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Klara Liden: Moderna Museet.


Remember in Reservoir Dogs when Mr. Blonde--played by the unruly Michael Madsen--mutilated the bound and gagged police officer to the beat of Stealers Wheel's bubblegum bub·ble·gum  
n. also bubble gum
1. Chewing gum that can be blown into bubbles.

2. Slang A style of popular music designed to appeal to adolescents, characterized by bouncy rhythms and a generally cheerful tone.
 hit "Stuck in the Middle with You"? "Losing control, yeah, I'm all over the place, clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right; here I am, stuck in the middle with you." Klara Liden does her own Mr. Blonde in Bodies of Society, 2006, a video in her exhibition "Unheimlich Manover." To an original score Liden commissioned from the Swedish band Tvillingarna, jingly like carny car·ny also car·ney  
n. pl. car·nies also car·neys Informal
1. A traveling amusement show; a carnival.

2. One who works with a carnival.
 music, she prances her own ame damnee dance and then, taking a steel pipe in both hands, taunts the object of her ire--a bicycle!--with menacing swipes, followed by a ferocious clobbering of the two-wheeler. Thank goodness it was only a bicycle. Liden seems to be no more acting here than she was in Paralyzed par·a·lyze  
tr.v. par·a·lyzed, par·a·lyz·ing, par·a·lyz·es
1. To affect with paralysis; cause to be paralytic.

2. To make unable to move or act: paralyzed by fear.
, 2003, when her impulsive, violent ballet on a Stockholm commuter train scared the bejesus be·je·sus  
n. Slang
Used as an intensive: The bear scared the bejesus out of us.



[Alteration of by Jesus.]
 out of passengers. The difference between Tarantino's scene and Liden's? Madsen is playing a part; Liden seems not to be.

The difference is significant, setting Liden apart from historical precedent--Chris Burden's "what if I hit it" shots at the 747, for instance--and positioning her at odds with the reigning relational aesthetics, with its privileging of what Nicolas Bourriaud calls "the whole of human relations and their social context, rather than an independent and private space." Just how tightly wound Liden is inside her own free will was never more apparent than in this exhibition: She emptied her apartment--down to the toilet--amassing her chattels CHATTELS, property. A term which includes all hinds of property, except the freehold or things which are parcel of it. It is a more extensive term than goods or effects. Debtors taken in execution, captives, apprentices, are accounted chattels. Godol. Orph. Leg. part 3, chap. 6, Sec. 1.  in stacks and bales inside the museum, like the bounty of a scavenger hunt. Her dislodged belongings, together with the exhibition's title, are a play on the Heimlich maneuver Heimlich maneuver, emergency procedure used to treat choking victims whose airway is obstructed by food or another substance. It forces air from the lungs through the windpipe, pushing the obstruction out.  (the violent but lifesaving abdominal thrust that ejects foreign objects from the airway) and Freud's unheimlich, which can mean "uncanny" and "that which is not home." Like an alien encampment, her construction occupied the museum's main thoroughfare; visitors could hardly avoid it, nor could they avoid feeling like trespassers. If I had to pick a precursor for Liden it might be the Bruce Nauman of works such as Violin Tuned DEAD, 1969, but Liden, instead of merely rediscovering the phenomenological fundamentals that triggered post-Minimalism, tows them into new depths, making them her own.

And what has Liden achieved? It is too soon to know for sure--her career has hardly begun--but an early conclusion might be that she is unlacing the traditional principles of morality. These, whether secular or religious, serve to suppress natural instincts toward savagery, and she wants to see what happens when these instincts are unleashed. This desire accounts for the impetuous im·pet·u·ous  
adj.
1. Characterized by sudden and forceful energy or emotion; impulsive and passionate.

2. Having or marked by violent force: impetuous, heaving waves.
 animalistic an·i·mal·ism  
n.
1. Enjoyment of vigorous health and physical drives.

2. Indifference to all but the physical appetites.

3. The doctrine that humans are merely animals with no spiritual nature.
 turbulence that is already a hallmark of her work. In Ohrya, 2005, a grainy grain·y  
adj. grain·i·er, grain·i·est
1. Made of or resembling grain; granular.

2. Resembling the grain of wood.

3. Having a granular appearance due to the clumping of particles in the emulsion.
 black-and-white video playing on a small TV--easy to overlook stuffed in among her things--traditional values creep in to haunt her. Here we find Liden in a confessional mood fueled by self-doubt, like one of the fraudulents in Dante's Eighth Circle. Alone in her kitchen, she mutilates what's left of her emotional stability; between chugs of milk, she concedes that life has started to take a downward turn, that she is far from an "adapted citizen"--she can't even pay her rent. And predictable, responsible behavior? That's for others. Is there no virtue to her life? She slumps on the kitchen floor, no reassuring answers in reach. It's messy and uncomfortable to watch. You could call it a tragic scene in search of a deus ex machina deus ex machina

Stage device in Greek and Roman drama in which a god appeared in the sky by means of a crane (Greek, mechane) to resolve the plot of a play. Plays by Sophocles and particularly Euripides sometimes require the device.
, except it's not pretend, and that's the power of Liden's art.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
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Title Annotation:Unheimlich Manover
Author:Jones, Ronald
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2007
Words:601
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