Christiane_Paul on Mon, 19 Aug 2002 02:28:50 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Josephine Bosma, review of Documenta XI [3x] |
With regard to the ongoing Documenta discussion, I don't think that the opinions voiced so far are mutually exclusive and I would take the middle ground. I agree with Paul and Diana that Documenta offered an exemplary broad view, including voices and (political) issues surrounding the 'human condition' (immigration, displacement, human rights, poverty etc.) that are usually left out and not addressed. I very much appreciated the breadth of this view and felt that it was more than needed in today's cultural climate. However, I had problems with the formality of the approach, which seemed a bit unilateral (and this may be part of Josephine's discontent). A large percentage of the film/video works (and photography) were from 'developing countries' and used a very similar aesthetic language (documentary). I'm deliberately exaggerating but after a while, I lost track of cultural specifics and it didn't matter that much anymore if I was in India, Africa, or Greece - I began missing a unique individual voice and cultural point of view and started feeling a sense of "National Geographic" with a more political, activist twist. At best, globalization can offer strength to communities and traditions by offering more understanding and awareness through shared experiences. At worst, it can lead to homogenization, and I couldn't help feeling that I was experiencing too much of homogenized aesthetics and approach. The film/video works that broke with the documentary language, be it through different installation or formal characteristics, suddenly stood out (and in all, likelihood, that wasn't all due to the quality of the work). In general, works were often grouped together according to formal categories (photography, three rooms of architecture, one after another) and for my taste, there wasn't enough room for works to breathe and establish connections across categories. (The work was beautifully installed, though.) Apart from half a dozen exceptions, the whole Fridricianum basically showed b&w work as if color had been sucked out of it (perhaps that depressed Josephine). What struck me most was that Documenta XI seems to be a deeply digital show, and I admit that part of this may be due to the specific lens I'm applying to it. The exhibition to a large extent is about archive, wunderkammer, database. Numerous archives of photographs/videos/films documenting a journey, place, condition, memories (cultural, personal); an archive of Insomnia Drawings by Louise Bourgeois; Feyzdjou's boutiques, a wunderkammer of personal history and identity; numerous room size installations that were transplants of artists' studios, archives of notes, drawings, scrapbooks; On Kawara's One Million Years, a database; Sanja Ivekovic's archive Searching for my Mother; a lexical/semantic inventory of the dictionaries of the Brother's Grimm; and and and... No doubt that archive and database are important cultural narratives of our time, brought about largely by digital technologies. Considering that, the small number of new media works was surprising. Apart from Ivekovic's work (a physical archive cum website), there were hardly any other projects that made the connection explicit. The show's focus on global, political issues also emphasized the absence of work that uses networked technology for an exploration of these themes (and there are numerous ones). RAQ and tsunamii.net were representing this perspective but I didn't find the installation very successful - it mostly pointed to the difficulties of connecting physical/virtual space. I found Documenta interesting and I enjoyed the experience but I didn't walk away remembering highlights ('my favorite works'). The experience blurred into one major statement (and I'm not saying it isn't an important one) rather than providing me with a multiplicity of views I had to sort out. A curatorial voice and unity that holds a show together is a good thing, but I couldn't help feeling that, on this level, Documenta was way too successful. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net