Lies, damn lies, and statistics.The bourgeois wants his art luxurious, his life ascetic. It would make more sense if it were the other way around. . . . What works of art really demand from us is knowledge or, better, a cognitive faculty of judging justly: they want us to become aware of what is true and what is false in them. - Theodor Adorno, Aesthetic Theory Scattered, almost ten years of context-specific projects that can be reconstituted only with difficulty; scattering, a body of work that tracks the paths and passages of the art system itself, which today will not hold still long enough to be judged: the fundamental dispersion of Christian Philipp Muller's installations and performances may explain the relative silence of American critics in the face of his now-extensive series of critical projects. To write about Muller's work (not to write on it, better to say alongside it) is to experience something akin to his best-known performance, Green Border, staged to accompany an installation in the Austrian Pavilion at the 1993 Venice Biennale Venice Biennale International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of . There, Muller organized eight "hikes" during which he illegally crossed the border into the eight countries surrounding Austria, countries that for the most part had formerly been part of its old empire. Poised between the telling superficiality of the tourist's journey and the inescapable exigencies of a forced migration, Green Border succinctly allegorized the current institutional confinement and the impossible contemporary position of so-called critical art: the performance's repetitive attempts at escape simply resulted in any number of attractive snapshots; its engagement at once with real historical conditions as well as avant-garde tradition only highlighted their inherent contradiction. FACT Adorno might have accused Muller, as he once did Walter Benjamin Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin (July 15, 1892 – September 27, 1940) was a German Marxist literary critic, essayist, translator, and philosopher. He was at times associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory and was also greatly inspired by the Marxism of Bertolt , of the simple and "wide-eyed presentation of mere facts," an accusation that rings with Adorno's typical disdain for the functionalist func·tion·al·ism n. 1. The doctrine that the function of an object should determine its design and materials. 2. A doctrine stressing purpose, practicality, and utility. 3. aesthetic position taken in the '20s and '30s by artists from Bertolt Brecht Noun 1. Bertolt Brecht - German dramatist and poet who developed a style of epic theater (1898-1956) Brecht to the Soviet Productivists. As we shall see, however, such disdain would be out of place; Muller seems to be aware of the pitfalls of the functionalist position, even though this legacy is a crucial aspect of his work: facts are the basis, indeed the very substance out of which many of his installations arise. This component of the work became most pronounced at the time of the artist's 1990 Cologne installation Koln-Dusseldorf, in which MUller attempted a statistical mapping of the age-old rivalry between the two German cities, a rivalry that in the last thirty years has increasingly been registered in the artistic sphere. Displaced from the walls, two untreated canvases printed with the names of the artists living in each respective city hung like curtains on the gallery's windows, performing the functional task of closing off the space from the outside. Muller also inscribed in·scribe tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes 1. a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface. b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters. the names "Koln" and "Dusseldorf" separately on two facing walls and, instead of paintings, hung framed diagrams drawn by a plotter. These bar graphs traced the income and expenditures for each city's cultural institutions from 1977 to 1989. In front of each wall, like so many copies of Hans Haacke's Condensation Cube, 1963-65, Muller placed a series of transparent Plexiglas "sculptures" directly on the floor, without bases. The comparison with Haacke is not simply fortuitous; similarly calling up Modernist sculpture's legacy of formal autonomy and its imperative of utter self-reflexivity, these sculptures in fact performed a reversal of any such formal neutrality and structural transparency. Muller had simply realized the last year of his survey in three dimensions; the mere facticity fac·tic·i·ty n. The quality or condition of being a fact: historical facticity. of the bar graph had determined the aesthetic parameters of the sculptures, and any transparency they retained was solely on the level of the instrumental communication of information. Now other artists have recently resorted to what we might here call the "aestheticization of the statistic"; Felix Gonzalez-Torres, for instance, exhibited framed charts mapping the course of the AIDS epidemic. Muller's statistical aesthetic, however, differs by the measure of what we might still call its "self-reflexivity" (though the term would need to be redefined). In many projects, this has taken the reflexive form most privileged by artists since the '60s, namely, site-specificity. Deepening the site-specific paradigm, however - and this is part of what made the Cologne show so successful in the end - the aesthetic presentation of facts in Koln-Dusseldorf corresponded to, mapped itself reflexively within, and thus revealed what we can only call an increasing factualization of the aesthetic sphere at the present (culture's entrance into the realm of sheer quantification, numbers, profit motives, etc.). With Koln-Dusseldorf, Muller betrayed himself specifically as an heir to what has been called the "factographic" tradition within the avant-garde, a lineage that most recently includes the work of Hans Haacke Hans Haacke (born 1936 in Cologne, Germany) is a conceptual artist. Haacke studied at the Staatliche Werkakademie in Kassel, Germany, from 1956 to 1960. From 1961 to 1962 on a Fulbright grant at the Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia. , Martha Rosier, and Allan Sekula.(1) Seemingly closest to Haacke among his immediate predecessors, Muller's didactic presentations appear less black and white than Haacke's similar investigations: few conclusions are drawn, clear allegiances seem to be postponed, and a certain productive ambivalence is permitted. After all, in Koln-Dusseldorf, one outcome of Muller's assimilation of sculptural form to the sheer transparency of the quantifiable was the possibility that this information might make little sense to its viewers, and that ultimately the reduction of cultural policy to numbers and monetary figures might serve to make its politics ever more hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air. her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal adj. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air. , rather than clearly accessible? And if one of Haacke's primary interests in his work over the last twenty-five years has been the use of art by international corporate organizations and the ultimate financial support of the artistic sphere by private business interests, Muller shifts his investigations toward the arena in which the cultural sphere can be seen to have become a business in its own right, functioning in complete correspondence to private industry. This tracing of the next step in the "refeudalization" of the cultural sphere - museums as the generators of income through tourism and their adoption of a mode of operation on the model of the corporation - might be seen as a step backward on the part of Muller from Haacke's more strident connections. But if so, it is a step backward that has been achieved on the larger social level in recent years, and is thus a historical development that Muller's work closely follows (in both the socially deterministic and the investigative senses of the word). This story of facts is not quite finished, however, and it gets more complicated, for Muller showed the sculptures from Koln-Dusseldorf on several other occasions. For Fixed Values, installed at the Brussels Palais des Beaux-Arts in 1991, he attempted to auction off the traces of his previous installations (he was successful - almost everything sold), both allegorizing and refusing the myth that site-specific works ultimately resist commodification Commodification (or commoditization) is the transformation of what is normally a non-commodity into a commodity, or, in other words, to assign value. As the word commodity has distinct meanings in business and in Marxist theory, commodification through their incapacity The absence of legal ability, competence, or qualifications. An individual incapacitated by infancy, for example, does not have the legal ability to enter into certain types of agreements, such as marriage or contracts. to circulate or exist beyond their exhibition. The Koln-Dusseldorf sculptures were included among a range of objects encompassing every possible medium, from an ostensible Apparent; visible; exhibited. Ostensible authority is power that a principal, either by design or through the absence of ordinary care, permits others to believe his or her agent possesses. work on paper to video and painting. Fixed Values was itself "site-specific": to accompany the exhibit, Muller designed an "auction catalogue" corresponding exactly to those produced by the Palais des Beaux-Arts as part of its activities (its contemporary-arts division is funded by proceeds from the institution's auction house and larger historical exhibitions). Furthermore, Muller used the modes of display from both the auction and historical-exhibition divisions to determine the treatment of his objects. Lighting the sculptures from Koln-Dusseldorf in the same manner as a concurrent exhibition of Portuguese crown jewels crown jewels Ornaments used at the coronation of a monarch and the formal ensigns of monarchy worn or carried on state occasions, as well as collections of personal jewelry consolidated by European sovereigns as valuable assets of their royal houses and the offices they in the historical section, Muller went on to borrow a vitrine from the auction house and the auction's numbering plaques, both elements used by Marcel Broodthaers Marcel Broodthaers (January 28 1924–January 28 1976) was a Belgian poet, filmmaker and artist with a highly literate and often witty approach to creating art works. in his work two decades earlier. Indeed, Muller seemed to want to use "Marcel Broodthaers" as a site-specific element (paradoxically, an economically legitimizing one) of the project as a whole, for the Palais des Beaux-Arts was the very institution that Broodthaers had helped occupy in May 1968 and that ultimately led to the development of the Belgian artist's "museum fiction." Numbering his own objects like so many eagles in a Broodthaers vitrine, Muller assembled various vestiges of his actions as rare elements for the auction: a pair of shoes worn by Muller in a Jef Cornelis movie became "Pair of very precious men's shoes"; unsold tickets from a performance were "Very rare entrance tickets"; three clovers from the installation porte bonheur, "Strange pressed cloverleaves." Out of context, the objects became mute commodities, creating heretofore nonexistent non·ex·is·tence n. 1. The condition of not existing. 2. Something that does not exist. non value through their very displacement to the current exhibition. And nothing registered this displacement as completely as the sculptures from Koln-Dusseldorf; here, Muller displayed them as if disassembled for storage, collapsed into their component pieces, flattened like so many fallen cards. Outside their original context-specific installation, the objects became noncommunicative, gave no information, and mapped nothing but their own material condition as Plexiglas plates. It was as if what artist Renee Green has called "the specter of Broodthaers" had settled over Muller's earlier Haacke-esque explorations, and the artist here registered the (perhaps necessary) risk work such as Haacke's has always run, a risk embodied in Broodthaers' own dictum: "The way I see it, there can be no direct connection between art and message, especially if the message is political, without running the risk of being burned by the artifice. Foundering."(3) FICTION From the time of his first major intervention, the performance Kleiner Fuhrer füh·rer also fueh·rer n. A leader, especially one exercising the powers of a tyrant. [German, from Middle High German vüerer, from vüeren, to lead, from Old High German durch die Ehem. Kurfurstliche Gemaldegalerie, 1986, Muller has shown as strong an interest in constructing elaborate site-determined fictions as in mapping mere factual parameters. For the 1986 performance, Muller donned the outfit of a museum guard, printed mock-historical pamphlets, and offered daily tours of the annual student exhibition at the Kunst Akademie Dusseldorf. With a gesture that only highlighted the out-modedness of his fellow students' productions (mostly paintings), Muller pointed out the student works to visitors but spoke instead about paintings from the collection of the Elector elector German Kurfürst. Prince of the Holy Roman Empire who had a right to participate in electing the German emperor. Beginning c. 1273, and with the confirmation of the Golden Bull, there were seven electors: the archbishops of Trier, Mainz, Johann Wilhelm, paintings that had for the most part long since been removed from this site to Munich. Playing on his visitors' trust in the authority of his uniform, Muller constructed complex scenarios regarding the supposed imminent return of these historical works to Dusseldorf. His action here forecast at least two recurrent concerns of his subsequent work: the deployment of a fictional scenario to reconnect to a moment of historical loss (in this case, of a collection) and the tracing of affiliations between the uses of culture and concepts of identity (here, playing on a perceived lack of civic identity due to the real loss of an art collection to Munich). The motivation for such a strategy is clearly linked to Broodthaers; it was Broodthaers, after all, who once explained his own elaborate fictions as a type of ideological critique: "Fiction enables us," as he put it, "to grasp reality and at the same time that which is veiled by reality." And so Muller would follow the Dusseldorf performance with a similar one providing a tour of a nonexistent royal garden; two years later, in 1988, he would cast himself as a Dutch king greeting the people for an installation in a private artist's club founded in nineteenth-century Amsterdam. Rather than a Beuysian affirmation of unlimited creativity, Muller's assumption of fictional roles seems clearly delimited de·lim·it also de·lim·i·tate tr.v. de·lim·it·ed also de·lim·i·tat·ed, de·lim·it·ing also de·lim·i·tat·ing, de·lim·its also de·lim·i·tates To establish the limits or boundaries of; demarcate. by the contemporary parameters and real conditions of artistic production: its repressed re·pressed adj. Being subjected to or characterized by repression. origins (in aristocratic privilege), current functionaries and mediators (museum guards, civic tour leaders), and potential future destinies (cultural tourism). Allegorizing the last possibility in a recent installation mapping all the institutions that show contemporary art in Switzerland (Tour de Suisse The Tour de Suisse (English: Tour of Switzerland) is a UCI ProTour stage race held annually in June. The race debuted in 1933 and has evolved in timing, duration and sponsorship since then. , 1994), Muller acted out the role of cultural tourist, making a film of his peregrinations from institution to institution. Muller offered his viewers the option of acting out a role as well: more delimited in alternatives than ever, visitors could choose to wear caps labeled with only a fixed number of occupations: "artist," "critic," "spectator," "patron," "collector," "dealer," and so on. Aside from using his fictions to map the structural conditions of artistic production, Muller has also (as in the 1986 performances) positioned these fictions to open up a dialogue with history, specifically the manifestations of the historical and neo-avant-gardes. In the 1993 Austrian border-crossing performance - documented in the Biennale The name Biennale is Italian and means "every other year", describing an event that happens every 2 years. One of the most important Biennales is an art exhibition that takes place for three months in Venice — the Venice Biennale — but there are numerous others: n. An aimless idler; a loafer. [French, from flâner, to idle about, stroll, of Germanic origin; see pel .(4) Indeed, the flaneur as outlaw has a great lineage in recent art - one need only think back to Vito Acconci's 1969 Following Piece. But here, Muller retooled the sublime, apolitical a·po·lit·i·cal adj. 1. Having no interest in or association with politics. 2. Having no political relevance or importance: claimed that the President's upcoming trip was purely apolitical. nature of flanerie flâ·ne·rie n. Aimless idling; dawdling. [French, from flâner, to idle about, stroll; see flâneur.] into a political critique of the national; and to be outside the law in this case was not to engage in anarchistic an·ar·chism n. 1. The theory or doctrine that all forms of government are oppressive and undesirable and should be abolished. 2. Active resistance and terrorism against the state, as used by some anarchists. 3. transgression but to insist on the outmodedness of the national and to locate its spatial determinations. Engaging these historical forms of avant-garde activity in order to de-construct them, Muller discovered new content in the old (the true mark of the historical materialist) and endowed an avant-garde myth with definitive use-value. With this action, Muller brought his factual and fictional investigations full-circle; and when on one of the crossings he was apprehended by the border police, fact and fiction had become very close indeed. FUNCTION Disguising the facts and real conditions of contemporary experience with reconciliatory fictions, while simultaneously materializing baseless fictions as naturalized nat·u·ral·ize v. nat·u·ral·ized, nat·u·ral·iz·ing, nat·u·ral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To grant full citizenship to (one of foreign birth). 2. To adopt (something foreign) into general use. facts: such is the very work - indeed the most basic definition - of ideology. Muller's strongest projects set themselves up to interfere within the circuits of ideological transformation, taking the ideology of the aesthetic, as well as the aesthetic as ideology (the purpose served by its modern conceptualization con·cep·tu·al·ize v. con·cep·tu·al·ized, con·cep·tu·al·iz·ing, con·cep·tu·al·iz·es v.tr. To form a concept or concepts of, and especially to interpret in a conceptual way: as a space of disinterested, purposeless pur·pose·less adj. Lacking a purpose; meaningless or aimless. pur pose·less·ly adv. pleasure and contemplation), as their main targets. Such was the contribution of Muller's piece, entitled Library Bus, for the 1991 "Tabula Rasa tab·u·la ra·sa n. pl. tab·u·lae ra·sae 1. a. The mind before it receives the impressions gained from experience. b. The unformed, featureless mind in the philosophy of John Locke. 2. " exhibition in Biel, Switzerland, where artists were invited to contribute public monuments for sites of their own choosing within the city. Muller's "sculpture" consisted of arranging for an out-of-use school bus to travel between the public schools in Biel, parking in front of them at predetermined pre·de·ter·mine v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines v.tr. 1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance: times during the day. Positioning itself in a dialogue with the architecture of the different schools while still managing to evade public sculpture's traditional purpose as a fixed ornament, Muller's bus seemed both to negate and to expand the very category of monumental sculpture itself. Muller also altered the interior of the bus, placing a copy machine and two worktables inside, posting pedagogical ped·a·gog·ic also ped·a·gog·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of pedagogy. 2. Characterized by pedantic formality: a haughty, pedagogic manner. citations, and stocking a bookshelf with publications on art chosen from those available to students in their school libraries. To be used as a space for reading, meetings, and discussions on art and teaching, Muller's object inserted itself into one of the key locations where aesthetic ideology is first inculcated - the public schools - with a view toward exposing the material sites of its production (the library books) and providing at least the possibility of a space where this inculcation in·cul·cate tr.v. in·cul·cat·ed, in·cul·cat·ing, in·cul·cates 1. To impress (something) upon the mind of another by frequent instruction or repetition; instill: inculcating sound principles. could be critically examined.(5) Muller's most recent work seems to have partially abandoned the somewhat agitprop agitprop Political strategy in which techniques of agitation and propaganda are used to influence public opinion. Originally described by the Marxist theorist Georgy Plekhanov and then by Vladimir Ilich Lenin, it called for both emotional and reasoned arguments. nature of this early project; in fact, his preferred tactic today seems to stress the countering of aesthetic ideology not only through a simple functionalization of his objects, but also through putting to critical use the "purposeless" spaces of art themselves - rendering them critical, we could say, by making them "dysfunctional." Far from the rather naive redeployment re·de·ploy tr.v. re·de·ployed, re·de·ploy·ing, re·de·ploys 1. To move (military forces) from one combat zone to another. 2. of various Fluxus strategies we see today in artists like Rirkrit Tiravanija Rirkrit Tiravanija (b. 1961 and pronounced RICK-rit Tira-VAN-it) is a Buenos Aires-born contemporary artist who divides his time in New York, Berlin and Bangkok. Work Tiravanija's artwork explores the social role of the artist. , Muller no longer seems to be satisfied with simply inserting an object of use into the normally aestheticized spaces of the gallery or museum; instead such objects are imported into the art space in such a way as to highlight the intrinsic alterations (and deformations) that the space performs upon the function of the object, and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. . For example, in his contribution to the 1995 site-specific project Platzwechsel (organized by Muller and including work by Ursula Biemann, Tom Burr Tom Burr (born 1963) is an artist based in New York. Burr was born in New Haven. His art encompasses installation, photography, sculpture and drawing and references architecture and public space and the psychological and social issues that surround it. , and Mark Dion) dealing with Zurich's recent "reclamation" and redesign of the Platzspitz park, a space famous for both drug abuse and cruising, Muller constructed a mock monument inside the Zurich Kunsthalle.(6) On a copy of the plinth for a well-known permanent monument in the park, Muller placed a simulation of a temporary architectural structure An architectural structure is a free-standing, immobile outdoor construction. The structure may be permanent. Typical examples include buildings and nonbuilding structures such as bridges, dams, electricity pylons, and radio masts. currently in the Platzspitz, a surveillance booth used by security guards (one of the only visible manifestations of any aspect of the park's recent past). Within the space of the art institution, the use-value of the surveillance booth was destroyed (it became a monument), and the design of the booth was such that visitors who entered had their heads positioned so that they would appear to outside spectators as a sculptural "bust." Working with the reifying operations of the art space, Muller had turned a tool for surveillance into an object of display (bringing the disciplinary functions of public architecture into view); to the extent that this became visible, the critique was also reversed, revealing how art institutions can turn even the tools of domination into "sculpture" (insisting here on the perpetual dysfunction of the museum - and putting this to use as such). The attempt to use the aesthetic to re-create real social life was one of the great failed projects of Modernism; more often than not, art merely serves (even - perhaps especially - today) purposes of cosmetic amelioration a·me·lio·ra·tion n. 1. The act or an instance of ameliorating. 2. The state of being ameliorated; improvement. Noun 1. and collective distraction. The dangers stemming from this condition are perhaps greater for those art works that do not take their (an)aestheticizing function as a given, for those artists who purport to be "critical" - institutionally or otherwise. And thus we have today all the neo-academies of "institutional critique Institutional Critique is an art term that describes the systematic inquiry into the workings of art institutions, for instance galleries and museums, and is most associated with the work of artists such as Michael Asher, Marcel Broodthaers, Daniel Buren, and Hans Haacke. ," the PR work of artistic "site-specificity," the use of Dan Flavin Dan Flavin (April 1, 1933 Jamaica, New York – November 29, 1996 Riverhead, New York) was an American minimalist artist who is famous for creating sculptural objects and installations from commercially available fluorescent light fixtures. sculptures as light-bulbs. Artistic projects that believe in the simple criticality and immediate functionality of their effects are usually fraudulent in the extreme, often importing the appearance of critique, to much art-world applause, in the absence of anything but mere surface effects. This is not a call on my part for artistic passivity, but for projects that take account of the dangers of what Hal Foster This article is about the comic strip artist. For the art critic and Princeton professor, see Hal Foster (art critic). Harold ("Hal") Rudolf Foster (August 18, 1892 in Halifax, Nova Scotia – July 25, 1982) was a Canadian-American cartoonist most famous has for a long time been calling the "conventionality of the critical" (the transformation of "political" art into a fashion of its own), and for work that marks the contradictions and limitations of its position while struggling against them all the same. In my view, Muller's work accomplishes this task (although it is a task that can never be completed and must always be renewed); his attempts to actualize political and artistic functions while working with and thus acknowledging art's continued dysfunctionality is a case in point.(7) To allegorize al·le·go·rize v. al·le·go·rized, al·le·go·riz·ing, al·le·go·riz·es v.tr. 1. To express as or in the form of an allegory: the current impossibility of transforming reality through artistic means is in the present to retain the future possibility that such transformation can be accomplished; Muller's work attempts to activate this critical consciousness. Such a project is hardly futile: as the artist himself has put it, "Becoming aware is a step of its own; perhaps someday we will be smart enough to be able to do more than just take note."(8) Refusing until that time to cover over any of its contradictions, Christian Philipp Muller's work continues to call upon our own faculties of judgment, providing us with facts that we can only hope one day to prove false, elaborating tales that - for the moment - ring all too true. 1. The work of Benjamin H. D. Buchloh Benjamin H. D. Buchloh is the Franklin D. and Florence Rosenblatt Professor of Modern Art at Harvard University. He is currently a co-editor of the journal October. has been instrumental in defining and tracing such a lineage; see, e.g., his "From Faktura to Factography," October 30 (Fall 1984), "Since Realism there was . . . (on the current conditions of factographic art)," Art & Ideology, ed. Marcia Tucker Marcia Tucker (April 11, 1940 to October 17, 2006) was the founding director of the New Museum of Contemporary Art from 1977 to 1999, a museum located in New York City dedicated to innovative art and artistic practice. (New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of : New Museum, 1984), and "Hans Haacke: Memory and Instrumental Reason," Art in America Art in America, published since 1913, is an illustrated monthly art magazine covering the visual art world both in the US and abroad, but concentrating on New York City. 76 (February 1988). 2. This reading of the work was courted by Muller in later installations of the sculptures, In a group show in Hamburg, for instance, he again displayed the Koln-Dusseldorf Plexiglas boxes, but this time on bases - each of which were exactly the same volume and measurements as the transparent box above, but completely opaque, figuring aesthetically the dialectic of opacity Refers to being "opaque," which means to prevent light from shining through. For example, in an image editing program, the opacity level for some function might range from completely transparent (0) to completely opaque (100). and transparency that Muller seemed to be dealing with in the political-cultural sphere. 3. Marcel Broodthaers, "Ten Thousand Francs Reward," in Broodthaers: Writings, Interviews, Photographs, ed. Benjamin H. D. Buchloh (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, 1987), p. 42. On Fixed Values, see Isabelle Graw's interview with Muller: "Preisgestaltung," Artis: Zeitschrift fur neue Kunst (March 1992), pp. 22-27. Green discusses the "specter of Broodthaers" in her "Open Letter No. 1: On Influence," Texte zur Kunst 7 (October 1992). 4. Green Border is one of the most complex of Muller's many installations. Its historical references are dense: citing Michael Asher For the explorer, see . Michael Asher is a conceptual artist known since the late 1960s for site-specific installations that offer a critique of art institutions. Rather than designing new art objects, Asher typically alters the existing environment, by repositioning or removing or Gordon Matta-Clark's technique of revealing relations through architectural withdrawal, Muller removed part of the back wall of the Austrian Pavilion's garden, opening it to the Biennale Garden surrounding it. In league with the border-crossing performance, the work took up the troubled relations between earth art and a certain type of institutionally critical Conceptual art conceptual art Any of various art forms in which the idea for a work of art is considered more important than the finished product. The theory was explored by Marcel Duchamp from c. 1910, but the term was coined in the late 1950s by Edward Kienholz. (most fatuously fat·u·ous adj. 1. Vacuously, smugly, and unconsciously foolish. See Synonyms at foolish. 2. Delusive; unreal: fatuous hopes. , Daniel Buren, who dismissed the former as so many "landscapists"). The rest of the installation read like a variation on Marcel Broodthaers' 1974 Un Jardin d'Hiver; Muller instead constructed what he called an "Orangerie of the North," Replete with the same objects (potted plants, a self-monitoring video camera, nineteenth-century prints), Broodthaers' use of elements from the last century dealing with captivity to approach the issue of artistic decontextualization was dialectically reversed by Muller's use of artistic elements to deal with the issue of decontextualization on the national scale. A more complete account of the work would also have to compare Muller's intentionally hermetic project to the contemporaneous installation by Hans Haacke exploring - in a very direct, unequivocal manner - the fascist history of the German Pavilion at the same biennale. 5. Again, to grasp the full ramifications ramifications npl → Auswirkungen pl of Muller's proposal, this project should be historicized by comparison to two similar works by Michael Asher and Hans Haacke. In 1977, for a nineteen-week sculpture exhibition sponsored by the Westfalisches Landesmuseum in Munster, Asher parked a trailer at nineteen different areas in the city and its suburbs. During the first half of the exhibition, the trailer moved progressively further away from the museum; during the second half it worked its way back toward the institution, allegorizing along the way the ultimate dependence of the project on the museum in order to contextualize con·tex·tu·al·ize tr.v. con·tex·tu·al·ized, con·tex·tu·al·iz·ing, con·tex·tu·al·iz·es To place (a word or idea, for example) in a particular context. the work as "art." Ten years later, and for the same city, Haacke proposed his (rejected) Hippokratie, a project for a bus design that would have made visible the links between the Mercedes Corporation and South African repression (Mercedes engines were installed not only in German buses but also in a vehicle called a "hippo," used by the South African police
The South African Police (SAP) traces its origin to the Dutch Watch, a paramilitary organization formed by settlers in the Cape in 1655, initially to protect civilians against against the black population). 6. See Christian Philipp Muller, "What You Don't See is O.K.," Platzwechsel (Zurich: Kunsthalle Zurich, 1995), pp. 110-25. For the parameters of all the contributions, see James Meyer's "The Functional Site," ibid., pp. 24-39. 7. Muller's series of exhibitions in New York - especially the most recent - take this logic to an extreme: in his last show (1995), Muller created objects designed for the display of gifts or news publications - for the duration of the show, however, they remained empty, performing no function, calling up instead the formal legacy of Minimal sculpture, turning the gallery again into a space of dysfunction. The objects could be used for displaying other objects - fulfilling their functional purpose - only upon being sold by the gallery. 8. Muller, "Preisgestaltung," p. 26. I would like to thank Judd Stitziel for his assistance in translating sections of this key interview. George Baker is a New York-based writer. |
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