Geert Lovink on Wed, 4 Mar 1998 12:48:58 +0100


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Syndicate: <nettime> Review of Serving Art by subREAL


Navigating the Normalcy
A social history of art reproduction
by Geert Lovink

subREAL - 'Serving Art' -
exhibition @ Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart (Germany)
20.02-15.03 1998

See also http://www.waag.org/subreal
with special images from the exhibition

The Trans-Romanian artist group subREAL seems to be obsessed with history.
An old European disease, one could say. Instead of condemning and
suppressing their totalitarian past, Calin Dan and Josif Kiraly have
specialized in reworking the Romanian art data in a playful way.

subREAL is opening up the photo archives of the former art
magazine 'Arta' (1953-1993), where they both worked as the last
editor-in-chief, respectively photographer until the publication died in
the process of economic liberalization. Unlike in other cases in the Former
East, subREAL does not intend to reveal any scandals about compromised
artists or alleged informers and secret agents working for the then so
powerful secret service (Securitate). The 600 kg heavy archive is primarily
visual raw material. The work produced in Kunstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin
('95-'96), regrouped the prints in various formats and around different
media (installations, performances, slides & video projections, lectures,
theater plays) addressing different types of public - from international
academics to the Kreuzberg lower middle class, and various environments -
from the streets of small Transylvanian towns till art spaces in Rotterdam
and Santa Fe.

This is the archive of a communist, state-controlled art magazine,
closely tied to the rich and influential Union of Artists, started in
the dark Stalinist early fifties, with a short period of reform in
the late sixties, until the even more dark times of the Ceausescu
regime, until its sudden, violent fall in December 1989. What is
fascinating here is not its pompous propaganda art, heroic statues of the
heavy industry workers or the posters stating 'Victoria Socialismului'
(they do exist, of course). But the horror vacui of
normalcy, the bewildering boredom of the works and their authors,
desperately trying to avoid any visible form of dissent. This art,
heavily surveilled by the authorities, was trying to escape history by
doing exactly what the party officials were expecting.

In search for the eternal forms (like in the work of Brancusi), the
metaphysical aims of this 'art' are becoming fully operational. Severely
overcoded by its ideological tasks, there is always an element which will
hopefully neutralize the official forms of expression. Here, art is not
merely expressing the Will to Power of a few second class party
intellectuals. This art tends to disappear and can no longer distract our
attention, let alone subvert...
No expression, no pain, no desire. Instead, we are taken on an endless
journey through blurry, impressionist landscapes, advanced forms of
mediocracy, from which we will never know what is perhaps hiding behind
these masks of oppression.

In the last months, working again in Germany, subREAL have been focusing on
the nearly 10,000 negatives of the archive. As a result of this process, a
selection of 1000 prints are now on display in the gallery of the Solitude
palace, which hosts a rather luxurious artist-in-residence program near
Stuttgart, on a hill overlooking the city.

'Serving Art' is dealing with the framing of the photographic image, in
this case the framing of the artworks. The paintings and sculptures were
taken out in the open by the photographers in order to make the so called
art reproductions. Because of the square format of the negative, which is
never matching the proportions of the reproduced object, and also due to
the inability of the photographer, we can see a lot of things happening
around the art object. the uncropped prints allow us to see is the full
image, with hands holding black or white back-cloths, and with the artist,
the photographer, his assistant/wife, or some other people involved in the
operation. Also the muggy studios, the 19th century urban environments,
forced to escape from a decayed modernity. The stories visible in the
margins are not 'correcting' the artworks, but just recording a period that
visibly wants to fade away. The context that we suddenly perceive is merely
doubling the effect of normalcy.

It is not the glittering utopia in contrast to the dirty reality, which
could function as a 'truth', correcting the 'false' works of art. The unity
of art in its social context is the actual theme of these
negatives which are on display for the first time. For the purpose of
printing the magazine, the photographers used only cutouts, retouched with
a brush, deleting the aura around the art object. In this pre-Photoshop
age, the photo and its negative still had a material aspect, an element
which subREAL is now exploiting purposefully. The archive is not yet
digital, not yet virtual.

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