadpan, Buster Keaton like mystery artist poses as a dandy. His actions are so blatantly topical, so banally urgent they can’t be postponed. They have to take place, here and now. Coarse and crude, his videos make a mockery of just about everything. They stand aloof from smooth perfection and are realised with the simplest of audio-visual means and a unity of time, place and action. Mimicking the world of animals and objects, Delmotte is a great pretender whose whimsical feats need no explanation--they're just absurdly cheerfully and dogged. ![]() Complete Communion Celebration ![]() Simona Denicolai (*Italy 1972) & Ivo Provoost (*Belgium 1974) : their contribution to the exhibition consists of an announcement first published in Berlin listings magazine 'Zitty', for the previous Architectures of Survival exhibition (April 2007), describing a mental image, repeated until this image attains more street credibility than its actualization. Plus the video To Be Here (Happy) (2006) in which the artists travelled with both a fake and real cactus from Brussels to the Californian desert. ![]() Right: Simona Denicolai & Ivo Provoost, To Be Here (Happy), video, 2006 Left: Jim Skuldt, Rapid Mobile Architecture, 2008, cardboard installation and fax exchange with Yona Friedman Jim Skuldt (*US 1970), over the last several months, has been capturing feral cats from the alleyway surrounding his studio. Those captured have been spayed and neutered and returned to their environment. As strategies of entrapment and evasion have evolved in tandem, Skuldt and the feline population have become acquainted with certain subtleties of mobile architecture in relation to survival on the streets in the urban built environment, arriving at a level of grid-based obfuscation he refers to as Rapid Mobile Architecture (RMA) whereby rapidly shifting walls serve to simultaneously mimic spatial environments and problemitize control asserted amongst its inhabitants. Yona Friedman (*Hungary/France 1923) will be in Los Angeles, in January 2009. Before his visit, we wish to introduce his work by distributing the manuals that he formulates like recipes for building and creating public and private environments, sculptures and shelters.
![]() ![]() Right: Jim Skuldt, Rapid Mobile Architecture, 2008, cardboard installation and fax Left: Aline Bouvy / John Gillis, Love Suckers, 2006, 50 drawings on paper
Aline Bouvy (*L 1974) / John Gillis (*B 1972)
Use 'street cred' reality from the suburbs of Liège to Berlin, London, Brussels… fashion systems, sexy music, graffitti and lifestyle magazines as the source material for their work to speak about seduction, misunderstandings, primitivist and futurist icons. Representing the hypnotic gaze on the other as well as the division of labour in the creation of the artwork, the duo thumb their nose at ‘straightness’ probing the limits of bad taste, formalism, luxury, deviance and pop culture. ![]() ![]() ![]() Left, on the floor: Andrea Winkler, Untitled, 2008, fabric, coloring, garland, plastic cups Andrea Winkler (Germany) creates works of intense sensuality and minimalist elegance. Her delicate reliefs and often frilling objects are made from everyday-materials like paper, foil, tape or glossy magazine pages. Located between an object trouvé and a site-specific installation the pieces are sparingly dispersed in the space attached to the walls, spread out on the floor, fixed to architectural protrusions and hanging from the ceiling. Carefree, playful and seemingly existing there only temporarily, things appear light and mobile like transit passengers. But the picture is well composed and catches the passer-by with powerful seducement.
![]() Right: Video The Mental Reason By Messieurs Delmotte (2008) Left: Francisco Camacho (*Columbia 1979, resident at Rijksacademie, Amsterdam) proposes this project : “One year ago, X was caught by the police trying to smuggle 2 kilos of heroin from the airport Al Dorado in Bogota to Texas. Description of the jail where X is now imprisoned. Using this description and after recording conversations with X's family, I will reconstruct the image of the space where X is now jailed. The tales will be linked only by the conception of the jail's space built up in the memory of X's family; many aspects will be practical but others will be more sensitive.” ![]() ![]() Left: Simona Denicolai & Ivo Provoost, insert in magazine, 2008 Right: NG, Statement, 2007, drawings on paper ![]() Left: NG, Statement, 2007, drawings on paper Right: David Evrard, untitled, 2008, prints on objects David Evrard (Belgium) proposes new Rorcha test patterns made with loose change (Euro cents) pasted on found objects. The architectural object and its urban context are at the centre of his drawings, texts, photographs, songs and sculptures that often speak about the relation between Europe and America. Fascinated by the imagery of the West from cinema and music, he recreates situations that function like fragments of that mythology. ![]() ![]() ![]() Left: Jean-Philippe Convert, The Wall, 2008, LP cover and flag Jean-Philippe Convert (*France 1972) made a piece by associating the Flemish flag with the album cover 'Off The Wall' by Michael Jackson. Like in his video Iraki People, he puts together different sources to question poetically what seems to be accepted in the media. Right: NG, Give Me A Break, 2000, sound dispositiv NG presents the video Limits Of Paradise: Free Solo, which resembles a survival dream : The artist wandering in differing landscapes (snowy mountains, post-industrial, river side, wild nature), gathering, naming, eating herbs, bays, plants. The video is accompanied by her drawing and text Statement, a manifesto for a utopian way of life plus the sound piece Give Me A Break, a series of ‘detourned’ songs about the position of the artist in society. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Michalis Pichler (Germany) shows works made mostly in New York. WAR Diary (2005) is an edition made up of collages, using front page headlines from the Daily News and merging them with images from the New York Times. In line with Dada tradition, the random mix of visual references and sensational lines from the two rival papers produces startling results. The book Hearts gathers images of discarded commodities, which carried depictions of hearts, found in public space in Berlin, Greece and New York City. For the book New York garbage flag profile, Pichler collected discarded paper cups and other mass-produced materials emblazoned with the American Flag. ![]() ![]() Frédéric Platéus, Monster Skewb, 2008, polyurethane, resin and vinyl Frédéric Platéus (*B 1976) makes graffiti ‘tags’ and sculptures inspired by spray paintings. The two dimensional ‘tags’ are transposed into 3D objects such as his light-boxes and Twisted Puzzles, relocating street culture to the living room, the sculptures look like thick tags, abstract labels for branding. When he works with Aline Bouvy / John Gillis, they tackle the relation between ‘high’ and ‘low’ culture, creating trash decors for the white cube. In a similar collaboration, he worked with Matthew Burbidge & Jaro Straub for the project Complete Communion Celebration in Komplot, Brussels. ![]() Frédéric Platéus, outside wall ![]() Jaro Straub (*Germany 1973) has picked up a packaging for a childrens miniature piano from the streets of Los Angeles outside an artist studio complex. He rebuilt the missing musical instrument which was originally made in China out of the cardboard remnants as a nonfunctional sculptural object. The keyboards of the piano are made of Crayola wallpaint samples, thus creating a color range which substitutes the black and white keyboards for a chromatic scale. ![]() Pauline Bastard (France) works on the detournement of functional objects, transforming their use value in moments of contemplation. Her work Fresh associates a plastic bag and a ventilation fan in a very literal visual pun. Movement and playfulness are also characteristic of the fountains she creates out of domestic wrapping paper. ![]() Ivan Argote (Columbia) presents a video which documents his efforts to give money to passengers on the metro and other videos of his street actions. Most of his work originates from everyday (ab)normalities, slightly modifying what is supposed to be accepted by all as either a belief or a reality. Using photographs and video to document his in-situ actions, he highlights the absurd or non-sensical aspects of things that are often unconscious to us.
![]() Andrea Winkler, Untitled, 2008, fabric, coloring, garland, plastic cups ![]() Messieurs Delmotte, The Mental Reason, 2008, video ![]() Jason Wallace Triefenbach (*US 1978) : "I am inspired by human interaction, and our seemingly natural ability to misunderstand one another correctly. The city as hive only works as a metaphor so far as we can ignore the great lack of compassionate coordination birthing tragi-comic transgressions of human dignity and the wasting of potential inherent in any system-run-amok. I look for the details of accidental architecture: the accumulating ambiance of angles, curbs, pipes, electrical boxes, signage, graffiti, litter, scuff marks, erosion, bike racks, trees, cracks in the sidewalk, construction barricades, surveillance equipment, flowerbeds gone to weed, etc. Beauty is the chance meeting of Donald Judd and Robert Rauschenberg in a McDonald’s parking lot. How then to abstract these urges? (…)". The combined use of music, costuming, sculptures and props, physical actions, and the presentation of written texts constructs a complex formal terrain upon which autobiography, fantasy and politics mingle, morph, and grow beyond this author’s original intentions. ![]() The French collective Bad Beuys Entertainment presents the video Champion (2003), an animated gif file that is a series of logos of products, brands, companies and organisations called CHAMPION collected on the internet. ![]() ![]() The Centre of Attention (a duo based in London) propose their "Gemeinschaft und gesellschaft" piece, that links to Yona Friedmans architecture mobile where "inhabitants are enabled to flexibly shape their spatial and social worlds". In the previous 2 versions, this has started with an installation by them. But in Los Angeles, the work of the other artists will have provided that installation already. Their work being so"visitors can make changes to the exhibition by adding, moving, editing and recombining elements, etc." The sentence above was written on a letter head from Outpost that has disappeared... ![]() |