Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,474,232 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Leopold Kessler: Galerie Kunstbuero.


Austrian artist Leopold Kessler, born in Munich in 1976, understands art as a kind of social service, a public act accessible to all, even though the public probably won't even notice his scarcely perceptible interventions. The results are often unpredictable happenings in the contested territory where the real world and the artistic realm meet. Disguised as a manual laborer in a blue coat and an orange vest, Kessler goes stalking through the urban streetscape, installing speakers and microphones or rolling some three-quarters of a mile of electrical cable through the streets of the city, as he did not so long ago for Akademiekabel (Academy Cable), 2004, his thesis project at the Akademie der Bildenden Kunste, Vienna. The effects of these actions can be fantastic: The cable connected the academy with the artist's own apartment--and supplied electricity, gratis; in other works, streetlights could be randomly turned on and off by remote control (Privatisiert [Privatized], 2003) and surprise announcements stopped commuters in their tracks (Freisprechanlage [Intercom], 2004).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Placing greater value on investigating knowledge and social relations than on aesthetics, Kessler playfully pries out the system's secrets, studying the limits of what is technically legal yet still subversive. "I am concerned with the relationship between the individual and society," he says, "with how the gap between personal development and the strictures stricture /stric·ture/ (strik´chur) stenosis.

stric·ture (strkch
 of living in a community is overcome, or not. I position my interventions in the public between generally useful services and vigilantism. They take existing functions and uses and alter, repair, or sometimes just expand on them." Every now and then, though, Kessler's praxis veers into traditional artistic territory. In this case, he exhibited an example of what counts for him as sculpture: a hybrid of Vienna's newly introduced coin-operated rental bikes and the classic shopping cart; he'd withdrawn both objects from their intended public use by inserting the key of the cart into the lock of the bike, disabling both. Similarly, his photographs of a London telephone booth
Telephone Booth
A slang term referring to one of the many phone terminals on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange that is used by floor traders to receive orders.

Notes:
With the advent of technology many floor traders use personal digital assistants (PDAs) to receive orders as well.
See also: Floor Trader, NYSE, Pork Chop
 (Sicherung/London [Security/London], 2005) play on the theme of public versus private, as Kessler equipped that booth and six others with an internal deadbolt for extra privacy while making calls.

The video Depot (Safe Deposit Box), 2005, documents Kessler's latest process piece, which is ultimately a kind of social analysis: He'd noticed that the word "Polizei" in the light box over the entrance to the local police station was missing its "o." He replaced it with a removable letter, which allowed him to use the light box as a sort of piggy bank. For five weeks Kessler showed up each day with a ladder and stashed money in the light box or, alternately, took it back out, all without being noticed; although the police symbolize the idea of public protection, they could not even police their own symbol. In a society where personal freedoms are becoming ever more restricted, as rules and regulations hem us in, Kessler finds disobedience seductive, transgression sexy. So it's not surprising when (in Blinking Jesus, 2005) he hijacks the lighting system for the statue of Jesus in the Basque city of San Sebastian to send out a message in Morse code A character code invented by Samuel Morse that is represented by the duration of a single tone. Written as dots, dashes and spaces, the first Morse code message was sent in 1844 over a newly constructed telegraph line between Baltimore and Washington. It was also used in World War II for signaling with flashes of light. A variation of Morse's original code was made by Friedrich Gerke in 1848, which evolved into the International Morse Code that is still in use.: "Be not afraid."

Translated from German by Sara Ogger.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Huck, Brigitte
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:535
Previous Article:Markus Raetz: Aargauer Kunsthaus.
Next Article:"Making Things Public": Zentrum Fur Kunst Und Medientechnologie.
Topics:



Related Articles
LUC TUYMANS.(artist, exhibition "Mwana Kitoko")(Brief Article)
Austria.(Calendar)
Switzerland.(Directory)(Calendar)
Switzerland.
Frankfurt.
Munich.
Austria.
Holland.
Jewelry dealer at home in Upper East Side gem.(Retail)(Brief Article)
Building Leopold's legacy: pines celebrated in a conservation classic have outlived the author and conservationist. As they age, they shape his...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles