Maverick
Arts
Bostons
Visual Artsletter
|
By
Charles Giuliano
82 Webster Street
East Boston, 02128
Charles.Giuliano@GTE.net |
December
18, 2000
Issue No.9
archive
Copyright 2000, Charles
Giuliano
Documenta XI
Part One of a Special Report
Because of the international
significance of the material,
this Special Report on soon to be
announced plans for documenta XI,
will be presented in several
issues of Maverick Arts. The
first installment will discuss
the Five Platforms that will
comprise documenta XI as well as
a general overview of the
international exhibition.
Subsequent issues will cover the
complete text of an interview
with the organizer, Okwui
Enwezer, and reactions to a
decision to launch the first
platform in Vienna, Austria,
where there has been a call for a
cultural boycott against
visiting, or participating in,
Austrian based projects. This is
in response to the current
political dominance of the
Freedom Party of Dr. Joerg
Haider, who has openly expressed
sympathies for the Third Reich.
Haider's father was a high
ranking member of the Nazi party.
Reactions and responses of
readers are greatly encouraged.
This material will be included as
a part of a continuing discourse.
During a brief layover from Great
Britain to Cuba, Okwui Enwezer,
the Nigerian born organizer of
documenta XI, presented a two and
a half hour lecture, at MIT, in
Cambridge, Massachusetts,
describing the history and =
plans for the upcoming exhibition
in Kassel, Germany. Following
this epic presentation, he
granted me an interview in which
he further discussed some of the
controversial decisions for the
next documenta.
He was invited to lecture at
the List Visual Arts Center, by
its director, Jane Farver, on the
occasion of the exhibition,
Global Conceptualism. He had
served as a member of the
curatorial team for that
important exhibition.
Much like the Whitney
Biennials, each new project seems
to be a response to the
criticisms of the prior one.
Under its director, the Belgian,
Jan Hoet, documenta 9, in 1992,
was critiqued for its sprawling,
circus like, sense of spectacle.
The ego and personality of the
director was a significant part
of that experience. Hoet's
installation took full advantage
of the site including the
permanent buildings, Museum
Fridericianum, documenta-Halle,
Orangerie, Neue Galerie,
Ottoneum, as well as, temporary
Pavillions and numerous site
specific works.
The documenta X of the French
curator, Catherine David, by
contrast, was austere and
scholarly. She created a new
space in the train station, but
destroyed the pavillions and
included very few site specific
works. Her exhibitions were all
inside and there was little sense
of festivity or spectacle. In
documenta-Halle, she created a
setting for 100 Days 100 Guests,
a series of daily talks, and also
made the internet an important
part of the event.
Although her documenta was
widely criticized as cold and
theory driven, it attracted
750,000 visitors. This compares
to 250,000 for the most recent
Venice Biennale. And, 6000
journalists filed reports that
fill 27 volumes of clippings.
Enwezer, respectfully
discussed how documenta X ended
Phase Two of the series. David
contextualized politically
inspired artists by including
such masters as Walker Evans,
Marcel Broodthaers, works from
the 1960s of the seminal Latin
Americans, Lygia Clark and Helio
Oiticica, the Atre Povere objects
of Michelangelo Pistoletto, and
major German artists including
Gerhard's Richter's epic, Atlas,
and Hans Haacke's, Shapolsky et
al. She reconfigured modernity
and contemporary art as it had
been conveyed by prior
documentas.
While David's project brought
the art of the 20th century to a
thoughtful conclusion, it wasn't,
well, much fun. Kassel, a rather
tough, industrial city of
200,000, dead center in Germany,
is not an attractive destination.
Other than for documenta, there
would be little compelling reason
to visit. The city has been
largely rebuilt because of
massive bombing, in 1943, in
which 10,000 died.
In an earlier era, Kassel was
a more important cultural center.
The Fridericianum Museum, for
example, was Europe's first
public museum, when it was
founded, in 1842.
The appointment of Enwezer,
the director of the second
Johannesburg Biennale, came as a
surprise, but has also opened up
new possibilities. It is
anticipated that there will be a
greater presence of global
artists. Enwezer has not entirely
revealed his plans but we should
expect the unexpected.
Based on his respect for
documenta X, we should anticipate
greater similarities to her
strategies, than a return to the
fanfare and spectacle of
documenta 9. The documenta of
Enwezer will be a time for debate
and dialogue rather than art
related tourism. In contrast to
the cerebral David, Farver,
describes Enwezer as, "very
visual."
When asked for specifics,
Enwezer explained that the
opening of the Kassel exhibition
is still 18 months away.
Accordingly, he is unwilling to
discuss invited artists or to
describe how the city, its
buildings and grounds, will be
used to create an installation.
>From March 8 to April 23,
2001, in Vienna, the first of
Five Platforms, Democrary
Unrealized, will be launched,
continuing in Berlin and London.
>From May 7, through 14,
Platform Two, in New Delhi,
concentrating on film and video,
concerns Experiments with Truth.
The theme of Platform Three, is
Creolite, in November, 2001.
Platform Four, in Lagos, Nigeria,
Under Siege, will involve four
African cities under stress:
Lagos, Freetown, in Sierra Leone,
Kinshasa, in the Republic of the
Congo, and Capetown, South
Africa. Platform 5, the documenta
XI exhibition, opens in Kassel,
in June, 2002.
The Platforms will involve
participants from a broad range
of disciplines as well as
artists, city planners, and
architects. At MIT, = Enwezer was
asked how these Platforms will
reflect artists invited and
specific works to be seen in
Kassel. There was no clear answer
as to how that issue will be
resolved. The geographic range
and remote location of = some the
Platforms will certainly limit
the audience and media coverage.
Through the internet, however, we
will have access to the results
of = this critical discourse.
At MIT, he sketched the
history of Phase One, its
founding in 1955 by Albert Bode,
and Phase Two, from 1972 through
1997, leading to his launch of
the global Phase Three. His ideas
may reshape the concepts of ever
more ubiquitous Biennales in
Istanbul, Montreal, Shanghai,
Johannesburg, Rio, Cuba,
Pittsburgh and Venice, to mention
but a few.
The first documenta, in 1955,
accompanied a Flower Show that
attracted 2 million visitors.
That first exhibition drew
150,000 visitors. The last
documenta organized by Bode was
in 1968. This was a time of
international political protest
that demanded an end to documenta
and its contrived political
agenda.
Phase Two, according to
Enwezer, commenced with documenta
5, in 1972, organized by Harald
Szeeman. "It wrecked
havoc," Enwezer said,
"It destroyed the
museological notion. It was the
emergence of a new avant-garde
with Fluxus, performance, and
conceptual art. It was the first
time for site specific pieces. It
included time based pieces that
destroyed the notion of time. It
was a time when subjectivity
played a role in art making. It
included photography and video
and changed the paradigm of
exhibitions.
"There were certain
constants. Beuys, for instance,
showed in every documenta, until
1979. Richter was another
constant. The David documenta =
represented a conclusion of this
concept. She included Richter,
for the last time, with his
magnum opus, Atlas. She showed
this epic work, in its entirety,
which took several galleries. He
is not included in documenta XI.
It is a time to make way for new
and younger artists.
"It has also shifted away
from all male, European curators
and began to include non European
artists. Alfredo Jaar was
included in 1987. And, the first
African, a sculptor from Senegal,
was included in 1992 (Mo Edoga).
It raises the question of the
West as the arbiter of value in
art. Is the West ignoring a view
of sites of importance in
producing art. Do you curate by
art history or by country?"
These are issues and questions
that will be further explored in
the next = issue of Maverick
Arts.
EVENTS
Critical
Condition
January 18, 7:30
PM
C. Walsh Theater
Suffolk UniversityModerated
by Charles Giuliano with
Daniel Ranalli, Randi
Hopkins, Bill Arning,
Carl Belz, Christopher
Millis, Mary Sherman
This is the first in
what is anticipated as an
annual series of lectures
and panel discussions
addressing issues central
to the Boston community
of artists. Next year it
is hoped to expand this
series to include other
arts institutions.
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