Archive 2021 KubaParis

Speaking in Tongues

Angelika Loderer, Operator (Nose), 2020, Brass, 6,5 x 11,5 x 7,5 cm
Angelika Loderer, Operator (Nose), 2020, Brass, 6,5 x 11,5 x 7,5 cm
Anna Lena Grau, Not yet titled, 2021, Pigmented plaster, 84 x 48 x 21 cm
Anna Lena Grau, Not yet titled, 2021, Pigmented plaster, 84 x 48 x 21 cm
Carolin Eidner,Untitled (Lady T-Rex), 2019, Pigmented plaster, mounted on styrofoam, wood, 155 × 65 cm
Carolin Eidner,Untitled (Lady T-Rex), 2019, Pigmented plaster, mounted on styrofoam, wood, 155 × 65 cm
David Schiesser, Reflux, 2021, Watercolor drawing on paper, 29,5 x 41,7 cm
David Schiesser, Reflux, 2021, Watercolor drawing on paper, 29,5 x 41,7 cm
Anna Lena Grau, Tränke, 2020, Plaster, epoxy resin, pigeon defense, water, 30 x 39 x 40 cm (detail)
Anna Lena Grau, Tränke, 2020, Plaster, epoxy resin, pigeon defense, water, 30 x 39 x 40 cm (detail)
David Schiesser, ICE 577, 2020, Canvas, charcoal Dimensions variable (detail)
David Schiesser, ICE 577, 2020, Canvas, charcoal Dimensions variable (detail)
Lotte Meret, To Fear, Hope and Desire Again, 2020, Video- & spatial installation, 14:38 min, 2K (detail)
Lotte Meret, To Fear, Hope and Desire Again, 2020, Video- & spatial installation, 14:38 min, 2K (detail)
Nat Marcus Lebenstechnik, 2021 Silkscreen on cotton 215 x 153 Nat Marcus, Lebenstechnik, 2021, Silkscreen on cotton, 215 x 153 cm (detail)
Nat Marcus Lebenstechnik, 2021 Silkscreen on cotton 215 x 153 Nat Marcus, Lebenstechnik, 2021, Silkscreen on cotton, 215 x 153 cm (detail)
Una Szeemann, As we lay on fingers, 2021, Rope, shrinking tube, metal, 920 x 20cm, variable (detail)
Una Szeemann, As we lay on fingers, 2021, Rope, shrinking tube, metal, 920 x 20cm, variable (detail)
Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, 1987, Leporello, artist book with vinyl, 25 x 19,5 cm (folded size)
Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, 1987, Leporello, artist book with vinyl, 25 x 19,5 cm (folded size)
Lotte Meret, To Fear, Hope and Desire Again, 2020, Video- & spatial installation 14:38 min, 2K
Lotte Meret, To Fear, Hope and Desire Again, 2020, Video- & spatial installation 14:38 min, 2K
Nat Marcus, Lebenstechnik, 2021, Silkscreen on cotton, 215 x 153 cm
Nat Marcus, Lebenstechnik, 2021, Silkscreen on cotton, 215 x 153 cm
Sarah Bernauer, Die Umarmung, 2020, Oil on canvas, 120cm x 70cm
Sarah Bernauer, Die Umarmung, 2020, Oil on canvas, 120cm x 70cm
Speaking in Tongues, Installation View, Blake & Vargas
Speaking in Tongues, Installation View, Blake & Vargas
Left: Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, 1987, Leporello / Right: Una Szeemann, As we lay on fingers, 2021, Rope, shrinking tube, metal, 920 x 20cm, variable
Left: Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, 1987, Leporello / Right: Una Szeemann, As we lay on fingers, 2021, Rope, shrinking tube, metal, 920 x 20cm, variable
Christian Hoosen, Blick aus meinem Arsch, 2020, Oil on canvas, 120 x 150cm
Christian Hoosen, Blick aus meinem Arsch, 2020, Oil on canvas, 120 x 150cm
Group Show: Speaking in Tongues, Installation View, Blake & Vargas
Group Show: Speaking in Tongues, Installation View, Blake & Vargas
Wall: Carolin Eidner, Fertility Breakdown II, 2021, Pigmented plaster, mounted on styrofoam, 50 x 70 x 3 cm / Floor: Anna Lena Grau, Packstück 5, 2017/18 Brass 18 x 36 x 21 cm
Wall: Carolin Eidner, Fertility Breakdown II, 2021, Pigmented plaster, mounted on styrofoam, 50 x 70 x 3 cm / Floor: Anna Lena Grau, Packstück 5, 2017/18 Brass 18 x 36 x 21 cm
Video:Young Boy Dancing Group,2021, HD, Loop, 3:44 min / Wall: Caroline Eidner, Untitled (Lady T-Rex), 2019, Pigmented plaster, mounted on styrofoam, wood, 155 × 65 cm / Artist Book: Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, 1987
Video:Young Boy Dancing Group,2021, HD, Loop, 3:44 min / Wall: Caroline Eidner, Untitled (Lady T-Rex), 2019, Pigmented plaster, mounted on styrofoam, wood, 155 × 65 cm / Artist Book: Dorothy Iannone, Follow Me, 1987

Location

Blake & Vargas

Date

09.06 –17.07.2021

Curator

Sarah Bernauer

Photography

Philippe Gerlach

Subheadline

Angelika Loderer Anna Lena Grau Carolin Eidner Christian Hoosen David Schiesser Dorothy Iannone Garrett Nelson Lotte Meret Nat Marcus Sarah Bernauer Una Szeemann Young Boy Dancing Group The collective body in Speaking in Tongues, which is composed of the individual works in this exhibition, can be read as an artistic exploration of a Body without Organs. This imaginary body reveals itself without solidifying, constantly reshaping its contours. Through its permeable surface, it is able to meld with other bodies. Speaking in tongues, the language of its body comes into existence by speaking equally to the inside and to the outside.

Text

Speaking in Tongues, also called glossolalia, refers to the act of speaking in an unknown language. With his vision of a new theater, the Theater of Cruelty, Antonin Artaud sought to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, stage and audience. In lieu of classical narrative and dialogue, he experimented with movements, sounds, and utterances in an imaginary language. His final work, the radio play To be done with the judgment of god from 1947, begins with glossolalia and ends with the proclamation: „When you will have made him a body without organs, then you will have delivered him from all his automatic reactions and restored him to his true freedom.“ Torn by the dichotomy whereby the body is both body and mind, Artaud desires a body that is not defined by the needs and functions of its organs. In A Thousand Plateaus, Gilles Deleuze poses the question: „How do you make yourself a body without organs?“ A Body without Organs creates and forms itself from the infinite possibilities of its virtual potential, independently of its organism. The Body without Organs operates in the free flow of its intensities, desires, and language. In the exchange and intermingling with other bodies, it is continually renewing itself. The collective body in Speaking in Tongues, which is composed of the individual works in this exhibition, can be read as an artistic exploration of a Body without Organs. This imaginary body reveals itself without solidifying, constantly reshaping its contours. Through its permeable surface, it is able to meld with other bodies. Speaking in tongues, the language of its body comes into existence by speaking equally to the inside and to the outside.

Sarah Bernauer