Archive
2022
KubaParis
Light Sleeper
Location
DAMIEN AND THE LOVE GURUDate
13.05 –29.07.2022Curator
Priya ShettyPhotography
Claude BarraultSubheadline
Solo Show at Zollikerstrasse ZurichText
EPISODES IN EUPHORIC RECALL
In the formation of a painting or sculpture Vanessa Disler draws from a
multitude of sources; a piece of music; an excerpt of 1970s autofiction;
the atmosphere of a movie. These fragments become spurs in cultivating
a visual language used to communicate psychological states elicited from
lived experience. This exhibition at Damien & The Love Guru takes its
title from the 1992 neo-noir directed by Paul Schrader, in which Willem
Dafoe stars as a drug dealer having an existential midlife crisis. Our
alienated protagonist traverses the city of night, selling wares to yuppies
and well-heeled deviants such as ‘Tis’ (a character redolent of Patrick
Bateman) who is described in the screenplay as “thirty-five, Swiss, linen
jacket, horn-rim glasses, Cerruti Euro-swank”
1
. Elegantly shot in cre
-
puscular glooms,
Light Sleeper
has a distinctly dreamlike quality; it is
replete with visual symbolism and paintings feature prominently. In a
notably contrived sex scene a blown up reproduction of Vermeer’s
Lace
-
maker
looms large over the two lovers.
Schrader’s
Light Sleeper
addresses ideas that have preoccupied Vanessa
Disler for some time; kismet, chance encounters, uncanny correspon
-
dences and the possibility of psychic communication. In a memorable
moment in the movie, our protagonist John la Tour converses with an
ex-lover and one time fellow addict and reflects upon the hedonism of
their previous life. Responding to his rose-tinted views of the past she
states that “
convenient memory is a gift from God—euphoric recall.
You only remember the highs, never the lows
”. The term euphoric recall
is used by psychologists to describe a tendency whereby recovering ad
-
dicts fixate upon episodes from their past when they actively sought out
psychotropic stimulation. This transcends mere nostalgia; for the sum
-
moning of such memories can reactivate neurological reward pathways
in the brain; pleasure centres are flooded with serotonin and ecstatic
information surges are induced.
While the term originates in psychiatry, euphoric recall can also be ap
-
plied to other spheres to describe the phenomenon whereby episodes
from the past become catalysts for creative potential. Euphoric recall
can be used to describe Vanessa Disler summoning the artistic anima
of Martin Disler (1949–1996) the Swiss artist whose legacy has been
a touchstone for her for several years. Now remembered predominantly
as a proponent of the Neue Wilde, Martin Disler’s work typifies how
many artists in the early 1980s attempted to sidestep what they saw
as an excessively cerebral and etiolated approach to making art. A self
proclaimed outsider, Disler believed art should be intense, intimate and
spontaneous. Vanessa draws upon Martin’s visual vocabulary while shar
-
ing his aspiration to make paintings imbued with personal, historical and
archetypal meaning. She too is drawn to the visceral immediacy of ex
-
pressionism and her engagement with painting is exuberant and sensual.
There is a palpable jouissance to Vanessa’s application of paint; works
are distinguished by rapid, vigorous brushwork created via spontaneous
gestures. Like her predecessor, Vanessa uses archetypal symbols in her
work, demonstrated here in the imagery on each side of the painted
structure; the depictions of day and night; the eternity loop; the square
spiral and patterning resembling rusted chainmail fencing. Both share
a propensity for using language in their work, as highlighted here in the
three steel ‘gates’ installed in the garden.
The work by Martin Disler that is particularly significant to this exhi
-
bition at Damien & The Love Guru is
Die Umgebung der Liebe
, which
dates from 1981 and can be described as his magnum opus. Executed
over four nights at the Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart, where
it was then displayed, this monumental painting is almost 35 meters in
length. Few people saw
Die Umgebung der Liebe
in person when it was
exhibited in 1981 but it became well known via word of mouth and re
-
productions in magazines and was one of the factors that led to Martin
Disler being invited to participate in Documenta 7 the following year.
Best remembered for Joseph Beuys’
7000 Oak Trees
, this iteration of
Documenta was curated by Rudi Fuchs who, when discussing his vision
for the exhibition, stated that he wanted to free art of the “various con
-
straints and social parodies it is caught up in”. Vanessa Disler’s painterly
environment, which the viewer must enter directly, echoes
Die Umge
-
bung der Liebe
and a detail of the masterwork by Martin Disler is found
in the
Light Sleeper
exhibition poster.
In addition to evoking
Die Umgebung der Liebe
the structure Vanessa
Disler has constructed inside the gallery resembles a refuge, sanctuary
or panic room. Such a reading is inevitable in this context, for Switzer
-
land is a nation renowned for its fallout shelters. The penchant for bun
-
ker building began in earnest in the early 1960s when the escalation of
Cold War tensions led to paranoia regarding nuclear holocaust. In 1963
the government issued laws stipulating that all homes must be equipped
with adequate shelter space. In the years since many of these zones were
adapted into wine cellars or music studios or simply used for storage. Yet
events of recent years have seen these spaces reactivated and returned
to their original function. The Fukushima nuclear disaster and more
recently the invasion of Ukraine have reignited fears many assumed were
forever buried in the past.
Just a few miles away from Zollikerstrasse 249, where Disler’s environ
-
ment is now situated, is the Urania Bunker, one of the largest civil de
-
fence bunkers in Switzerland. The upper floors of this sprawling complex
currently operate as a multi-storey parking lot known as Urania Parking.
The bunker was constructed in the early 1970s on the site of an extant
WWII air raid shelter. But before construction of the Urania nuclear
bunker began, the subterranean realm was occupied by a countercultural
youth group who declared it outside of Swiss jurisdiction and renamed it
the “Autonomous Republic Bunker”. In 1971 the local government raided
the bunker and evicted the inhabitants. Photos taken before the crack
-
down capture the heady atmosphere of this short lived commune. These
images show a mass of youths sitting on the floor, looking rebelliously at
the camera. They are surrounded by murals that they have painted upon
the concrete walls; an array of glyphs; spirals; lozenges, ankhs, a lemnis
-
cate and a wedjat eye.
Pádraic E. Moore, May 2022
1) Vanessa Disler is not the first artist to make work that responds to Schrader’s movie.
In 1992 David Salle produced twelve lithographs illustrating scenes from the screenplay
Pádraic E. Moore