Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,291,097 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

ANN VERONICA JANSSENS.


"SUPERSPACE"

Invited by curator Moritz Kung to participate in Utrecht's fourteenth annual Festival a/d Werf celebrating art, music, and theater, Ann Veronica Janssens took the opportunity to elaborate her notion of "superspace." Comprising twelve works scattered throughout the city, "Superspace," 1999, established a network of experiences through which the artist, the viewer, and the city could connect.

On paying for a general-admission pass to the festival, viewers received a packet that included a map delineating the locations of Janssens's interventions and a telephone card that provided a 900 number that visitors could use to call the artist's answering machine. Distributed as well was f15,000, 1999, six thousand coins (2.5 florin pieces) covered in silver stickers bearing one of six texts, suggesting what the coin was worth in other "currencies" of the artist's choosing, including oxygen, memory, and sexual excitement. One reads on some coins, for example, that they are worth "three seconds of agreement" or "108 seconds of silence."

In the central train station, on "Bizz Board" screens that usually feature trailers for upcoming films, Janssens presented Phosphenes (Fireflies), 1997/99, an image of two people pressing their fingertips to their eyelids eye-lid (ld)
n.
, accompanied by a moving text proposing that viewers do the same in order to experience "colorful and luminous patterns." Soundscape, 1999, involved a thirty-minute ride in one of five two-seater cars outfitted with a driver and a techno-music cassette. Viewers who weren't in the mood for a drive could instead lose themselves in L'espace infini (Infinite space), 1999, a wood-and-plaster model (presented in a mobile construction office set up in a city square) of an interior space whose walls are coated with plaster in such a way that all edges and definition of the space are obscured. For the equally destabilizing Agoraphobia agoraphobia /ag·o·ra·pho·bia/ (ag?or-ah-fo´be-ah) intense, irrational fear of open spaces, sometimes occurring in association with panic attacks.

ag·o·ra·pho·bi·a (g
, 1999, 16-by-20-inch mirrors were distributed at the gates of a church under renovation; viewers were instructed to explore the space using the mirror, a disorienting, and at times vertiginous ver·tig·i·nous (vr-tj-n, experience. One's perception was similarly challenged by Tunnel, 1999, an underground footpath the entrance to which was all but obscured by streams of white smoke. Janssens invited viewers to change the environment themselves in Liquid Crystal, 1999, a set of twelve pillows dotting the lawn of a small courtyard. As one sat down, body heat altered the liquid crystals covering the cushions, creating rainbows and other coloristic effects.

Again and again, the viewer was forced to abandon his or her usual points of reference. The boundaries separating physical from mental space, public from private, were progressively dissolved. The intervals of time between viewing the artworks themselves became tools of dissolution: the dissolution of the spectator in the city. While each of the "arrangements" was notable for its discretion and lightness--whether encountered as transparency, whiteness, geometry, or weightlessness weightlessness, the absence of any observable effects of gravitation. This condition is experienced by an observer when he and his immediate surroundings are allowed to move freely in the local gravitational field. All bodies in the weightless environment experience the same acceleration. The more massive bodies (see mass) in the surroundings experience a stronger gravitational force, but they also have more inertia, or resistance to acceleration.--considered together, they made for a formidable exhibition experience.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Pontegnie, Anne
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 1999
Words:471
Previous Article:MICHEL MAJERUS.(Brief Article)
Next Article:JANET CARDIFF.(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Money games: Amsterdam officials can't hurdle transition; Gay Games V proves a financial fiasco too.(Brief Article)
A Nation of Immigrants: Women, Workers, and Communities in Canadian History, l840s-1960s.(Review)
NON-OBJECT LESSONS.(Brief Article)
`ROOM' AN ENGAGING CHAMBER OF ILLUSION : THE FACTS.(NEWS)
A History of Women's Writing in Italy. (Reviews).
Pay-and-return invoicing: anonymous tips are an important source of information on employee theft.(Billing Schemes)(part 3)
Sweden.(Directory)(Calendar)
NDIA events calendar.(Calendar)
NDIA: events calendar.(National Defense Industrial Association)(Calendar)
NDIA events calendar.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles