Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven: zeno x storage borgerhout.About a year ago, it was reported that Swiss-based scientists had succeeded in creating antimatter antimatter: see antiparticle., the mirror image of matter--purportedly an important break-through inasmuch as this could explain, or at least tell us more about, the big bang. This news item was the starting point for Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven's latest project, "Anti-Sade." Paraphrasing the news report but changing terms like "the standard model Standard Model, in physics: see elementary particles. of physics" and "antimatter" into "the standard model of moral philosophy" and "anti-Sade," the content acquired at times a subversive, allusive, and above all ironic tone. According to the artist, the contemporary fascination with the Marquis de Sade lies in our deep-rooted fear of nature and its laws, which we misuse, abuse, and try to tame but in fact do nothing but pervert. What does all of this have to do with art? A self-appointed "HeadNurse" whose art is meant to heal the aberrations in today's society, all and everything, Van Kerckhoven attempts to create works that refuse the idea of art as something negative, dealing or even flirting with cruelty, cynicism, or decay--even if this refusal strikes some as indicative of a rather naive, me-against-the-world attitude. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The heart of the show was a video installation, Deeper, 2003, which follows the life of a man as he sits, thinks, eats, gazes. It's divided into nineteen scenes, a choice that isn't casual but refers to an old legend according to which it takes that many stages to transform lead into gold. The movie, if that's an appropriate word for what better could be described as a fluid succession of alienating scenes, follows this numerical path and produces, like a chemical formula, a portrait of an archetypal modern Western man. Desolate and unattached, this character, played by the acclaimed dancer Marc Vanrunxt, moves through a life where nothing seems to happen, everything just takes place. One projection was screened on the wall while a second one glided and turned in a circular movement through space, sucking the viewer into this bizarre but altogether recognizable trip as not just a voyeur 1. A person who derives sexual gratification from observing the naked bodies or sexual acts of others, especially from a secret vantage point. 2. An obsessive observer of sordid or sensational subjects. "Anti-Sade" also included a series of manipulated, constructed images of interiors referring to cultural icons like Baudelaire, Freud, and, again, Deleuze. Immersed in the vitriolic colors of these modernistic assemblages one felt as if the artist herself were inviting us to join her in inhabiting the ideas of the various writers and thinkers. One of these works is called Houellebecq, 2001, after the notorious literary provocateur. To dissect society, showing it a mirror, as the author did in Les Particules elementaires (The Elementary Particles, 1998), is also the strategy Van Kerckhoven used in "Anti-Sade." Anyone who has read Houellebecq's novel knows that art can blow your mind; Van Kerckhoven's piece, by contrast, just might help get your mind back on track. |
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