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Julius Koller; Kolnischer Kunstverein.


"Univerzalne Futurologicke Operacie" (Universal Futurological Operations) provided an unprecedented opportunity to get acquainted with the full range of work by Slovakian artist Julius Koller. It turned out to be quite a revelation. A singular figure, Koller developed highly sophisticated (and often uncannily funny) conceptual tools to maintain independence in Communist Czechoslovakia, where cultural production was divided into institutional and so-called free art, i.e., the public sphere The public sphere is a concept in continental philosophy and critical theory that contrasts with the private sphere, and is the part of life in which one is interacting with others and with society at large.  of official Socialist Realism socialist realism, Soviet artistic and literary doctrine. The role of literature and art in Soviet society was redefined in 1932 when the newly created Union of Soviet Writers proclaimed socialist realism as compulsory literary practice.  and the private spaces of, as Koller once named it, a "subjective objectivity system." Throughout postwar Slovakian history, marked until 1989 by political and cultural outlines drawn in Moscow and then (after a time of euphoria) by the sobering reality checks of the "free market," he continued to explore this "system." Always interested in gestures of universalism Universalism

Belief in the salvation of all souls. Arising as early as the time of Origen and at various points in Christian history, the concept became an organized movement in North America in the mid-18th century.
 from a position of both voluntary and forced marginality, Koller has now become recognized internationally as the exceptional outsider he is.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

However, his work's uniqueness should not suggest that he's an artist without context. Born in 1939 in Piest any, he studied painting in Bratislava from 1959 to 1965. Around 1963, he began to combine painting and text, concentrating more and more on strategies for leaving behind the myths of subjectivity and authenticity associated with painting and even with the extension of painting into the three-dimensionality of Happenings in the 1950s and '60s. Though the self-proclaimed Dadaist continued to paint, Koller opted also for an interventionist sign making, a manipulation of the meaning of the most inconspicuous in·con·spic·u·ous  
adj.
Not readily noticeable.



incon·spic
 situations.

One model of Koller's move toward a particular poetics po·et·ics  
n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb)
1. Literary criticism that deals with the nature, forms, and laws of poetry.

2. A treatise on or study of poetry or aesthetics.

3.
 of place was Group 42, a proto-Situationist collective founded in Prague during World War II. Deploying painting, photography, and poetry, its members reacted to the changes in urban life caused by the war. Twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 later, Koller invented methodologies for making sense (and sometimes nonsense) of life under Communism. Without ever becoming sentimental or, to the contrary, overtly sarcastic about the social realities of his urban milieu, he performed "Anti-Happenings" by leaving "textcards," handmade with a children's printing set, in Bratislava and elsewhere--as "invitationcards to an Idea." The very term Anti-Happening (written on the first textcard, from 1965) is typical of Koller's skepticism, which is symbolized by the question mark, one of his early emblems, presented on a flag above a deserted swimming pool in 1969 or formed by Koller and a group of kids on a hill in 1978 (Universal Futurological Question Mark [U.F.O.]). Koller claims that even the most single-minded intervention reveals a dimension of universality--and thus activates the connections between the vernacular of the present and the continuous flux of historical times as well as the communication between different states of existence. Filtered into the everyday, Koller's idea-actions suspend or interrupt its seamlessness, applying to it a touch of virtuality.

Exhibiting these intrusions into the fabric of reality--hardly visible when they took place for the first time and even more difficult to reimagine from the distance of today--is a highly ambitious endeavor. Artist Roman Ondak, who curated this meticulously compiled retrospective for the Kolnischer Kunstverein, showed, roughly chronologically, photographs, collages, and other printed matter, but also white chalk on the floor (a long line, drawn by Koller, "framing" the exhibition space in the main hall of the Kunstverein), a Ping-Pong table (standing in for the Ping-Pong Society project of 1970, the transformation of an art gallery into a Ping-Pong club Ping-Pong Club (行け!稲中卓球部  ), and, placed throughout Cologne, thirty billboards with blown-up photographs of Koller's historical "operations."

Though simple in presentation, the show conveyed the impressive scope of Koller's creations of "cultural situations." For Universal Fantastic Orientation, 1978, Koller stood in various locations holding a metal sign displaying changing directions and distances (measured in minutes) to the fictional town of "Ufomany" (a pun pun, use of words, usually humorous, based on (a) the several meanings of one word, (b) a similarity of meaning between words that are pronounced the same, or (c) the difference in meanings between two words pronounced the same and spelled somewhat similarly, e.g.  on the homophony homophony (hōmŏf`ənē), species of musical ensemble texture in which all voice parts move more or less to the same rhythm, in which a listener tends to hear the highest voice as the melody and the lower voices as its accompaniment.  of the Slovak "many," indicating a location, and the English "many," but also on the name of Cicmany, a village and a national heritage site in the former Czechoslovakia). Elements of his longtime project of mapping the unknown and picturing the impossible can also be found in Flying Cultural Situation (U.F.O.), 1982, a photograph of which was in the show (and was mounted as a billboard in front of the Kunstverein): Koller and a little boy stretch their arms like wings, as if to become flying objects taking off from a hill, on the outskirts of Bratislava.

Koller's semiological manipulations of landscape and topography, of places and (his own) faces, investigate the possibilities of shifting meaning by the simplest alterations. In deadpan-humorist fashion, most poignantly displayed in a series of photo-portraits that cover a period of more than four decades, he systematically explores the relationship between art and alienation, or the idea of art as alienation. "U.F.O.-naut J.K." becomes the artist's altered ego, an extraterrestrial maker and distributor of universal signs: question marks, Ping-Pong balls, or wave lines, a more recent signature symbol, formed by tennis balls in a swimming pool in 1992 or drawn on the floor in the "antiperformance" Nova vaznost', 1991.

Inviting comparison to outsider-absolutists like Marcel Broodthaers, Andre Cadere, and Bas Jan Ader, Koller's contribution to the art of the deterritorializing "minor" in late modernism Late Modernism, encompasses the overall production of most recent art made between the aftermath of World War II and the early years of the 21st century. The terminology often points to similarities between late modernism and post-modernism although there are differences.  cannot be underestimated. Eventually, the art world itself becomes increasingly deterritorialized. The installation of the hypothetical U.F.O.-Gallery, 1971-72, in Slovakia's High Tatra Mountains Ta·tra Mountains  

A range of the Carpathian Mountains in east-central Europe along the Slovak-Polish border. The Tatras are a popular resort area.
 (inaccessible to all but expert climbers) plays on the fictional geography Fictional geography is the use of maps, text and imagery to create lands and territories to accompany works of fiction. Depending on the completeness and complexity of the work, varying media, levels of collaboration and a number of other factors, the depiction of geographical  of art institutions. "'Gallery,'" Koller explains in an interview with Hans-Ulrich Obrist, "is the name in Slovak of a narrow plateau on the Ganek peak which is a very demanding challenge for mountaineers." Finally, with this admirable exhibition, the challenge of his own enterprise is open for debate. Koller's work, developing for more than half a century with astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
 and consequence, is by its very intransigence in·tran·si·gent also in·tran·si·geant  
adj.
Refusing to moderate a position, especially an extreme position; uncompromising.



[French intransigeant, from Spanish intransigente :
 and incommensurability in·com·men·su·ra·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Impossible to measure or compare.

b. Lacking a common quality on which to make a comparison.

2. Mathematics
a.
 one further reason to clearly reassess what it means to talk about the other, alternative modernist art of the East.

Tom Holert is a Berlin-based writer.
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Author:Holert, Tom
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jan 1, 2004
Words:991
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