Annika von Hausswolff: IASPIS Gallery.Annika von Hausswolff's exhibition "The Memory of My Mother's Underwear Transformed into a Flameproof flame·proof adj. Resistant to catching fire; flame-retardant. tr.v. flame·proofed, flame·proof·ing, flame·proofs To make resistant to catching fire. Adj. 1. Drape drape v. To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds. n. A cloth arranged over a patient's body during an examination or treatment or during surgery, designed to provide a sterile field around the area. & Other Works," part of a series of presentations of work by Swedish artists who have shown abroad with funding from IASPIS IASPIS International Artists Studio Program in Sweden , referred to spaces beyond the gallery in more ways than one. In the most literal sense, it joined work from her earlier project at the Statens Museum for Kunst You can assist by [ editing it] now. in Copenhagen and works borrowed from the collection of Magasin 3 in Stockholm. Other levels of outward reference had to do with the substance of the work itself: Hausswolff's installation and pictures opened up into personal memories and cinematic allusions--psychological spaces at once obvious and indescribable. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The exhibition consisted of three photographic works portraying objects like doors, blinds, and a chair, as well as a custom-made pink satin curtain covering the better part of one wall in the rectangular gallery space. This last piece, The Memory of My Mother's Underwear Transformed into a Flameproof Drape (all works 2003), agreed very well with the whitewashed neo-baroque stucco ornaments in the gallery, transporting us into places we might have seen in the cinema or somewhere else. As the title suggests, the fabric mimicked the color and texture of the artist's mother's underwear as she remembers it. Hausswolff's work moves through the intimately personal into a larger social sphere. However, as she has noted in a conversation with Danish curator Marianne Torp, the possibility of miscommunication is always inherent in intersubjective spaces. The same things have quite different meanings for different individuals. Notions of safety--such as the need for boundaries between yourself and some things in the world--are strongly pronounced in the recent works exhibited here. Both Untitled, an image of tattered blinds, and Carrying One's Door Through the Room, showing a door hovering in midair without revealing who is carrying it, refer to objects that define boundaries. Philosophical Chair pictures an ordinary piece of furniture strangely balancing on one leg. The oversize o·ver·size n. 1. A size that is larger than usual. 2. An oversize article or object. adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized Larger in size than usual or necessary. Adj. 1. wall curtain inspires curiosity about what might be hidden behind it. It also makes the visitor feel quite small, which suggests the comfort and confinement of overprotection o·ver·pro·tect tr.v. o·ver·pro·tect·ed, o·ver·pro·tect·ing, o·ver·pro·tects To protect too much; coddle: overprotected their children. . An additional reference to ideas of safety lies in the fact that the curtain is flame resistant. The experience of danger that was so pronounced in Hausswolff's earlier works is now replaced by a more scrutinizing look at uncanny objects and their material presences. The glittery objectivity of the photographs themselves serves to distance the viewer. These images would easily surrender to a psychoanalytic discourse that might dissect dissect /dis·sect/ (di-sekt´) (di-sekt´) 1. to cut apart, or separate. 2. to expose structures of a cadaver for anatomical study. dis·sect v. their every detail. As Hausswolff has said, she tries to forget all the theoretical knowledge she has gathered and to proceed directed by her intuition only--like an analysand analysand /anal·y·sand/ (ah-nal´i-sand) one who is being psychoanalyzed. a·nal·y·sand n. An individual who is being psychoanalyzed. revealing the unconscious through free association. Since she endeavors to avoid predetermined pre·de·ter·mine v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines v.tr. 1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance: self-reflexivity, her work in itself becomes a natural object for scrutiny of the artistic process. Hausswolff doesn't give us obvious hints for interpretation of her images. The objects she depicts are simply there, presenting themselves to our gaze in various still but unstable positions. They don't facilitate narration. But they sustain a feeling of mystery, of something left behind, something unarticulated un·ar·tic·u·lat·ed adj. 1. a. Not articulated: our unarticulated fears. b. Not carefully or thoroughly thought out. 2. Biology Not having joints or segments. . That dimension could be sensed in her earlier work, but it is more present than ever in this exhibition. |
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