Tacita Dean: Museu d'art contemporani de Barcelona.Museum technical staff repairing one of nine 16-mm projectors ... Two visits, a short time apart, to the MACBA MACBA Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona (Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art) survey of Tacita Dean's work give the impression that this conceit might in fact be part of the show. The gimpy gimp 1 n. A narrow flat braid or rounded cord of fabric used for trimming. Also called guimpe, guipure. [Perhaps from French guimpe; see guimpe. , not exactly factory-new equipment the artist uses for her film installations does in fact require extensive care and maintenance. Defects come with the territory. The technological prerequisites of this art are characterized by a moment of decay, a sliding toward obsolescence ob·so·les·cent adj. 1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete. 2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed. . One need not worry about the work's institutional stability, however. What other artist in her mid-thirties can point to two near-simultaneous surveys at significant European venues (the second show was held at Tate Britain), featuring "central" work from 1995-2001? While neither constituted a complete retrospective, each show had its high points. Although the forty-four-minute film Fernsehturm, 2001, shot from the revolving restaurant at the top of Berlin's television tower, was exhibited in London only--where it was christened a "masterpiece" by The Guardian's Adrian Searle--the Barcelona survey shone with Jukebox 2, 2001. In a conversation with the curator, Roland Groenenboom, Dean characterized the latter work's massive retro-futuristic console as "a completely weird prototype... a monster really." This hybrid construction houses 192 CDs containing 192 hours of audio, a concept dating back to a sound installation Dean developed as part of a Millennium Dome project. In Aden; Dhaka; Akashi, Japan; Fiji; Hoo nah, Alaska; New Orleans; Ubatuba, Brazil; and Greenwich, England, each site separated from the next by forty-five degrees of longitude, she recorded the ambient sounds in the span of a single day (Friday midday to Saturday midday). Jukebox 2 affords those who use this faux-sci-fi smorgasbord of geo-aesthetic soundscaping oceanic expanses of time and space, and it brings together a series of themes and motifs found throughout Dean's work: The console resembles the bridge of a (space) ship, and this maritime aspect is underscored by her selection of seaside sites. These references accumulate to create an acoustic space for imagination that inevitably overflows with images of faraway harbors on faraway coasts. The ocean, sea travel, coastal landscapes, strange stories about stowaways Stowaways are a Portuguese band from Matosinhos, who formed in 2001. They are made up of Nuno Sousa (vocals and guitar); Pedro Gonçalves (guitar); João Carujo, (drums)and Sérgio Seabra (bass). Fred on keyboards and João Covita on the accordion are more recent additions. and sailors lost on the Atlantic: All are deeply woven into Dean's work. The artist reconstructed the 1928 trip of a female fare-beater on a four-master (Girl Stowaway, 1994, not included in the MACBA show) and researched the fate of sportsman Donald Crowhurst, who ran into trouble during the 1968 round-the-world Golden Globe Race and began fictionalizing his hopeless situation via radio and in his logbook before hurling himself into the sea. But the decisive reference here is Bas Jan Ader. In 1975, as a component of his three-part work in Search of the Miraculous In Search of the Miraculous: Fragments of an Unknown Teaching (1947) by P. D. Ouspensky recollects the teachings of an individual to whom he refers only as "G.", known to be G. I. Gurdjieff, and the author's relationship with "G.", leading to his break with him. He meets "G. , the Dutch Conceptual artist set off from the East Coast of the United States The "Eastern Seaboard," or "Atlantic Seaboard" are terms referring to the easternmost coastal states in the United States. They touch the Atlantic Ocean and stretch up to Canada. in his small, thirteen-foot sailboat, headed for England. After three weeks, all contact was lost. However close Dean's "refictionalizations" of histories (and stories) may be on the surface to Ader's "auto-fictionalizations," her position as archivist ARCHIVIST. One to whose care the archives have been confided. , detective, narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete. , and filmmaker of tragic fates and ruinous moments differentiates her aesthetic from that of the daredevil Dutch existentialist ex·is·ten·tial·ism n. A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the . The myth "Bas Jan Ader" is integrated into the time machine of her art, as is that of another artist of the '70s who died early, Robert Smithson. Dean not only addresses the field of Smithson paraphrases in contemporary art (from Renee' Green to Sam Durant); she inserts herself--as in the case of Ader--into a historical, romanticized, and even overly heroicized male artistic narrative. Two works in the MACBA exhibition are dedicated to Smithson: Trying to Find the Spiral Jetty, 1997 (an audio-documentation of conversations during a fruitless search for Smithson's signature piece in the salt desert of Utah), and From Columbus, Ohio to the Partially Buried Woodshed Partially Buried Woodshed is a work of land art created by Robert Smithson. It was created at Kent State University in January 1970. The work has since been demolished, and only concrete remains in the grass. , 1999 (a video of an expedition to the alleged r emains of a Smithson earthwork earth·work n. 1. An earthen embankment, especially one used as a fortification. See Synonyms at bulwark. 2. Engineering Excavation and embankment of earth. 3. at Kent State University). On another level, too, Dean plays with obsolescence in both symbolic and material terms. The fragile 16-mm projectors and the reinvented jukebox (she knows, of course, that she could have simply recorded the 192 hours of sounds on a few hard drives) tend to cultivate the specialized appeal of yesterday's technologies and ideas. Unlike Walter Benjamin and his followers, who theorized the outdated to counter the growing immaterialization of aesthetic communication, Dean is indebted to the auratic qualities and sublime moments that can be won from the obsolete. Michael Snow once claimed that sound would finally transform the projector into a "'personality' as a unique Thing-in-the-world." The interaction between the sound-rich projector-"personalities" and the filmic film·ic adj. Of, relating to, or characteristic of movies; cinematic. film i·cal·ly adv. images (and sounds) of the abandoned architectures of a defunct modernism (as in Bubble House and Sound Mirrors, both 1999) is a highly efficient way to sculpt sculpt v. sculpt·ed, sculpt·ing, sculpts v.tr. 1. To sculpture (an object). 2. To shape, mold, or fashion especially with artistry or precision: "mood." The longer one lingered in the MACBA exhibition, the more one wondered what chance the viewer has in the face of such a sensitively woven opto-historical "world." The contingency of Dean's choices of motif and theme, the decision in favor of specific forms of presentation and methods of narrativization, the arbitrariness of what the artist "likes," what she's "interested in," what she remembers/recalls (e.g., "It feels very like Kent, late summer")-- all this wells up into an impressive (and sometimes oppressive) inevitability. Thus opens an abyss of explanation-seeking into which one falls when wrestling with the fascination that this elegiac el·e·gi·ac adj. 1. Of, relating to, or involving elegy or mourning or expressing sorrow for that which is irrecoverably past: an elegiac lament for youthful ideals. 2. miseen-scene provokes. To go to ruin on what is already a ruin: Despite all its exertion of control, its erudition er·u·di·tion n. Deep, extensive learning. See Synonyms at knowledge. Erudition of editors—Hare. Noun 1. and conceptuality, a tendency toward the self-indulgently moribund lurks through the highly elaborated texture of allegory and decay. Entropy at its most beautiful? Yes. At the end of a long afternoon, it did feel a bit as if one's own thoughts had taken on a crisp neoProusrian patina. Interestingly strange. Tom Holert is a writer and critic based in Cologne. Translated from German by Sara Ogger. |
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