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29.12.10

PAOLA PIVI | WHAT GOES ROUND - ART COMES ROUND

mini chair pendant by paola pivi
The miniature vitra chair pendant by Paola Pivi is currently on display as part of her What goes round – art comes round exhibition in Paris at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin until December 23, 2010.  This is just one of her many imaginative pieces alongside other amazing work by artists like Takashi Murakami and Xavier Veilhan just to name a few.  What a great excuse to visit Paris.




My religion is kindness. thank you, see you in the future. 
Paola Pivi


by Renee Massaro
all images © paola pivi

27.12.10

COURTISANE 2011 ARTIST IN FOCUS


aifsylvain3.jpg
I’m very happy to announce we will have three amazing “Artists in Focus” as guests on next year’s Courtisane Festival, which will take place from Wednesday March 30 until Sunday April 3 2011, in various locations in Ghent (Belgium). These artists-filmmakers will present a combination of their own work - as screening and/or performance, in collaboration with selected musicians - and their personal sources of inspiration.
Here’s a preview. More news on the full programme will soon be available on www.courtisane.be.
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Robert Beavers (1949, Brookline, Massachusettes) is considered as one of the most important avant-garde filmmakers from the second half of the 20th century. He’s also the most European of American artist filmmakers, since he has been living and working in Europe since 1967, shooting most of his films travelling between Italy, Greece and Switzerland, where the Temenos Archive is located. Founded by Beavers and the late Gregory Markopoulos, this archive preserves the entirety of their film oeuvre as well as all related documentation material. Until the late 1990s, Beavers rarely presented his films, but recently restorations of his films have been shown at the Austrian Film Museum in Vienna, Tate Modern in London, the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Having lived briefly in Belgium in the late sixties, this will be the first time in several decades that his work is screened here. “Since leaving the USA in 1967, Robert Beavers has laboured in relative isolation on works whose goal ‘is for the projected film image to have the same force of awakening sight as any other great image.’ His meticulously crafted films are at once lyrical and rigorous, sensuous and complex. Whilst communicating his response to the landscapes, architecture and traditions of the Mediterranean and Alpine countries in which they were filmed, they also incorporate deeply personal and aesthetic themes. Rarely seen in public, Robert Beavers’ remarkable body of work is a celebration of light, life and colour.” (Mark Webber)
A selection of Robert Beavers’ work will be shown as part of the Courtisane festival in Ghent. The week after he will present several programs of his films at Cinematek, the screening theatre of the Belgian Royal Film Archive in Brussels.
Some texts, essays and interviews are available here and here
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Robert Fenz (1969, Ann Arbor, Michigan) is among the more exciting and original young filmmakers working in and against the avant-garde tradition today. Fenz’s films, mostly shot in black and white 16mm, have a rare energy and restless beauty that recalls both the jazz-inspired imagery of New York School photographers such as Roy DeCarava and Aaron Siskin and the landscape films of one of Fenz’s former teachers, Peter Hutton. An inveterate traveler, Fenz has made films in Cuba, Mexico, Brazil and, more recently, India and France. His most celebrated work is the film cycle Meditations on Revolution, filmed over seven years (1997-2003), exploring the basic theme of revolution in its purest definition: the radical transformation of a subject from one state to another, and the various forms that transformation can take. Fenz has also worked as a cinematographer on several films including Chantal Akerman’s Là-Bas and De l’autre côté (From the Other Side) . He has recently finished two new films, one of which engages the cinematic legacy of anthropological filmmaker Robert Gardner.
Fenz’ cinematographic approach has been greatly informed by music, especially by jazz improvisation. One of his inspirators was composer and master improvisationalist Wadada Leo Smith (1941, Leland, Mississippi), whose incredible forty-year career has included performances and recordings with legendary musicians Anthony Braxton, Don Cherry and Cecil Taylor. “Studying music with Leo”, said Fenz in an interview,”reinforced my belief that I needed to go into the world with an idea – do research on a subject and arrive at a place where I would be prepared to adapt and change the film completely, in the moment”. The two met when Smith, who helms the CalArts program in African American Improvisational Music, taught the filmmaker. Later the trumpeter provided the soundtrack for Vertical Air (2000), one of Fenz’s best-known films. On the occassion of the Courtisane Festival, Wadada Leo Smith will perform live with a selection of Robert Fenz’ films.
Read an interview with Fenz and Smith here
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Sylvain George (1968, Vaulx-en-Velin, France) started making films in 2004, after his studies in philosophy. His work, influenced in particular by the thinking of Walter Benjamin, combines formal experiment with militant commitment. “The idea”, he says, “is to make films that take a stand and assert a political position, and at the same time not to separate content from form; to be formally demanding and to manage to define an own view and grammar as a filmmaker.” Far away from any form of didacticism, his films depict and allegorise the struggles of the “nouveaux damnés”, trapped between the rule and the exception: the stateless, the clandestine, the precarious. Most of his films explore issues related to immigration. His most recent work,Qu’ils reposent en révolte (des figures de guerre), gives an account of the living conditions of migrants in Calais over a period of three years (2007-2010). “Politically speaking, it is about standing up, contesting these grey zones, these spaces or cracks like Calais standing somewhere between the exception and the rule, beyond the scope of law, where law is suspended, where individuals are deprived, stripped off their most fundamental rights. And that while creating, through some dialectic reversal, the “true” exceptional states. Space-time continuums where beings and things are fully restored to what they were, are, will be, could be or could have been”. Rebellion and redemption are at the heart of George’s films, which find, beyond the dominant order of the visible, true politics in the gestures, cries and bodies of those who are excluded.
Music is an important factor in the films of George, who especially likes to draw upon the ethos and energy of free jazz. On the occasion of the Courtisane Festival Qu’ils reposent en révolte (des figures de guerre) will be accompanied live by William Parker (1952, New York) for the first time. One of the most vital musicians in the experimental jazz scene in New York and beyond, Parker has played with various musicians such as Alan Silva, Rashid Ali, Cecil Taylor, Peter Brotzmann, Derek Bailey and Hamid Drake. His compositional skills span a range including operas, ballets and film scores. On the festival, Parker will play the double-bass solo, exploring the interface between bow and strings. As one commentator noted: “as if his bass were raw wood he was using to light an internal fire”.
More info on George can be found here

Two performances produced in collaboration with art centre Vooruit 
text and images by diagonalthoughts

14.12.10

FRANCESCO POLI | THE SEVENTIES


MAXXI | Francesco Poli discusses the Seventies and Italian Conceptualism
Le Storie dellArte
The Histories of Art, a series of seminars on the history of contemporary art from the last 50 years, organised around chronological and thematic issues, is returning to MAXXI.
Gallerists, curators and art critics meet the public to discuss the Neo-Avant-Gardes, Conceptualism and Arte Povera, Post-Modernism and the art of the new Millennium. 
Not simply lectures on contemporary art, but the stories by those protagonists who with extraordinary exhibitions have marked the history of Italian contemporary art.
Francesco Poli discusses the Seventies and Italian Conceptualism
Saturday 17 December, 11.30 – 13.00
MAXXI Auditorium 
Admittance €4 – free for holders of the my MAXXI membership card while places available, tickets must be picked up by 11.15 on the day of the event
The Italian Seventies were years of cultural, political and ideological tension. This was a period in which those experimental tendencies that emerged in the previous decade developed and established themselves, leading to a radical artistic and cultural mutation.
The contribution of the Italian artists, especially within the ambit of conceptual art, the object of this discussion, was highly original and of enormous consequence for the following decades.
Francesco Poli is a professor of the History of Contemporary Art at the Brera Fine Arts Academy in Milan. He also lectures at the Université Paris 8 and in Communications Science at the Faculty of Lettera in Turin. He has curated numerous exhibitions in public and private spaces. He contributes to diverse periodical and the daily newspaper La Stampa. His publications include: Il sistema dell’arte contemporanea. Produzione artistica, mercato, musei, Rome 2009; Minimalismo, arte povera, arte concettuale, Rome 2009.

Forthcoming events:
11.30 – 13.00
21 January 2012 | Achille Bonito Oliva
18 February 2012 | Angela Vettese
17 March 2012 | Germano Celant
21 April 2012 | Laura Cherubini
19 May 2012 | Carlos Basualdo

12.12.10

CRISTIAN BOLTANSKY | INTERVIEW BY ROSENBAUM-KRANSON



christian boltanski, no man's land, 2010 
(photo by james ewing, courtesy of park avenue armory)


I sat down with Christian Boltanski shortly before No Man’s Land, a site-specific intervention, opened at the Park Avenue Armory on New York City’s Upper East Side. By the time we met, most of the elements in the Drill Hall were roughly in place—the wall of characteristic biscuit tins, the clusters of used clothes, and the massive crane. Taken together, along with the heartbeat recording room, which I didn’t visit until a later return, the piece touches on questions familiar to those already acquainted with the artist’s work—memory, identity, loss, resurrection—and yet poses them in such a manner as to be accessible to those visitors for whom the name Christian Boltanski holds no preconceived meaning. In keeping with Boltanski’s desire not to have his work neatly labeled or categorized, but rather, engender its own visceral, emotional, and psychological reactions, I will refrain here from recounting the artist’s often-told biography. Instead, I believe that Boltanski’s words speak strongly for themselves.


Sarah Rosenbaum-Kranson: Can you describe the show that’s going on here now at the Armory, No Man’s Land?

CHRISTIAN BOLTANSKI: It’s a show—for me, it’s a little bit like a musical partition, and the first time was in Paris, at the Grand Palais [Personnes], and it will be here, and after that, it’s going to be in Milan [at the Hangar de Biccoca]. But each time it’s a different show, and each time it’s with a different object. When you have a partition, you can play for a big orchestra or a small orchestra. And because the space is so important in my work, especially for this piece, in Milan it will be totally different. With this kind of work and this kind of place, I think you must make some kind of collage. What I have said in Paris—and it’s sort of the same here—is that it’s like writing an opera, but the music is the space, and the music is already there, and you can write the story, but you have the music. And you can’t be against the music; you must work with the music. For this reason, I really change the work each time I show it. What is very important for me is that the people are inside the piece and not in front of the piece. In most of my work, it’s like that, but especially here, there will be sound, you are totally inside. And also, in a way, when the public is there, the visitors are walking, and they are mostly looking down, and they are not speaking, and they become a part of the work. 



chistian boltanski, installation of personnes for monumenta 2010 at the grand palais, paris


Rosenbaum-Kranson: I was actually curious about some of the variations of the piece because I know one of the major differences, obviously, between this and Personnes is that in Paris it was the dead of winter, and here, we’re in the heart of spring.

BOLTANSKI: Sure, and that’s a big difference, and in a way, it’s a pity. In Paris, it was something more—it was very cold. I refused the heat, and it was terribly cold. I hope that the smell can be here, but I’m not sure that the clothes are going to smell. It’s important for me to work with cold, or to work with smell. When you are cold, you are inside the work. If it smells, you are inside the work. If it’s very noisy, you are inside the work. And it’s this idea of being inside the work that is important to me.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: Do you think the fact that we’re now in warmer months will actually end up heightening the smell?

BOLTANSKI: I hope so, but quite frankly you don’t feel anything, you don’t smell anything, and unfortunately, the clothes are clean!

Rosenbaum-Kranson: The clothing is too clean this time?

BOLTANSKI: I think so, unfortunately. I don’t know. But in any case, what is important for me is not for the visitors to say, “oh I love this” or “oh I don’t like that,” it’s to say what happened. If somebody arrives at one of my shows and says, “oh, he’s a good artist at the end of the twentieth century” or something, then that’s very bad. I would prefer someone to say, “I don’t know what happened,” “I don’t know if it’s art or not art, but I’m really touched.” And I hope for this kind of reaction because, in fact, I think this piece, especially this piece, is a very easy piece. It’s not intellectual at all. It’s something that everybody can receive and understand very well because it’s so simple. In all my work, from the beginning to now, there’s always this idea that used clothes are like a body. If you have lost your father, what are you going to do with his clothes? You know that the clothes belonged to the man, and you don’t know what to do with them. And also, the fact that we don’t know if we are going to survive until tomorrow, especially for people who are older—we are just walking, in a way, with mines, and the mines can go [makes sounds mimicking an explosion], and you see plenty of your friends dying, and you don’t know why you are not dead and if you’ll die tomorrow. This is something that everybody knows, more or less. But for me, it is important that there is something I want to say but also something that needs to be totally open. For the children, it’s a very funny piece because it’s colorful and you know the crane is like an amusement.



christian boltanski, no man's land, 2010
(photo by james ewing, courtesy of park avenue armory)


Rosenbaum-Kranson: Like getting toys out of an arcade game.

BOLTANSKI: That was my first idea for the piece. For this reason, I think everybody can take what he or she wants. But I’m sure here, in New York, a lot of people are going to think about the Holocaust, which is not impossible for me, but it’s not exactly what I think. And when I made the work in Paris, two days later, there was the earthquake in Haiti, and for me, it’s also about the earthquake in Haiti. But each one is within the piece, reading it how he or she wants to read it. For Jews here, it’s going to make them think about the Holocaust, but for people from Haiti, it’s going to make them think about the earthquake, and for a child, it’s going to make him or her think about toys. I accept all these interpretations.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: That’s what is so wonderful about presenting a work in a city like New York…

BOLTANSKI: Where there are so many people.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: Can you elaborate on your use of the crane?

BOLTANSKI: It’s like the finger of God. I think God is like us—when we walk in the forest, we do this [makes a gesture of squashing a bug], and we kill an insect. We are not against the insect—
we didn’t see the insect, but still we kill it. And God is blind—for me, God doesn’t care about us. And sometimes God takes us by chance. And that’s the idea of the piece. And also, the other idea is that you can see each coat, and you can hear the heartbeats, and that means there are people’s identities. But in the mountain [of clothes], there’s no more identity because you can’t see if it’s a jacket or coat—everything is mixed together.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: This brings up a number of questions. I guess I’ll start with this element of smell, of sound, the fact that you’re using clothing. There’s this sort of insinuation of touch as well. I was curious if you could talk about the layer of sensuality that has always been strongly present in your work.



christian boltanski, reserve: the dead swiss, 1990, 1,168 boxes and photographs


BOLTANSKI: These shows are bodies. And the bodies smell. There were a lot of people in my work—there were thousands in Dead Swiss—60,000 heartbeats. There are always a lot of people. One of the questions in my work is unicity and the big number. But in this case, here, in the Armory, we have something like 400,000 people, I suppose. And also, in fact, it’s strange because I don’t speak directly about the Holocaust, but one of my questions about the Holocaust is the numbers. It’s easy for me to imagine one thousand people, but it’s totally impossible for me to imagine six million people. And the idea of the big number is something that’s so strange. And also, the survivors, after the Holocaust, always had guilt—why did I survive? Why didn’t God kill me? And also, why do I survive and why does my friend die? It’s not directly about the Holocaust, but it’s around the Holocaust, you could say. But it’s true that there are a lot of people, and I think the only question that’s in all my work is that I believe that everybody is unique, and at the same time, everybody is so fragile. After three generations, nobody is going to remember me or you. We remember the grandfather, but we can’t remember the great-grandfather. And it’s something so strange because everybody is so important; all of us are absolutely important and at the same time so fragile.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: That idea of individuality as well as the connections between people is something that comes up a lot, for me, in your work, where there’s this element of the individual pieces but also the group. When you walk into the Drill Hall, you have this mammoth pile of clothing, which, on the one hand, is one large piece, but then, of course, it’s all these individual little bits together.

BOLTANSKI: Yes, it’s plenty of people. It’s one piece made by thousands and thousands of people. It’s the mountain, and at the same time, it’s 400,000 people. But they are no longer somebody because they are destroyed, they have no more identity.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: I was speaking to Lawrence Weiner about his manhole cover project downtown, and I made the mistake of referring to them as modest because, from my perspective, when you’re just walking there, they’re inserted into the ground, and you can easily overlook them. But he adamantly corrected me and said they’re not modest, they’re nineteen manhole covers which each weigh three hundred pounds. But that idea, that connection between monumentality, modesty, and intimacy, is something that I’ve been thinking a lot about with your work as well.

BOLTANSKI: I think one of the differences between us is that Lawrence Weiner is the last Jewish artist we have, and I’m more Christian. I said that one time to Lawrence, and he did not agree. But I am totally sure that he is the last Jewish artist, because he exhibits stories—there’s always question and question and question in Lawrence’s work. And the fact that he refuses to use images and only uses words is also from the Jewish tradition.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: You created a work about fifteen years ago in New York that also used recycled clothing, Dispersion, at the Church of the Intercession in Harlem. It was part of a larger four-site installation called “Lost: New York Projects.” For Dispersion, visitors could actually leave with the clothes.

BOLTANSKI: At the church, it was possible to buy a bag for two dollars and fill the bag with clothes. I decided to do that here at the end of the show, but the location is a little difficult. We are on Park Avenue, and it’s too rich. For me, what was important was that I believe in the resurrection. It’s like if you go to the flea market, and if you see that there is a jacket on the floor, and somebody had loved the jacket before, somebody chose it, but this person is dead or this person doesn’t like this jacket anymore—and I mean to say, “I love you, I take you.” And for this reason, I’m going to give a second life to the jacket. The jacket is going to travel with me, and I’m going to say, “oh, you are so beautiful,” and I believe that what is important for an object or for a person is to look at it and give some love. And if you give some love, you give life. And all these clothes in No Man’s Land are dead clothes. But if somebody says “you are mine,” a new life will begin. And that’s the reason I did that in the church with Tom Eccles [Curator and former Director of the Public Art Fund]. And here, I thought it would be good to finish the work, to say it’s not dead, there’s the possibility that these clothes are going to survive, but Rebecca Robertson, [President/CEO of the Park Avenue Armory] and Tom said we are on Park Avenue, and it’s a little difficult.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: I think this idea of recycling and resurrection is a really beautiful one—that things can be brought back.

BOLTANSKI: In fact, here, all these clothes are going to go back to the man who lent the clothes.



christian boltanski, no man's land, 2010
(photo by james ewing, courtesy of park avenue armory)


Rosenbaum-Kranson: Where do you get thirty tons of clothes?

BOLTANSKI: In New Jersey. Do you want to know something funny? There are too many clothes now. The man who lent the clothes is working with one hundred tons of clothes per day, and there’s the big problem of how to destroy them. Now people don’t keep their clothes; clothes are less expensive and are not good quality, and after three months, they just throw them away. A few of them go to Africa, perhaps ten percent or something like that, and most of the clothes are going to become felt.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: One of the other things I’ve been thinking about is that you work with material that’s being recycled, but then, the installation as a whole, you can also see as being recycled. You revisit earlier pieces.

BOLTANSKI: Yes, especially for me, I have very few ideas in my life. And I hope with each piece it’s the same ideas. One chooses to be a painter, like I did, or a fashion designer. When you are a fashion designer, you must have a lot of ideas; when you are a painter, you must have one idea. And in fact, very often—I think, a little bit for me, and I think for most artists—there is a problem at the beginning of life, very often a psychological problem but also a historical problem, and for your whole life, you try to speak about this problem. If you think about Louise Bourgeois, she had this problem with her father, and all her art has to speak to that. We never find the solution, but it helps to have to speak about this problem. My problem was more historical than psychological, but I’m always trying to understand. We have a question, and all our lives, we try to understand why.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: Going back to the heartbeats that you mentioned earlier, you started collecting them in 2005, and I was wondering if you could speak a little about the connection between them and the other materials you use.

BOLTANSKI: For me, used clothes, a photograph of somebody, or heartbeats are the same thing. It’s always some kind of an object which represents that the subject is missing. In fact, the first idea was a little bit like a joke—I made a piece, I think, five years ago with my own heartbeats, and I thought this time it would be good not to have a photo album, but a heartbeats album, that it would be possible to go home and say, oh, I’m going to hear my grandmother tonight. And after that, I decided to collect heartbeats. But, in fact, people are not going to survive with this, it’s going to show absence. If you go to this island in Japan [Boltanski’s heartbeat recordings are archived on Teshima Island in Japan’s Inland Sea], and if you hear the heartbeats of your grandmother, your grandmother’s going to be very dead, and she’s going to be more dead because you hear these heartbeats, and it is going to show you more that she’s absent. In fact, it’s like when you see a photo of somebody, you feel more that this person is dead.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: The secondary presence makes you feel the absence even stronger.

BOLTANSKI: Yes, and this island of Teshima is going to be the island of the dead, of the dead people, because all these heartbeats are going to be heartbeats of dead people in a few years.



christian boltanski, view of teshima island, japan, repository for “the heart archives”, 2005-2010, japan seto inland sea


Rosenbaum-Kranson: How did you start working with this island?

BOLTANSKI: I did a very large piece in the north of Japan in an old school which is no longer in use because there are no more children in this part of Japan. And I created a very large work inside— it’s, I don’t know, two thousand square meters. The man who paid for this, Mr. Fukutake, is the director of the Naoshima Fukutake Art Museum Foundation in the south of Japan, and now he wanted to make some other art around Naoshima, and he asked me to think about a project. And I thought it was a good place to put my heartbeats–what is important is to make the struggle. It is to go to this island—and it is very difficult to go there—and during the travel, you can think about the person whose heartbeat you are going to hear. It’s not to hear most of the heartbeats, which mostly are the same, but what is important is to think about the person, and to know that the heartbeat of your grandmother is there, or your own heartbeat is there.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: So you know that you actually can do it.

BOLTANSKI: It’s not only a dream, it’s reality. And this year, I put a speaking clock under the Cathedral of Salzburg. And you have the crypt, you go to the catacombs, you go the crypt, and you can hear the time day and night, and it’s impossible to stop. And for me, it was very important, because, for me, one of the images of God is a lot of time. It was important for me to see the bishop, who was a very conservative bishop, and to explain that I needed his place, and after, I don’t know, one year, he accepted. And it’s a reality—you can go to Salzburg, you can go to the cathedral, you can go to the crypt, and you can hear the time. Now I work with this man in Tasmania, and it’s also a reality. Do you know the story of Tasmania?

Rosenbaum-Kranson: No. Can you explain it?

BOLTANSKI: That’s a strange project. I know a man who lives in Tasmania, David Walsh, and he wins a lot of money in casinos—he plays all the time. He’s a very strange man, and he collects a lot of things, especially Egyptian mummies. And he wants to make a foundation in Tasmania, and asked me, because we have a friend in common, if he can buy a piece of mine. And I decided to play with him. And first, my studio is filmed day and night, until I die, and it’s sent, through video-conference, indirectly to Tasmania. But only after I am dead can he make something of it. And also, what is funny for me is that he’s a gambler, and the piece has a price, and I ask him to pay me every month until I die—we call that in French viagé. If you sell a house in France, you can sell it like that: you don’t ask for the money, but the man who buys the house must pay you a little money every month until you die. And in eight year’s time, David Walsh is going to pay me what he asked to pay me if I asked for the money now. But he told me that he was sure that I’m going to die before eight years. Because you know he’s a gambler, if I survive ten years, he’s going to have lost money; if I die in four years, he’s made money. And he said, “I’ve never lost in my life, and I’m totally sure that you’re going to die before eight years.” And for me, it was very funny to do that because the man who believes that he is stronger than chance is a devil, because nobody is stronger than chance, only the devil.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: And how many years ago was this?

BOLTANSKI: It began this year. Also, for me, it was interesting to do that because in our society it’s totally impossible to speak about the fact that we are going to die. It’s something we totally refuse. We refuse to be older, and we refuse to die. And I hope to survive twenty years, but it’s very possible that I will die in five years. It’s normal to speak about that and not to refuse it.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: Reading through all of the interviews and essays on your work, there are two concepts that come up over and over—that you’re a trickster, on the one hand, and hyper-concerned with death, on the other. And that story, I think, really made me think about how they’re not necessarily opposed.

BOLTANSKI: It’s my last piece because my studio is going to be filmed until I die, and it’s going to be my last image of me. He wanted to buy my ashes, but I refused because I don’t like Tasmania at all—it’s too rainy. I don’t want to finish my life in Tasmania. But in any case, I think it’s a little parable. What I am doing, I think perhaps all my life, but especially now, are like little parables.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: You mentioned Lost: New York Projects earlier. That was also a very large intervention into Manhattan’s landscape, but very different from the single-site installation you have here with No Man’s Land.

BOLTANSKI: I like to work outside of galleries and museums. Because I’m an artist the only thing I can do is make art, but if you want to touch somebody, within five seconds they must not know it’s art but they must believe it’s life. For this reason I have shows in churches or garages because they’re much more interesting than art spaces. And also because, I think, if you are in a museum, people have the label “museum” and category “artist.” In fact, what was very difficult was that the city is so large that to go from the synagogue in Chinatown to the church in Harlem was such a long a trip that nobody had time to do that.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: So, the fact that the sites for Lost were so disparate made it too difficult for people to approach the work?

BOLTANSKI: Yeah, I think that Europe is different. I think at this time, the people who would go to see art in the States were more conservative, and they would always go to the same places, and it was very difficult for them to go to a place that they didn’t know.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: It was too difficult to break people’s routines?

BOLTANSKI: Yes, especially in such a big city. And I was happy because a lot of people saw it, but for the art scene, there were not so many people. It’s also like that in France. People always go to the same places. I just had an exhibition called "Après [After]" in a museum just outside of Paris, the MAC/VAL [Musée d’art contemporain du Val-de-Marne], and there were some people whom the director of this museum told me had never come here because they have to take the bus—you know, only twenty minutes—but they always go to the same place. Although what I loved in Lost: New York Projects, and what I’m also doing here, is that everything was destroyed after. I can say, I don’t know, seventy or eighty percent of my work is destroyed after, and I like this idea—you can see it, but afterwards there is nothing.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: Finding funding for the arts is increasingly difficult. It must be especially so when you don’t focus on selling objects.

BOLTANSKI: In any case, the Public Art Fund is something very important in the States because it is something really public, and I know that the money is private money, but it is something really for the public. In Europe, we have more things like that, but there is more public money and more possibility to do something without the idea of selling something. It’s less like that than it was before, but during the seventies and the eighties, there was a lot of money for making a show in a cave, in the mountains—it was possible to find this kind of money. And I think in the States it was much more difficult to find this kind of money. Also, the times have changed. I came to art just after ’68, and at this time, the idea of the market was not so important; the idea of the gallery was not so important. And, in a way, when I was young, all my friends had other jobs, and it was just normal. For this reason, to make projects without the idea of selling something was totally normal. And it seems to me that now the idea of the market is much stronger than it was at this time. I refuse to have permanent assistants or a permanent secretary, because I think assistants kill art. If I have two assistants, I must give them something to do, and if I have no idea, that means they must do something that I did already, and I must pay them, and this means I need to sell. And it becomes like a little factory, and I think that this is very dangerous. And for this reason—I am perhaps too romantic—I’m totally free. I can watch TV for three days, and nobody cares. And I think I’m very lucky for that, not to have to pay somebody, not to have to produce something.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: The money factor, especially with public art, is so strange because here, in the States, there’s so little money for the arts that whatever public art is produced usually is privately funded. And yet, because it’s in public spaces, so much of the controversy surrounding it tends to get stirred up by people who are offended that it’s their “tax dollars at work,” even though it’s usually not their tax dollars.

BOLTANSKI: The big difference now in Europe is that there’s less and less public money and more and more private money, like in America. And during the seventies, there was a lot of public money, and now there’s less public money. There’s always some, but it’s becoming less and less. And it’s nearly impossible now to make a show with only public money—you must mix.

Rosenbaum-Kranson: So, one final question. After everything we’ve talked about, and especially this idea of the work as the human body and all of the senses that you incorporate, have you ever thought about working with taste?

BOLTANSKI: Taste? No, I’ve never tried, I don’t know, [laughter] perhaps because I love to eat too much, and I don’t want to mix that? And also, perhaps, because eating is something more happy, and my work is not so happy.


all images © Boltansky - Museomagazine

VIK MUNIZ

An Important Film, 'Waste Land' Is Equal Parts Art and Love

In Rio de Janeiro, there is a landfill that is the largest in the world.  Named Jardim Gramacho, the island of garbage is filled with catadores, Brazilian garbage pickers who troll through the trash in search of recyclables.  Halfway across the world, Vik Muniz makes art in Brooklyn. He has done well for himself, focusing mainly on the photography of images made from quirky materials like chocolate syrup and sand.  He decides that his next project will be working with the catadores to give back to the region.  This is Waste Land, a startlingly moving film that recently made the Oscar Documentary shortlist.  The movie quietly arrived at the Kendall Square Theater on Friday, but it is the type of film that should really be greeted with the type of attention garnered by the new Harry Potter.  Equal parts about the importance of recycling and the interpersonal connections that can be shared by the creation of art, Waste Land is a stunningly breathtaking movie that explores just how easy it is to bring joy where there previously was despondency. 


            In Waste Land, Muniz discovers that the individuals he encounters are far more important than he ever thought they would be.  On his first visit to Jardim Gramacho, he finds himself drawn to several different people.  Choosing a select few, Muniz begins to snap pictures of them, some posed and others in their natural environment.  His technique from there is to project enormous versions of these pictures on a white floor in his Rio studio.  The same people in the photographs are paid to strategically place the trash they spend their lives digging through all over the floor, in the form of the picture.  Muniz then snaps a picture from overhead, which in turn becomes the finished piece.

Muniz quickly discovers that the relationships he builds with the catadores is more important than the work he creates.  Tião is the head of the catadore organization, devoted to improving the lives of the impoverished landfill workers.  He searches for books in the rubbish in hopes of one day having enough of them to start a library for the community.  This elicited some cheers from the audience in the theater, a sign that that I found interesting.  I had spent much of the film up to that point marveling at how wonderfully well informed and well spoken the catadores were.  Some of them had read books like Sun Tzu’s The Art of War and were able to understand it, without the aid of any sort of education.  It was this spirit and desire to learn that made them prime candidates for escaping the harsh working conditions of Jardim Gramacho.

          One of the most moving stories of the bunch belongs to Suelem, an eighteen-year-old mother of two.  She rarely gets the opportunity to see her children, and when the camera crew follows her on her first visit home in a month, the tears begin to flow both on and off the screen.  It is clear to viewers that Suelem does not value herself as a human being anymore, until she sees herself blown on the giant canvas that is the studio floor.  It is a touching moment s she weeps into Muniz’s shoulder when he gives her a framed version of the painting to put on her wall.


Muniz’s wife is the voice of reason, speaking on behalf of the audience when she rightfully asks her husband “what is to become of these people once you leave?”  The question is fair—Muniz essentially stepped into these people’s lives, plucked them from the garbage dumps, as a sort of “this is what your life could be like” moment.  In fact, some of the worker’s emotionally confess to the camera that they can’t ever return to the dump again.  However, the film wraps up each person’s story beautifully and (mostly) positively.  In their initial interviews, almost every person Muniz meets tells him that they are perfectly happy, but in the end, it is clear that Muniz has given the catadores a new self worth and, hopefully, the will and the courage to make a change.