Goshka Macuga: Thinker, Maker, Institutional Spy

Similar documents
Linda Wallace: Journeys in Art and Tapestry

INTERVIEW // NIR HOD: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF A STAR BY ALISON HUGILL; PHOTOS BY MAIKE WAGNER IN BERLIN

EXHIBITION - INTERVIEW

ZHU YU THE ARTIST. A Case Study. Introduction. He s the Damien Hirst of Chinese art, except that the things Zhu Yu does are much, much stranger.

Michael Landy s Basel Moment

REGARDING ANA RoseLee Goldberg

British Museum's Afghan exhibition extended due to popular demand

PRESS RELEASE. 24 May 4 September PALAZZO CIPOLLA - ROMA Via del Corso, 320

WHITEWALL Barry McGee V2.indd 2 11/10/13 5:21 PM

ROSIE EMERSON: On Development, Discovery and Dreams

Scavenger Hunt: Adventures at Sea

THE FASHION INTENSIVE

OPEN CALL. WoSoF - WORLD SYMPOSIUM FOR FASHION. JEWELLERY. ACCESSORIES. Deadline : 10th November TONGJI University D&I, SHANGHAI 16th/DEC/2018.

Celebrating Alexander the Great's lost world

TRANSFORMATIONS A GRAPHIC AND CHOREGRAPHIC WORKSHOP

HAHAN. Hack The Market. By Mariam Arcilla Photography courtesy of Hahan

Abramovic, Marina. Perfomance Artist Tehching Hsieh Talks Taking Risks with Marina Abramovic, Interview Magazine, November 6, 2017.

Characters Narrator. Mr. Twee Emperor

Skin Deep. Roundtable

Capsule Wardrobe Guide

Martha Rosler Isn t Done Making Protest Art

COOL HUNTING INTERVIEWS LEO VILLAREAL

303 GALLERY. Wyrick, Christopher. The Imaginarium of Elad Lassry C Magazine (May 2015), p. 132 ELAD LASSRY IN HIS STUDIO S VIEWING ROOM.

In the Spirit of Summer Memories

CREATING THE ARTIST ARCHIVES

volume two. two thousand FOUrteen volume two. two thousand FOUrteen

Sabba Syal Elahi Interview (2 of 2)

Maja Bajevic / Marcelle Marcel curated by Ami Barak

Visual Standards - Merit Level 3 Diploma in Art & Design. VISUAL STANDARDS - Merit

Producing the Art of Living: Kalup Linzy

Podcast 77 - What Australians Wear

Appendix XVIII: Plates

Apparel, Textiles & Merchandising. Business of Fashion. Bachelor of Science

ASHLEY BICKERTON AT YOGYAKARTA ART LAB (YAL)

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons by Sean Banville Alexander McQueen fashion label to live on

Peripatetic Georgian artist Andro Wekua on work, war and wandering

Meredith Woolnough 92 X-RAY MAG : 64 : 2015

Style Icon: Stefano Pilati

FASHION WITH TEXTILES DESIGN BA (HONS) + FASHION BUSINESS BA (HONS) + FOUNDATION IN FASHION. Programmes are validated by:

!"#$%&'(!#$%")!"#$%&'"#()&*" *&+",-%".)(/0(1#++%"(2#,3%45

H A Y / C H A RT 2017 HAY

London & The Home Counties 5 DAY CULTURAL EDUCATIONAL - HISTORICAL PROGRAMME

The Red Thread Artist Statement

2014: The Year According to Shahryar Nashat

MORTIMER-HAYS BRANDEIS TRAVELING FELLOWSHIP MUTED CONVERSATIONS VISUAL EXPLORATION OF SPIRITUALITY IN VIETNAM

ANDY WARHOL. Research & Analysis

An Educators Resource for: Nathalie Du Pasquier Other Rooms. Christian Nyampeta Words after the World. 29 September January 2018

This video installation Boundary is a metaphor for how it felt to be raised in a

Assyrian Reliefs Bowdoin College Museum of Art

LADUMA NGXOKOLO -

Press Release. October 9 th 2017

Teachers Pack Whitechapel Gallery. Isa Genzken: Open, Sesame! 5 April June whitechapelgallery.org

BEHIND THE ART AT SUPERMARKET ART FAIR

32 / museum MARCH/APRIL 2017 / aam-us.org

SPERONE WESTWATER. 257 Bowery New York T F

G r o n k. Max Benavidez. Los Angeles

Fires of Eden. Caleb Ellenburg

EMPEROR CHARLES V CAPTURES TUNIS Documenting a Campaign

Guidance to Applicants for Portfolio Programmes 2018

furnace 24/7 and I knew that wasn t going to happen for me.

FREE LARGE PRINT information sheet please take one

BOND ART BENIAMINO LEVI. Beniamino Levi with the Dalí sculpture Unicorn

SUPA 2006 Summer University of Performing Arts 06 Theatre Studies, Mediterranean Institute, University of Malta

SEARCH SURFACEMAG.COM. SUBSCRIBE Get Surface today and save 48% off the cover price. 8/15/12 10:29 AM

FLYING TIGER Fun and design home accessories. FLYING TIGER fun and design home accessories

I recently bought a new dress in a sale. Very pretty, made of a fairly thin blue viscous material, very cheap from Sainsbury Tu range. It has some lov

The Future of Diamonds

State of the Pit. Featured Posts. Recent Posts. Follow Us. Home Editorials About News Archive Careers Advertise With Us

At Own Your Cervix, an art installation by Vanessa Dion

Make art, like love Interview with Kendell Geers

TOM HISCOCKS. Sculpture

Six Thinking Hats. American Business Book Café J/E. Relax. Learn. Grow.

CONVERSATIONS ON A BANQUETTE: GEORGY BARATASHVILI by Ricky Lee

New Borders, New Boundaries: Fashion in a Shifting World

THE ART OF PUNK: EMBROIDERY ARTIST, JUNKO OKI, FINALLY RELEASES HER LONG AWAITED ART BOOK

For Creative Minds. Mummy Country Continent. Mummy Map

Tarik Kiswanson on the Forgotten Age of Childhood

Feminist Avant-Garde Of The 1970s, The Photographers Gallery Galvanising

Paris Sultana Gallery: small space to focus on the Art Fair

Illaria Bombelli, The world of labour in Sharon Lockhart s photos, domus, May 9, 2018

Andrea had always loved seeing his wife wearing stockings, silky lingerie but one day, some time ago, he had decided to explore for himself the deligh

Mali Twist. 18th January André Magnin s curated celebration of Malick Sidibé

PRESSBOOK. XU Zhen Artling. June /1

Drinking Patterns Questionnaire

THE CRADLE of the MUSEUM

Dominik Lejman 60 seconds

January HAPPY NEW YEAR

Press Release. Hanover, May 17, Opening: May 25, 2018, 8:00 pm Press Conference: May 23, 2018, 12:30 am

A Lens On Resistance

YEAR 12 FASHION CYCLES

FINDING the BEAUTY in the

GUCCI. How to save the business

Sophie's Adventure. An Honors Thesis (HONRS 499) Kelly E. Ward. Thesis Advisor Dr. Laurie Lindberg. Ball State University Muncie, Indiana

Special School Days

ALUTIIQ MUSEUM & ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPOSITORY 215 Mission Road, Suite 101! Kodiak, Alaska 99615! ! FAX EXHIBITS POLICY

Instruction Manual New Factory Styles 2011

Miroslaw Balka. Pirelli HangarBicocca and Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan, Italy. Curated by Vicente Todolí, Crossover/s, Miroslaw Balka s

The Blindness Series

Touring Highlights from The Courtauld Gallery s Collection of Islamic Metalwork

PICNIC#12 Austin Thomas. March 2017

Transcription:

Goshka Macuga: Thinker, Maker, Institutional Spy Text by Emily Steer Pushing through the boundaries of the traditional idea of the artist, Goshka Macuga s practice also involves her taking on the roles of archivist, critic, philosopher, historian and curator. For her latest project in Milan, she went under the skin of the Fondazione Prada. I quite like the idea of being a detective, she tells Muriel Zagha. Goshka Macuga s work embraces a great variety of media sculpture, drawing, painting, film, photography, tapestry and takes the form of complex installations into which she incorporates archive materials, museum artifacts, and new objects produced by herself or other artists. Working all at once like a cultural archaeologist and a detective, Macuga weaves all these materials into a narrative that focuses on institutional histories, proposing unconventional associative readings of their social and political contexts. When we meet in her East London studio, she has just returned from the opening of her new show in Milan, To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll, perhaps her most ambitious to date, which examines the idea of the end of humanity.

You researched, curated and designed To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll. How did the project come about? The new Fondazione Prada space in Milan opened its doors to the public in May 2015. It was a new beginning for this institution and I thought it might be interesting to address the question of the end on this occasion, but in a broader context. Scientists and thinkers have been trying to define humanity for centuries, but we are now at a stage where the questioning has turned towards whether we are post-human or if, perhaps, we are reaching the end of our existence. This raises many ecological issues, but there s also a historical strand of human thought, starting from Greek philosophers, that reflects on our concern with the idea of the end. We humans have always feared this, but we have perhaps never come so close to it. The project involved four or five months of research before making or producing any artworks, as well as looking at the collection of the Fondazione Prada. The Fondazione had recently bought a studiolo a late fifteenth-century panelled study room, with marquetry inlay, originally designed in northern Italy to reflect its owner s intellectual and social status. Historically, studioli were also a place in which to study the arts of memory and rhetoric, which were used in the composition of political was seen as creating artificial memory, and so it has close links with today s technology. These themes of rhetoric and memory echo throughout the exhibition. The centrepiece of the show, To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll, is an android performing a speech that is an amalgamation of sections from famous speeches by Martin Luther King, Freud, Einstein, many people who are significant to me, and that in different ways address the idea of the end. The android introduces himself as a collector of human speech, speaking at a time when humans no longer exist, so it s a kind of post-human proposition of how our knowledge might survive. The robot is, conceptually, closely connected to the studiolo, where a performer undertakes readings of significant texts in Esperanto.

Esperanto is the only purpose-made language: it was constructed in the hope of unifying understanding and communication and then collapsed. When I came to this country in 1989 there were still centres where you could learn Esperanto, like the one in Holland Park. Now it s an extinct idea. You also collaborated with Patrick Tresset on a series of drawings. The installation Before the Beginning and After the End consists of five large scrolls containing drawings made by Patrick s computer system Paul-n, laid across industrial tables together with objects loaned from different museums. Each table displays a narrative of sorts, which evolves from table to table: from Adam and Eve to the creation of di erent religious systems, diagrams relating to Hermetic philosophers, the beginnings of medicine, the theories of Einstein, etc. We borrowed 3,000-year-old pieces from the Egyptian department in the Louvre, for example, as well as very contemporary works. On the sixth and last table we have robots, designed by Patrick, drawing the ending of the narrative in real time. This project is vast, with a lot of details and connections between things and ideas. Is research an important part of your practice? For me the research part is even more important than the actual making of art. Of course, I love being an artist, but I like to have access to different practices from what one would have normally in the studio. It s something that really excites me. On this occasion I really went into technology, a completely new thing for me. Normally a whole project, all the research and the production of the work, would take me six months, up to a year, but here, because of the scale of it, it lasted for a year and a half. That s why I feel so radioactive today. And the worst thing is that I m already thinking what to do next. Somebody made this really cynical comment to me at the opening: If this is about the end, is this your last project? And of course through the whole period when I was working on this, because it was so much a question of life and death to finish it in time, I thought: Maybe this will be the last project that I ever make. When I took the flight from London [to install the show], it was one of those days when the weather wasn t very good, and I thought: ok, this is the perfect moment to die. The project would happen anyway and I would be free from my pre-show anxiety. So I was having all these fantasies, but even though the plane took off in a turbulent way, we landed without any drama. And then I had another two weeks of torture installing the show and being really stressed. How do you feel about incorporating the work of others into your own? Collaboration has been a major aspect of much of my working life. In the nineties, when we were studying at Goldsmiths, lots of us would do exhibitions in our homes and studios. One exhibition would involve a number of people, who would invite more people into the next one and then into the next, and those that stayed on would evolve within the work and add to it, so we had a very accumulated context. And I was fascinated with how the context of a domestic environment reflects on the work, how the work fits into it, how people produce something in relationship to each other, and how this culminates in a reading of the work collectively.

I scrutinized all of this and then embraced it as a strategy: dealing with the dynamic of context. By then I was making some pieces of my own art in a bigger environment, borrowing things such as artworks and objects. It was a big operation but on a very small budget. Later on I was invited to create these works in gallery spaces, so I did a show at the Transmission Gallery in Glasgow [Homeless Furniture, 2002], I went to Sweden to present Cave [Kunstakuten, Stockholm, 2000], then I made work for Fundacja Galerii Foksal [Untitled, Warsaw, Poland, 2002]. From then on, the work became much more complicated: I wasn t only working with friends, I was also borrowing pieces from collections, I was doing research in different museums. The high point of this was the exhibition I did in 2006 in Liverpool [Sleep of Ulro, A-Foundation], where I really pushed myself to explore how I could develop my practice and really exercise my working methodologies. Sleep of Ulro involved many collaborations with other artists as well as relationships with different collectors and museums. The involvement of others means that you end up doing things that you might not have done by yourself. That is certainly the case with Patrick Tresset, because he has an amazing knowledge of robotics and a very interesting approach to how technology can question human creativity. Is your desire and ability to collaborate with other artists in any way related to having grown up in communist Poland? Is it a sort of art communism? This is a tricky question: usually at the end of a project, everything looks good and we are all happy, but this is not necessarily how the process works! Artists like to have control over their work and how it s shown.they are open to experiments to see how things can be shifted slightly, but in the end you are the leader and the tyrant. In the last few years I have been going to cern in Geneva and speaking with the scientists there: I wanted to learn more about quantum physics. It s a great pleasure to speak to these people: they know a lot about the arts, about music as well as science. It s been a really enjoyable process partly because there was no outcome, no pressure to deliver. It became more magical because it was about thought and not matter. It s all about chemistry and physics, it s like falling in love. Collaborative processes are tricky, because I think that it s most interesting when it s not conditioned. You have a polymorphous, omnivorous attitude to using different media. Is it a question of chemistry within you? Do the questions you ask yourself dictate the media, or do you happen to be playing with tapestry, photography, Photoshop, and then see certain preoccupations graft themselves onto that? I don t really have a great romantic connection to any medium. I ll perhaps work with a specific medium for a few years, then I ll stop and move on to something else. The first tapestry I made was Plus Ultra, for the 53rd Venice Biennale. It referred to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, who commissioned many tapestries as a form of propaganda in order to further his political and military status. Plus ultra, meaning further beyond, was Charles s motto, and reflects a significant attitude of that time towards the world, which is part of the history of colonization. This motto was often shown on a banner wrapped around two pillars, the Pillars of Hercules [which flank the entrance to the Strait of Gibraltar], which represented the edge of the known world. It is this image of an S-shaped banner around two pillars that the dollar sign is said to represent. Plus Ultra explores how these histories intersect with our contemporary political scene, and tapestry felt like the most appropriate medium to incorporate all of these ideas. Around the same time, I was working on a project at the Whitechapel, The Nature of the Beast.

I was looking into a substitute of Guernica for the exhibition and I came across the tapestry reproduction that was hanging at the un and was covered up during Colin Powell s speech promoting the invasion of Iraq. The significance of this act drew me into a closer consideration of this medium. As well as its historical relevance, tapestry was a good solution for me because I could produce quite large works and move them fairly easily: Le Corbusier refers to tapestries as nomadic murals. Plus of course they are so close to propaganda art, so this was a good medium to address my relationship to politics. What about your approach as an archivist? It is very striking how,when you are invited by an institution to do something, the first thing you do is go under the skin of the institution by looking into its archive. This feels like an appropriate response to the way we live now. We are surrounded by information, and whole new fields of study teach people how to deal with data. So if you are interested in finding some sort of truth, you need access to sources and documents that are more subjective than what is already mediated in history books or art-history books. But I also find statistics fascinating. I go to the archives but I also visit MIT websites and try to learn about machine learning and the different ways that data is processed. What interests me is how you extract the truth from what has been registered as such, if it s not something that you have witnessed directly. This has obvious links to my past and how we experienced history in Poland or in any part of the Eastern European bloc, which is a totalvy different relationship to history than in the rest of Europe. When my nephew goes to learn his Polish history at school it will not be the same history that I learned. History is a constructed narrative and this of course lends itself easily to manipulation. In my work, I rarely use material that hasn t been revealed before or that is my own discovery; instead I try to decontextualize the material that I come across.

I m not so much of a detective even though I quite like the idea of being a detective. But if you are invited to do an exhibition in an institution, that institution and its history are your context, and even if you didn t go to their archive, some people could contextualize your work within the history of this institution. Many American institutions are founded on private money that often wasn t made in politically neutral ways. Nobody chooses to talk about these nuances anymore because that s how the whole culture has been built, but it does matter to know this stuff: I like to know it. You like to know whom you re getting into bed with? Yes the embedded phenomenon! All the information that we ve had access to regarding recent wars is not material collected in an objective way. When journalists wrote about the Vietnam War it was subjective recollections for the most part, today it s embedded photographers who are entitled to have access to zones of conflict, and they cannot witness everything that goes on. So I kind of embed myself as well, but for a different reason than war journalists do. You first came to London in 1989. How different was it from your native Poland? I actually wanted to go and study icon restoration in Russia, but I wasn t accepted. I came to London because one of my friends was here. This was before the Berlin Wall collapsed. Then it just went from one thing to another, I did a foundation course, then went to Saint Martins, then straight to Goldsmiths. Meanwhile Poland was changing massively: you d go back and the names of streets wouldn t be the same. There was a massive growth of the art scene there, and many conflicts between artists, institutions and the public. It was a crazy time, when things were really on high alert. In some ways I was upset that I was missing out on it but at the same time I really enjoyed the whole progression of how I was working here. Since 2006, I have been working non-stop on different big projects: it s been ten years of consistent development. Almost every time I get invited to do something I do a new thing, and only on few occasions do I reshow groups of works. It s a pretty hardcore way of working. There is often an insecurity about making site-specific work and wondering if it will translate anywhere else. Actually it totally does. For example, a big project I did in Poland, which looked at the time of my absence from 1989 to the present and the issues of the public censoring culture, was all in Polish but was shown in Chicago, then in Vienna. People have different approaches to it but they totally get it: they understand the language of monumental art, the language of bureaucracy, even if they can t read the text. To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll runs at the Fondazione Prada, Milan until 19 June.