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"Neue Welt": Kunstverein. (Frankfurt).


Let's say this much up front: In the welter of theme-based exhibitions, "Neue Welt?" (New world) is exceptional. But why? After all, it is concerned, as the curator, Nicolaus Schafflausen, states in the catalogue, with "the redefinition of the public sphere, the positioning of the individual in a spectacularized society, and the effects of a globalized economy"--that is, with themes that nowadays nearly every ambitious exhibition pursues, though usually with only middling success.

What concerns Schafhausen is the redefinition of the public sphere as a "metaphor for a complex system of interlocking interlocking /in·ter·lock·ing/ (-lok´ing) closely joined, as by hooks or dovetails; locking into one another.
interlocking Obstetrics A rare complication of vaginal delivery of twins; the 1st
 spheres," including that of art. This public sphere has long since metamorphosed into a spectacle encompassing the entire globe, in which anyone can take on the role of star--for a limited amount of time (fifteen minutes, it's been said). And so, right at the beginning of the exhibition, each and everyone walks through Interview (Paparazzi pa·pa·raz·zo  
n. pl. pa·pa·raz·zi
A freelance photographer who doggedly pursues celebrities to take candid pictures for sale to magazines and newspapers.
), 2000, a flashbulb storm built by Malachi Farrell. Microphones block the way, cameras whir whir  
v. whirred, whir·ring, whirs

v.intr.
To move so as to produce a vibrating or buzzing sound.

v.tr.
To cause to make a vibratory sound.

n.
1.
, lights flash. Anyone can awaken the public's interest, but what about the integrity of the self? Why is a sense of loneliness creeping in everywhere? With exaggerated expectations placed on the self, the search for identity ends up--like the (now somewhat aged) video work by Bruce Nauman Good Boy/Bad Boy, 1986--in a rhetorical infinite loop. The most honest thing to do might be to cut off communication altogether and shut oneself in a disco box, such as Bernhard Mar tin's Single Disco (Whisper Club), 2000.

Another possibility for escaping the lonely and painful search for identity is fanaticism Fanaticism
See also Extremism.

Adamites

various sects preaching a return to life before the fall. [Christian Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 8]

assassins

Moslem murder teams used hashish as stimulus (11th and 12th centuries).
 as Willem de Rooij and Jane Ostermann-Petersen document in their video Leigh Valentine, 1994-2001. From a renovated garage in Amsterdam, the preacher Leigh Valentine, a blond American and former Miss Missouri, fires up a crowd of immigrants from Surname with statements like "You got more power than the devil" and "Thank you, Jesus, that you have full control." Power, control--who has the power, who is controlling whom, where, and when in a globalized society? The centers of power are no longer easy to determine; everyone seems to control everyone else--it gets spooky, as in Edge of a Wood, 1999, a magnificently constructed installation by Rodney Graham. What are the thundering helicopters looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
, looking to control, with their searchlights in the night on the edge of the woods?

Collapsing identity, expanding loneliness, and thirst for control are all familiar enough. So, too, are the hopeless employment offices documented movingly in photos by Paul Graham and the inhospitable parking lots of shopping malls impressively recorded by Dan Holdsworth in their nighttime illumination. In disturbing documentaries by Santiago Sierra, one can watch people who, for very little money, will masturbate mas·tur·bate
v.
To perform an act of masturbation.
 in front of the camera or allow a line to be tattooed across their back. Disturbing? Yes, but this is not yet what constitutes the value of "Neue Welt."

Rather, its value resides in suggesting there is a "new world" within art itself, unnoticed by the majority of curators and critics, but which Schafhausen has succeeded in making manifest. Metaphysical truths and aesthetic experiences--the values of European modernism--are no longer the goal. These values, like the modernist furniture photographed by Barbara Visser, have been destroyed. The new art wants to create an impression in a world of omnipresent om·ni·pres·ent  
adj.
Present everywhere simultaneously.



[Medieval Latin omnipres
 spectacle and glamour--now, immediately, on the spot--and to bring its concerns to everyone. Looking at Gerhard Richter's polished steel sphere, Kugel ku·gel  
n.
A baked pudding of noodles or potatoes, eggs, and seasonings, traditionally eaten by Jews on the Sabbath.



[Yiddish kugel, ball (from its puffed-up shape), from Middle High German.
, 1989, one sees oneself as the center of the world. But the epoch in which the self could still consider itself the center has, with the process of globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
, irretrievably ir·re·triev·a·ble  
adj.
Difficult or impossible to retrieve or recover: Once the ring fell down the drain, it was irretrievable.



ir
 passed by.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:New world
Author:Smolik, Noemi
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Dec 1, 2001
Words:600
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