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Once Upon a Time. Another World is Possible.
The Guggenheim Museum Berlin presents in Once Upon a Time: Fantastic Narratives in Contemporary Video,
six artists from its collection that address possible or fictional
realities through video. Reading the title, one might think that
fairytales or myths will be the topic of the exhibition. Instead, the
videos are critical reflections about society using a symbolic
narrative.
The meditative video of Chinese artist Cao Fei, who
was a resident artist at the Osram factory in China thanks to a bursary
from the Siemens Art Program, gives a hint about this. During six
months, she had the opportunity to talk to the employees and ask them
questions about their daily lives, their dreams and how they motivate
themselves to leave their homes in order work in a factory. From these
regular meetings and talks, she created the video Whose Utopia (2006),
divided in three parts –Imagination of Product, Factory Fairytale and
My Future Is Not a Dream. Whose Utopia
pays attention to the individual wishes and dreams of the employees,
who are performing their dreams, either dancing or playing music, while
working. Almost simultaneously, a girl is dancing wearing an angel’s
dress and some seconds later we see her in her normal working clothes.
Another moment of the video shows a young man playing an electric
guitar to an absorbed and non stopping working audience. The song, My
Future is not a Dream evokes a melancholic resignation of dreams that
might not come true.
In a similar way, Argentinean artist Mika
Rottenberg presents a claustrophobic and absurd working atmosphere in
her video installation Dough
(2006). A group of women with exaggerated bodily proportions - either
extremely fat, with long fingers or flexible extremities - are working
in a small and warm place cutting, extending, turning and packing a big
piece of pastry, that is sent to the other women colleagues by an obese
employee, who is constantly kneading the dough. This claustrophobic
atmosphere is augmented by a wooden installation, giving the audience a
little frame to see what is happening in this environment, in which
flowers create allergic reactions, and tears and sweat help to enlarge
the dough. In some way, both videos are reflections on modes of
exploitation of labourers in factories, generally organised by foreign
businesses from rich industrial nations.
Francis Al˙s’ When Faith Moves Mountains
(2002) is a utopian look at inclusive cultures. In a slum in the
outskirts of Lima, Peru, the artist asked 500 people to literally
'move' a dune, scooping it some centimetres above its level. The artist
created this piece for the third Lima Biennial (2002), motivated by the
political situation of Peru during the corrupted government of former
president Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000). The symbolic movement of the
mountain by the group is almost an act of faith, pointing out that
every single individual is important in order to reach a common goal.
The geological displacement is a 'social allegory' and, as the artist
says: “When Faith Moves Mountains
attempts to translate social tensions into narratives that in turn
intervene in the imagined landscape of a place. The action is meant to
infiltrate the local history and mythology of Peruvian society
(including its art history), to insert another rumour into its
narratives. If the script meets the expectations and addresses the
anxieties of that society at this time and place, it may become a story
that survives the event itself. At that moment, it has the potential to
become a fable or an urban myth.”
What if the landing on the moon would have been done by women? This question is answered by Aleksandra Mir in her video First Woman on the Moon
(1999). Commemorating the 30th anniversary of landing on the moon by
the troupe of Apollo 11, the artist recreates a fake moon landing on a
beach in the Netherlands. Parodying the historical moment, the episode
is recorded by the press, including the creation of sand craters by
huge caterpillar bulldozers. The epic and almost magic moment is when
the US American flag is planted on the ground by a woman, mocking a
moment that some people consider part of a conspiracy theory.
Another moon landing is the one presented in One Million Kingdoms (2001)
by French artist Pierre Huyghe. The protagonist of this animated story
is the Japanese manga character Annlee, purchased by Pierre Huyghe and
Philippe Parreno in 1999, 'rescuing' it from being condemned to be
buried in oblivion. In this video, Huyghe gives Annlee a new role as a
solitary girl walking on the moon. A landscape of mountains appears,
when the girl starts to speak. However, her voice is an electronic
version with excerpts of talks by astronaut Neil Armstrong during the
landing on the moon in 1969, interrupted by extracts of Jules Verne´s
novel A Journey to the Center of the Earth (1864), as if the girl is
remembering passages of fictional and real stories, and overall about
mass-mediated myths.
In this exhibition, myths and fables are
presented as actual reflections on society, veiled with symbols and
allegories about reality, for instance gender inequality and inhuman
working conditions. The concept of creating a utopian world in
contemporary art expresses that, once upon a time, another world was
possible.
Text by
Katerina Valdivia Bruch for Aesthetica Magazine
Once Upon a Time: Fantastic Narratives in Contemporary Video. Francis Alys, Cao Fei, Pierre Huyghe, Aleksandra Mir, Mika Rottenberg, Janaina Tschäpe
Deutsche Guggenheim Museum Until October 9th, 2011
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