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Katya Sander: Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien.


Changes brought on by the gradual dismantling of Western Europe's welfare states are giving new urgency to questions about the function of public space and its potential uses: How are surveillance and control structured? In what ways does the hierarchical organization This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject.
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 of public space become apparent? How is "the public" produced, and what roles do its participants play? Such questions came to the fore in the three video installations by Danish artist Katya Sander shown together under the title "The Most Complicated Machines Are Made of Words." What Is Capitalism?, 2003, shows the artist conducting a curious kind of man-in-the-street poll. She stands not in a crowded downtown pedestrian zone but rather in a bleak wasteland outside Copenhagen--elk can be seen crossing the field in the background. Nonetheless a few people walk by. In the mirrored exhibition space, which extends the projection into infinity, the passersby come out of nothingness noth·ing·ness  
n.
1. The condition or quality of being nothing; nonexistence.

2. Empty space; a void.

3. Lack of consequence; insignificance.

4. Something inconsequential or insignificant.
 and disappear back into it, uncanny and otherworldly apparitions. But then Sander looks directly into the camera to make sure the equipment is still working, saying "Do we have an image?" and so breaks the illusion. She approaches her pedestrians with the question "What is capitalism?" They give vague, awkward responses: "A principle of expansion." "Like a big bubble that can only implode To link component pieces to a major assembly. It may also refer to compressing data using a particular technique. Contrast with explode. ." "A system of representation. The way money represents a given value." "An economic system, a system of exploitation."

Double Cinema, 2000, stages a favorite tool of consumer capitalism Consumer capitalism describes a theoretical economic and cultural condition in which consumer demand is manipulated, in a deliberate and coordinated way, on a very large scale, through mass-marketing techniques, to the advantage of sellers.

The phrase is controversial.
: a focus group. Two videos projected on opposite walls show a consumer poll being conducted as researchers watch from behind a two-way mirror two-way mirror
n.
See one-way mirror.
. It is a textbook situation that goes awry because the questions posed by the nervous woman moderating the discussion remain curiously vague, leaving the consumers confused. The work was displayed in a room arranged with opposite banks of tribunal seating for viewers, continuing Sander's critique of the surveillance apparatus of the focus group into the exhibition space.

Sander shows capitalism in various moments of failure. In Exterior City, 2005, the social system of the welfare state is revealed as a capitalistic cap·i·tal·is·tic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to capitalism or capitalists.

2. Favoring or practicing capitalism: a capitalistic country.
 pretext or a quasi-utopia. A young woman wends Wends or Sorbs, Slavic people (numbering about 60,000) of Brandenburg and Saxony, E Germany, in Lusatia. They speak Lusatian (also known as Sorbic or Wendish), a West Slavic language with two main dialects: Upper Lusatian, nearer to Czech, and  her way through the labyrinthine lab·y·rin·thine
adj.
Of, relating to, resembling, or constituting a labyrinth.



labyrinthine

pertaining to or emanating from a labyrinth.
 outdoor passages of various apartment buildings, identified by a voice-over as social housing in Vienna and Malmo. This urban activist puts up posters, a few fleetingly recognizable lines of text addressing her DEAR FELLOW RESIDENTS or DEAR CO-OP MEMBERS--an attempt, surely in vain, to find fellow agitators for an undefined cause. Architecture is presented as a carrier of social desires, in this case the fantasy that collective residential architecture will make for happiness despite neglecting the needs of individuals. Corresponding to the claustrophobic residential buildings, the closer you get to the screen, the narrower the exhibition space and the smaller the benches.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In all three works, some ideological conception of space (or lack thereof in the case of the wasteland of What Is Capitalism?) is borrowed from the video content and transposed trans·pose  
v. trans·posed, trans·pos·ing, trans·pos·es

v.tr.
1. To reverse or transfer the order or place of; interchange.

2.
 to the architecture of the viewing room. This sustains the Foucauldian assumption that each of us participates in existing power structures, even in opposing them. Staging the interruptions and failures of utopian projects, the contradictoriness of systems, and disorientation disorientation /dis·or·i·en·ta·tion/ (-or?e-en-ta´shun) the loss of proper bearings, or a state of mental confusion as to time, place, or identity.  in attempts to put these processes into words, Sander's works become paradoxically exhilarating.

Translated from German by Sara Ogger.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Video installations by Danish modern artist
Author:Montmann, Nina
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUDE
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:550
Previous Article:Patrick Faigenbaum: Musee Du Louvre.(Installations)
Next Article:Kris Martin: Sies + Hoke.(Exhibition)
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