Mey, Adeena (2015) Kunsthalle Archaeology / 쿤스트할레 고고학. [Show/Exhibition]
Type of Research: | Show/Exhibition |
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Creators: | Mey, Adeena |
Description: | Kunsthalle Archaeology / 쿤스트할레 고고학, Cheongju Art Studio (1-11 October 2015). Participating Artists: KVM (Ju Hyun Lee & Ludovic Burel), Werner von Mutzenbecher, Oh Taekwan, Park Jeehee, Luuk Schröder, The Book Society Curated by Adeena Mey Published by Cheongju Museum of Contemporary Art, Cheongju, South Korea. From gallery website: While its title refers to the “Kunshalle”, a model of institution founded by artists functioning without collections in German-speaking parts of Europe, which came to embody the ideals of this new museum based on public participation, this exhibition wishes to produce its “archaeology”. Probing situations where artistic, curatorial and architectural discourses overlap or confront each other, Kunsthalle Archaeology is an experiment in de-essentializing such a model and remap it through its encounter with its Korean counterpart. For instance, a multiple and post-western genealogy of the new museum can be traced back to the work of Kim Swoo Geun and his design for the Arko Museum in Seoul or his entry for the Pompidou Centre competition in 1971. Indeed, Kim’s unrealized project reflects a similar concern in making exhibition spaces more flowing, a vision for art and its context also paralleled through his programs which included avant-garde music, installation art and happenings in his SPACE building. Nevertheless, Kunsthalle Archaeology is neither an architectural exhibition nor a comprehensive presentation of artworks directly engaging with the architectural and discursive formation of the museum as a site of information and communication. Rather, it takes up these historical moments in their capacity as raising curatorial “problematic” (Gilles Deleuze), namely, rendering such problems visible. If the “Kunsthalle model” is one that present itself as state of permanent constructive conflict with contemporary art production and the contemporary art system” (Beatrix Ruf), Kunsthalle Archaeology seeks to problematize this logic within the context of the Cheongju Art Studio. French-Korean duo KVM’s (Ju Hyun Lee & Ludovic Burel) Yukgeori Market, September 15 (2015) deals with vernacular design, more specifically, chairs tuned by merchants on the markets of China or Korea. In the present case, the works on display result from a protocol devised by the artists to borrow furniture from stalls in Cheongju’s Yukeori Market for the duration of the show. Unlike industrial design, ordinary design does not rely on any symbolic capital or technical skills but pertain to the realm of care (for objects, for oneself). Adopting the display conventions of the design company Vitra, KVM’s installation is a comment on the logic and disciplinary power of design objects. Werner von Mutzenbecher’s Kunsthalle (1969) was commissioned as part of the exhibition Für Veränderungen aller Art (1969) at the Basel Kunsthalle in Switzerland. Mutzenbecher filmed and described the emptied rooms of the museum, following its lines, depths and geometry, and by so doing, revealing its aesthetic and expressive qualities. Originally, Kunsthalle was presented inside one of the very rooms it filmed (and not in a cinema), responding the the curator Peter Althaus’ experiment with his notion of the “open museum”. Hence, when shown in different contexts, Kunsthalle becomes an autonomous film and loses its reflexive dimension vis-à-vis the exhibition apparatus. In the frame of Kunsthalle Archaeology, the film oscillates between these two positions of reflexitivy and autonomy. Oh Taekwan’s Overlap Area II (2015) consists in a wooden box in which five paintings are integrated. The viewer is able to interchange Oh’s careful pictorial constructions which operate between graphic composition and expressive gestures, moving outside of the canvas and bringing a participatory element into painting. Oh’s ingenious device, by its compact size, stands in stark contrast to his usual paintings on canvas, generally monumental. This miniaturization of his work constitutes a personal museum of sorts, akin to other artists’ museums, which function as individual exhibitionary fictions to reflect on their institutional settings. Speaker (2013) by Luuk Schroeder was made during his stay at Nanji residency in Seoul. Commissioned to produce a piece for a public sculpture park, Schroeder placed a speaker broadcasting chanted comments about the surrounding artworks. A sculpture that was never intended to be a sculpture; A modernist sculpture placed at the bottom of a lake; A sculpture that attracts insects. Like most of Schroeder’s pieces, Speaker raises the question of where the work starts and what actually constitutes it. Indeed, the video might only be a documentation – rendered autonomous through its exhibition – of a piece which only exists through the performativity of the voice. As such, Speaker not only questions the limits of the artwork but distributes them somewhere within the whole process itself: from shooting, recording to exhibiting, what makes the work “hold” does not rely on the institutional context but on a demand to the viewer. The Book Society operates as an independent bookstore in Seoul doubling as a cultural space and a platform for publishing, often involved in editorial and curatorial projects. Their Unfinished List (2015-ongoing) is a collection of ephemera and publications produced by art spaces and institutions across Korea, organised by designers. Personal and composed of scattered printed matter, this archive functions as a kind visual history of Korean exhibition spaces through design, attesting of their existence by way of visual communication, a prime feature of new museums as it were. Hence, by bringing together these diverse singular practices, Kunsthalle Archaeology not only retraces the multiple planes that constitute the histories of public art spaces but also wishes to produce new ones. Adeena Mey, Cheongju, October 2015. |
Keywords/subjects not otherwise listed: | Curating, Installation, Korean Contemporary Art |
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Central Saint Martins Research Centres/Networks > Afterall |
Date: | 1 October 2015 |
Related Websites: | https://cmoa.cheongju.go.kr/cjasEng/speclExbiView.do?key=252&exbiNo=359&pageUnit=10&searchCnd=all&searchKrwd=&pageIndex=15&kindExhi= |
Related Websites: | |
Locations / Venues: | Location From Date To Date Cheongju Art Studio, South Korea 1 October 2015 11 October 2015 |
Date Deposited: | 02 Jul 2021 14:24 |
Last Modified: | 02 Jul 2021 14:24 |
Item ID: | 17055 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/17055 |
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