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Christian Jankowski: Museum Fur Gegenwartskunst.


Right in the hall behind the museum's entrance, where openings are usually held, stood a cardboard puppet theater painted in gestural blue strokes and placed behind two spotlights on a rickety rick·et·y  
adj. rick·et·i·er, rick·et·i·est
1. Likely to break or fall apart; shaky.

2. Feeble with age; infirm.

3. Of, having, or resembling rickets.
 tripod of bamboo poles. The curator's opening remarks and an improvised dialogue with the artist, in the broad accents of the Baden region, were staged here as a kind of Punch and Judy Punch and Judy, famous English puppet play, very popular with children and given widely by strolling puppet players, especially during the Christmas season. It came to England in the 17th cent.  routine. A videotape of the event ran on a monitor on a nearby tabletop on sawhorses, which also contained a book opened for visitor comments: "Of course, the world itself is a tautology tautology

In logic, a statement that cannot be denied without inconsistency. Thus, “All bachelors are either male or not male” is held to assert, with regard to anything whatsoever that is a bachelor, that it is male or it is not male.
. Still, most acts of self-referential art come across as boring and self-important. But not here. 'Art is not dead, it just smells funny.'"

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In this work, as in others, Christian Jankowski Christian Jankowski (born 1968 in Göttingen, Germany) is a contemporary multimedia artist who largely works in video, installation, and photography. He has created a number of television interventions, including "Telemistica" (1999), in which he asks Italian television psychics if  uses a popular medium to take on the discourses of the art world as if--a la Jean-Francois Lyotard--he had to explain postmodernism once more, this time to the kids. From a point above the cash register at the museum entrance, where in supermarkets one would usually find a security monitor, Jankowski presented the video Die Jagd (The Hunt), 1992, in which packages of sugar and toilet paper are vanquished with bow and arrow bow and arrow, weapon consisting of two parts; the bow is made of a strip of flexible material, such as wood, with a cord linking the two ends of the strip to form a tension from which is propelled the arrow; the arrow is a straight shaft with a sharp point on one  before landing in the shopping cart as trophies. At the spot where the visit to an exhibition turns into a purchase, the artist himself intrudes into the shopping jungle as an archaic hunter. This anachronistic a·nach·ro·nism  
n.
1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.

2.
 gesture may serve to remind us of the anachronism a·nach·ro·nism  
n.
1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.

2.
 of the individual artist in the age of highly technologized media. But with his various collaborations, Jankowski deliberately breaks with this role for artists. Telemistica, 1999, has become well known: A series of Italian TV fortune-tellers predict the artist's success at the Venice Biennale. The Holy Artwork, 2001, was a television sermon by Pastor Peter Spencer in the Harvest Fellowship Church in San Antonio, Texas “San Antonio” redirects here. For other uses, see San Antonio (disambiguation).
San Antonio is the second most populous city in Texas, the third most populous metropolitan area in Texas, and is the seventh most populous city in the United States. As of the 2006 U.S.
. Jankowski's most complex collaborative project was the seven scenes of the art world in the film Rosa, 2001, in which segments of the film Viktor Vogel--Commercial Man (2001) by Lars Kraume were expanded by Jankowski with the help of Kraume's film crew. "What's the value of art? What role does longing play in the arts? Where are the limitations of art? What do art and humor have in common? What is beauty in art? How free is the free artist? Do art and commerce influence each other?" With such fundamental questions, put to the art industry, Jankowski reflects on his own praxis, in which serious inquiry is indistinguishable from travesty. Even the genres of his perfectly scripted and shot films take their cue from the functions of the art system: The Matrix Effect, 2000, made for the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut, is moderated by children in the style of museum docents, while art criticism and theory find their counterpart in the Texas sermon.

It may be that after the narcissistic nar·cis·sism   also nar·cism
n.
1. Excessive love or admiration of oneself. See Synonyms at conceit.

2. A psychological condition characterized by self-preoccupation, lack of empathy, and unconscious deficits in
 '80s and '90s, there's not much left to say about the market that hasn't already been said. Still, Jankowski dislodges all the cliches here from their affirmative or cynically critical anchors and subjects them to a liberating dose of self-irony. "When you make an artistic mistake as an engineer, it can have dramatic consequences!!!" according to one of the numerous text-based textiles hanging on the wall or thrown into piles as in a laundromat. Liberated from the pathos of modernity and the effusive ef·fu·sive  
adj.
1. Unrestrained or excessive in emotional expression; gushy: an effusive manner.

2. Profuse; overflowing: effusive praise.
 giddiness of party culture, art could certainly have consequences once more. Why not dramatic ones?

--Hans Rudolf Reust

Translated from German by Sara Ogger.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:Basel
Author:Reust, Hans Rudolf
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:590
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