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Roy Villevoye: De Hallen.


Starting out as an abstract painter interested in the cultural and political connotations of colors, Roy Villevoye began working with photography, installation, and video in the mid-'90s, often making works based on his stays in the Asmat region of New Guinea. Villevoye confronted his position as (potentially) neocolonial outsider by taking frontal photographs of Papuans holding sheets of paper in magenta, cyan blue, and yellow--the primary colors used in printing. In fact, Villevoye often turns his photographs into monumental four-color prints, consisting of countless dots of magenta, cyan, yellow, and black--a kind of industrial pointillism pointillism (pwăn`təlĭz'əm): see postimpressionism.
pointillism

In painting, the practice of applying small strokes or dots of contrasting colour to a surface so that from a distance they blend together.
. The prints on view at De Hallen were actual photographs, however, and of a comparatively modest size, but with 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.
 quality that once again emphasized the image's surface.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Although some date back to 1994, the pictures selected for the show reflect Villevoye's current way of working: He has more or less stopped staging photographs with imported elements (like the sheets of colored paper) but has kept a keen eye for elements that sabotage the Western will to see exotic purity. The cross-cultural vicissitudes vicissitudes
Noun, pl

changes in circumstance or fortune [Latin vicis change]

vicissitudes nplvicisitudes fpl; peripecias fpl 
 of the T-shirt are a recurring motif; The Fifth Man, 2003, a low-resolution digital picture taken with a video camera, shows four Papuans, three of them wearing Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama.  shirts, staring into the camera, as does the artist himself, also wearing a bin Laden shirt. Is this the Papuan branch of Al Qaeda? There is no explanation in the show; Villevoye, who is not unwilling to elucidate the background in interviews (the men hardly know anything about the figure depicted on the T-shirts, which they got from some Indonesians), shuns explanatory captions and didactic texts. His images are compelling in part because they are in a sense incomplete, because they have no substantial textual supplements.

The photo Propeller in Jungle, 1995, shows the remains of an airplane propeller surrounded by Papuans. The origin of this object is explored in Propeller, 2004, a video shown on alternate days in a separate room: It turns out that the propeller belongs to a crashed World War II fighter. At one point in the video, a Papuan called Kornelis Emine gives a highly mythologized version of the event, full of fairytale elements and ending with the words, "Actually, we don't tell this story." An American priest wonders if this legend was told to cover up an act of cannibalism cannibalism (kăn`ĭbəlĭzəm) [Span. caníbal, referring to the Carib], eating of human flesh by other humans. , which would not have been unthinkable in the '40s. In fact, the pilot survived the incident, and Villevoye tracked him down. If Propeller contrasts Papuan storytelling with a search for historical truth, the second film shown in this exhibition has a very different structure. The New Forest, 2004, made with Jan Dietvorst, contains some of the same material: Emine again tells his story, but it is one of a number of monologues and interviews with no clear progression. Papuans tell about bewitched be·witch  
tr.v. be·witched, be·witch·ing, be·witch·es
1. To place under one's power by or as if by magic; cast a spell over.

2. To captivate completely; entrance. See Synonyms at charm.
 objects and angry forefathers forefathers nplantepasados mpl

forefathers nplancêtres mpl

forefathers nplVorfahren
 or practice emotional blackmail to extract money from the artist; a cheerfully lost Korean traveler speaks unintelligible English; an American muses on Papua while looking like Brando in Apocalypse Now. None of these characters occupy a privileged position, and there is no voice-over narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete.  to supply an authoritative viewpoint. Resolutely averse to romanticizing Papuans or sugar-coating their own position, Villevoye and Dietvorst destroy the lingering illusion of New Guinea as an intact bit of prehistory prehistory, period of human evolution before writing was invented and records kept. The term was coined by Daniel Wilson in 1851. It is followed by protohistory, the period for which we have some records but must still rely largely on archaeological evidence to . Instead they offer a glimpse of what may be the posthistorical future: a global village of rumor, myth, and misunderstanding against the background of a comatose co·ma·tose
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or affected with coma.

2. Marked by lethargy; torpid.


comatose (kō´m
 economy.
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Title Annotation:Haarlem, The Netherlands
Author:Lutticken, Sven
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:585
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