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"Mots d'ordre mots de passe": Espace Paul Ricard.


Curators Cyril Jarton and Laurent Jeanpierre's "Mots d'ordre mots de passe pas·sé  
adj.
1. No longer current or in fashion; out-of-date.

2. Past the prime; faded or aged.



[French, past participle of passer, to pass, from Old French; see
" (Order Words Passwords) gathered artists from across generations and media "to isolate and compare two strategies--order words and passwords--that operate in art as well as in politics." Unfortunately, neither phrase was defined nor explained, though a prominently displayed press release informed us that the three consecutive rooms of the L-shaped Espace Paul Ricard were set up for order, passage, and combinations of the two, respectively. "Order words" would presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 represent the voice of authority speaking in commands, rules, or directions. But the function of "passwords" or "passage words" (as translated in the press release) was less clear.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In the first room, one had the feeling that artists and artworks were chosen to fit the curators' categories. Many artists tended to shroud political vituperation in ambiguity and irony: Gil Wolman's Situationist slogans, such as Man Looked at Things, 1979; Philippe Ramette's big stainless-steel megaphone, Canon a paroles (Speech Cannon), 2001; Claude Leveque's Untitled (Arbeit macht frei "Arbeit macht frei" is a German phrase meaning "work brings freedom" or "work shall set you free/will free you" or "work liberates" and, literally in English, "work makes (one) free". ), 1992, where Mickey Mouse Mickey Mouse

Famous character of Walt Disney's animated cartoons. He was introduced in Steamboat Willie (1928), the first animated cartoon with sound. Mickey was created by Disney, who also provided his high-pitched voice, and was usually drawn by the studio's head animator,
 plays host under Auschwitz's notorious "Work Makes You Free" sign; Davide Balula's sound installation of murmuring pigeons; Johan Berard's digital "timer," Untitled, 2003, where tiny images of people coming and going are projected as time flashes by; or even the photographs and drawings from the Russian Criminal Tattoo Tattoos are used among criminals to show membership of gangs and record the wearer's personal history - such as his or her skills, specialties, accomplishments and convictions. They are also used as a means of personal expression.  Encyclopedia (Steidl, 2004), which seemed an odd inclusion. Given the ambiguity of the art versus the apparent dominance of the curators' intentions, I was left wondering whether the show was presented to the artists as being concept driven or simply an exercise in trend spotting.

In the "passage" room, Alain Sechas's polyester-and-resin sculpture of a closed-eyed cat walking through a wide-eyed cat, Le Monument pour Jacques Lacan Jacques-Marie-Émile Lacan (French IPA: [ʒak la'kɑ̃]) (April 13, 1901 – September 9, 1981) was a French psychoanalyst, psychiatrist, and doctor, who made prominent contributions to the psychoanalytic movement. , 2002, suggested a negotiation of Other through Self. Street politics were engaged in STRIKE (K font V.I), 2005, a blinking neon-tube construction by the art duo Claire Fontaine (Fulvia Carnevale and James Thornhill Sir James Thornhill (25 July 1675 or 1676 – May 4, 1734) was an English painter of historical subjects, in the Italian baroque tradition. He was the son of Walter Thornhill of Wareham and Mary, eldest daughter of Colonel William Sydenham, governor of Weymouth. ), and also in Werner Buttner's photocollages, one showing a hammer and sickle hammer and sickle
n.
An emblem of the Communist movement signifying the alliance of workers and peasants.


hammer and sickle
Noun
 in a ring of fire, a toy produce shop, and wall sign that reads WAITED ON BY FRAU HAss. But one remained none the wiser as to what a "passage word" might be, nor how the idea relates to these artworks.

The confusion increased with the babble of videos from room to room: Pascal Lievre's political phrases sung to pop tunes, Abba Mao, 2001, and Lacan Dalida, 2000, in the first and second rooms, respectively, were only a few steps from Frederic Lecomte's edited porn video and film clips, also in the second room, which looked like colored Rayograms. From the last room a chatter permeating per·me·ate  
v. per·me·at·ed, per·me·at·ing, per·me·ates

v.tr.
1. To spread or flow throughout; pervade: "Our thinking is permeated by our historical myths" 
 all the galleries was revealed to be recorded voices from a fake art dinner emanating from beneath Thierry Mouille's Le Banquet, 2001, an insipidly in·sip·id  
adj.
1. Lacking flavor or zest; not tasty.

2. Lacking qualities that excite, stimulate, or interest; dull.



[French insipide, from Late Latin
 conceived work consisting of a U-shaped conference table set with white paper and plastic picnic utensils. On the wall, Bruno Perramant's painting that looks as if rendered from a subtitled film image, Voice No. 15, 1999 (AND THERE WILL NEVER BE PEACE is scripted over a watery architectural reflection), lacked sufficient panache to be convincing.

"Order Words Passwords" could be construed as being critical of media consumerism through artistic irony. However, by the time one reaches the last room, the curators' uneven selection of paintings, objects, and videos, and the obscure, apparently arbitrary terminology, seemed to undermine this position. In the end, at least some works--those by Wolman, Ramette, Leveque, sechas, and Berard for instance--resisted and withstood the curators' unclear constraints.
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Article Details
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Author:Rian, Jeff
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:584
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