Archive

curators

© Jesper Just

© Jesper Just

HEART was the first art museum to feature the Jesper Just in a solo show in 2005 and has since made acquisitions of his work a priority in its collection. Because of its long involvement and continued fascination with the artist, HEART is now organising a second solo show of the artist as a survey, highlighting the most significant pieces from the past 10 years of Just’s career. A career, which has enjoyed such international success and prominence that Jesper Just has been chosen to represent Denmark at the Venice Biennial in 2013.

The exhibition will also be the inauguration of a new and unique piece by Just, specially commissioned by HEART and generously funded by The New Carlsberg Foundation. The piece, entitled This is a Landscape of Desire, will form the core of the exhibition, which also features eight other works realised by the artist in the past 10 years.

Three of them (This Nameless Spectacle, 2011; Sirens of Chrome, 2010 and A Voyage in Dwelling, the eponymous episode of the 2008 trilogy) will be presented as monumental video installations in the main exhibition space of the museum, together with This is a Landscape of Desire. This will enable “a spatial experience”, where a powerful correlation between the emotional movement of Jesper Just’s characters and that of the viewers is established.

© Jesper Just

© Jesper Just

A psychogeography is traced by the artist’s imagination via the languages of visual arts, cinema and architecture. Over the years, Just’s work has scaled up: today his video installations have a sculptural presence that not only engages the viewers on a visual, but also on a psychological level, while it also tends to incorporate them physically, as will be evident in the exhibition.

Earlier single-channel works like It Will All End in Tears, 2006; Something to Love, 2005, Bliss and Heaven, 2004, The Lonely Villa, 2004, No Man is an Island II will be continuously screened in HEART concert hall, so that the audience can get a full perspective on Just’s body of work.

Jesper Just’s films started out more or less as recorded happenings, seemingly far from the carefully choreographed cinematic events that his work has developed into over the past decade. The artist himself, however, prefers to view them all as an integral part of his artistic oeuvre.

The question of representation, understood as the manner in which we create images -and how those images, in turn, conjure ideas, expectations and conventions, is central to Jesper’s work. One could say that to Just, what’s interesting about representation is that it never merely represents. Rather, it actively performs.

Of course, the question of representation and performance doesn’t merely apply to people or characters. Location too can perform. As can language. Music. Sex. Gender. Perhaps this is why the mainstream film is one consistent source of inspiration in his work. By digging into the representations of cinema and beyond, he attempts to elucidate the very limits of our imagination. The exhibition is curated by Caroline Corbetta.

© Jesper Just

© Jesper Just

HEART

Jens Hoffmann Mesèn (born 1974 in San José, Costa Rica) is a writer and exhibition maker. He has organized exhibitions since 1997 and is currently the Director of the Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco where he also directs the Capp Street Project artist-in-residence program.

Jens Hoffmann has curated more than 30 exhibitions internationally since the late 1990s. His current curatorial projects include “When Attitudes Became Form Become Attitudes” (opening in fall 2012 at the CCA Wattis Institute and spring 2013 at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit) and the 9th Shanghai Biennial (opening October 1, 2012, at the new Shanghai Art Museum).

Hoffmann‘s training in theater has as much influence on his curatorial efforts as his experience with art history and curating. Of key importance for all of his exhibitions is the staging of the experience, from the design of the installation to the conceptualization of the catalogue, the related programming, and the “performances” of the artworks themselves. The stage set of the exhibition space, site, or geographical location is itself an important factor in the development of his ideas, which respond to both time and place. Hoffmann takes into account the larger historical and sociopolitical context in which an exhibition is happening as well as the relevant curatorial and art historical relationships.

Hoffmann trained as a theater director and studied stage directingdramaturgy, with Andrea Breth and Manfred Karge and cultural sociology with Wolfgang Engler at the Ernst Busch School for Performing Arts in Berlin. He holds an MA from DasArts: School for Advanced Research in Theater and Dance Studies at the Amsterdam School for the Arts were he studied under the Dutch theater pioneer Ritsaert ten Cate.

A defining characteristic of Hoffmann’s work is his conception of an authorial role for the curator, as well as applying the ideas and strategies of artists (in particular Conceptual art) to his curatorial efforts. His unique approach has resulted in a highly personal exhibition history that reflects a creative development not dissimilar to that of an artist.

He was co-curator (with Adriano Pedrosa) of the 12th Istanbul Biennial. He co-curated the 2nd San Juan Triennial in Puerto Rico in 2009, the 9th Lyon Biennial in 2007, he was guest curator for Manifesta 4 in Frankfurt in 2002 and co-curator of the 1st Berlin Biennial in 1998. With Harrell Fletcher, he developed the People’s Biennial (together with Independent Curators International), of which the first edition was presented in 2010-11 at five U.S. museums. In 1999 Hoffmann organized, together with Maurizio Catellan, the 9th Caribbean Biennial in St, Kitts.

In 2009 he founded the publication The Exhibitionist: A Journal on Exhibition Making, and he has been an editor-at-large for Mousse magazine since 2011. In addition to this Hoffmann is a frequent contributor to Frieze and Artforum.

In 2006 Hoffmann began working with the Kadist Art Foundation, which is based in Paris and San Francisco, and has built their 101 Collection, a collection of artworks from the West Coast of the United States, and El Sur, a collection of artworks by young and emerging Latin American artists. Since 2012 Hoffmann is member of Kadist’s Art Committee.

Hoffmann is an associate professor at the Graduate Program in Curatorial Practice at California College of the Arts in San Francisco and has been an adjunct professor at  Accademia delle Belle Arti in Milan since 2004. From 2003 to 2009 he was a lecturer at the MFA in Curating Program at Goldsmiths College University of London. In 2012 Hoffmann was Visiting Professor and Course Leader of the 4th Gwangju Biennial Curatorial Course.

From 1995 to 1997 Hoffmann worked an assistant dramaturg with Tom Stromberg at the Theater Am Turm in Frankfurt. Stromberg and Hoffmann realized the performing arts program for Documenta X “Theater Sketches” in 1997. The following year Hoffmann became co-curator of the 1st Berlin Biennial, which he organized as artistic coordinator with Klaus Biesenbach, Nancy Spector, and Hans Ulrich Obrist. This was followed by two years at the Guggenheim Museum in New York as an assistant curator for contemporary art. From 2003 to 2007 Hoffmann was the director of exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London.

He worked for Brussels 2000: Cultural Capital of Europe, for which he curated, with Barbara Vanderlinden, the program “Indiscipline,” a large scale series of talks, lectures, and performances exploring interdisciplinary links among science, art, political theory, and architecture though the spoken word. From 2001 to 2002 Hoffmann worked as a guest curator with Mattijs Visser at the Museum Kunst Palast in Düsseldorf, where he organized “SPECTACULAR: The Art of Action,” a yearlong examination of the relationship between performance art and the museum’s collection, with various stagings and actions taking place throughout the museum.

His most recent books include “The Artist’s Studio” (for the MIT Press series Documents of Contemporary Art and Whitechapel Gallery, 2012), “The Next Documenta Should Be Curated by An Artist” (ed.) (Revolver, 2004), and “Perform” (coauthored with Joan Jonas, Thames & Hudson, 2005). “SHOW TIME,” a history of exhibitions from 1990 to the present, is forthcoming from Thames & Hudson in 2012 and “The Exhibition As A Dramatic Construction” will be published by Sternberg Press in 2013.

dOCUMENTA (13) is dedicated to artistic research and forms of imagination that explore commitment, matter, things, embodiment, and active living in connection with, yet not subordinated to, theory. Opened yesterday it will last for 100 days. Founded by German Arnold Boe, since 1955 is held every 5 years to house the works of hundreds of artists.

These are terrains where politics are inseparable from a sensual, energetic, and worldly alliance between current research in various scientific and artistic fields and other knowledges, both ancient and contemporary. dOCUMENTA (13) is driven by a holistic and non-logocentric vision that is skeptical of the persisting belief in economic growth. This vision is shared with, and recognizes, the shapes and practices of knowing of all the animate and inanimate makers of the world, including people.

Guillermo Faivovich & Nicolás Goldberg

dOCUMENTA (13) is located in an apparent simultaneity of places and times, and it is articulated through four main positions corresponding to conditions in which people, in particular artists and thinkers, find themselves acting in the present. Far from being exhaustive of all the positions that a subject can take, they acquire their significance in their interrelation. The four conditions that are put into play within the mental and the real spaces of the project are the following:

On stage. I am playing a role, I am a subject in the act of re-performing.

Under siege. I am encircled by the other, besieged by others.

In a state of hope, or optimism. I dream, I am the dreaming subject of anticipation.

On retreat. I am withdrawn, I choose to leave the others, I sleep.

These four conditions relate to the four locations in which dOCUMENTA (13) is physically and conceptually sited—Kassel, Kabul, Alexandria/Cairo, and Banff. These places are phenomenal spatialities that embody the four conditions, blurring the associations that are typically made with those places and conditions, and which are instead constantly shifting and overlapping.

dOCUMENTA (13)

Selected by Ingrid Melano

My first book is out now! The art market is the result of complex interactions. The purpose of my research is to analyze the relations among actors of the contemporary art system, in particular considering the production of contemporary art exhibitions. In this sense i thought to fill a gap of European researches, preferring to shift the attention on four precise cultural institutions, representative of different European art management styles: Ludwig Museum in Budapest, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo in Turin, Magasin 3 in Stockholm, KW in Berlin. Only by taking into account the behavior of institutions, art dealers, curators and artists, i could admit a flourishing future for the art system, therefore a deep sense for people working in this field.

Buy “the Powers behind Contemporary Art Exhibitions in European Museums” here

Everybody knows Mousse, the bimonthly magazine published in Italian and English. Mousse keeps tabs on international trends in contemporary culture through city editors in major art capitals such as Berlin, New York, London, Paris, and Los Angeles. Ten Fundamental Questions of Curating is a project that emerged from a desire to trace the coordinates of contemporary curatorial practice, to take stock of a profession that is constantly evolving.Through the contributions of ten curators, the ten essays in the project examine ten fundamental themes in curating.

The booklets are structured as hypothetical chapters in a book that once completed, through the reflections of some of the leading figures in the contemporary scene, will try to offer an answer to the question of “what it means to be a curator today”.

The fourth dossier features Maria Lind answering the question “Why Mediate Art?”. With selected visuals by Marysia Lewandowska. Ten Fundamental Questions of Curating is distributed with the international edition of Mousse and with subscription copies (#28).Previous chapters were: chapter III – What To Do With The Contemporary? / Text – João Ribas / Visuals – Matthew Buckingham (#27); chapter II – How About Pleasure? / Text – Dieter Roelstraete / Visuals – Pierre Bismuth (#26); chapter I – What is a Curator? / Text – Jessica Morgan / Visuals – Urs Fischer (#25).

If you want to be updated about Mousse’s activity, follow their blog, you can find it among my blogroll on the right.

Mousse Magazine

%d bloggers like this: