| |
Maria
Eichhorn’s Projections
by Nora M. Alter
Maria Eichhorn’s artistic practice defies facile
categorization. With strong roots in the legacies of
Fluxus and the Conceptual art tradition, Eichhorn’s
work has spanned a variety of genres and media: from
wall texts to artist books, staged events to probing
interviews, broad-ranging symposia to public billboards,
and film and video. The latter are the focus of the
VOX exhibition, which includes Eichhorn’s 16mm
Film Lexicon of Sexual Practices (1999-2005),
the video Shares in the Kunsthalle Bern (2005), as well
as the video documentation The Social-Historical
Background to the Artist’s Contract from her project
The Artist’s Reserved Rights Transfer and Sale
Agreement by Robert Projansky and Seth Siegelaub
(1998), and references to Billboard Istanbul Biennial
1995 (2005).
The elusiveness of Eichhorn’s artistic practice
is perhaps best encapsulated by the title of a collaborative
book project, No Credits (2005), with which
she was involved. The volume, like much of the artist’s
work, consists of a joint project initiated by Eichhorn’s
students in Zurich and which is composed of statements,
interviews, and artistic interventions that comment
on and examine the institution of an art school. Eichhorn’s
function is that of a catalyst, prompting and coordinating
a dialogue with an array of participants. Indeed, Eichhorn’s
strategy of serving as a metteur en scene drives many
of her projects. These include Curtain (Denim)/Lectures
by Yuko Fujita, Mika Obayashi (1989/1997/1998)
for which the artist organized an anti-nuclear lecture
series followed by a book publication and her contribution
to the group show Kopfbahnhof/Terminal (1995)
presented at the central train station in Leipzig. For
the latter, Eichhorn arranged a raffle of roundtrip
tickets between Leipzig and twenty-one diverse destinations.
Travellers thus became direct participants and the act
of travelling an integral part of the art work. Similarly,
for Arbeit/Freizeit, (Work time/ Leisure time)
(1996), Eichhorn surveyed employees of the Generali
Foundation in Berlin, asking each to describe the relationship
between labour and leisure, and to select an object
that for them best signified leisure and/or work time.
An array of these objects was then displayed in a vitrine
in the lobby of the Generali Foundation.
Eichhorn pushes the limits of what conventionally constitutes
an artist’s role—she often steers institutional
forces in an attempt to subvert their logic. If the
public was the central player in earlier projects, since
her 1997 contribution to the public sphere exhibition
Sculpture. Projects in Münster (Purchase of
the Plot at Corner Tibusstrasse/ Breul, Province Münster,
Hall 5, No. 672 ) Eichhorn increasingly mobilizes
legal documents, contracts, and economic laws that determine
the flow of capital. Thus, in the much-noted and award-winning
project Maria Eichhorn Public Limited Company,
exhibited at the Documenta 11 in 2002, the artist used
the production funds she was allotted to incorporate
a new company complete with shares.
Film and video comprise but a small portion of Eichhorn’s
artistic practice. As with other media with which she
works, the material specificity of these media is less
important than the critique she uses them to develop.
In some instances, such as Billboard Istanbul Biennial
1995 (2005), video functions in a manner that is
similar to an artist book—in both cases, what
is exhibited is a trace of a previous event or action
organized by the artist. But such traces do not simply
function as documents, for Eichhorn purposefully and
dialogically addresses the present condition and its
reflection on the past by inserting footage of recent
interviews and other materials. In contrast, Shares
in the Kunsthalle Bern is a promotional film, in
line with the generic specifications of corporate advertising
that functions to promote the sales of stocks or shares
in a company—in this instance the Kunsthalle.
With more than a small dose of undercutting irony, Eichhorn
includes staged shots of potential “buyers.”
The film is exhibited along with a two-volume printed
matter edition that details the underlying logic of
the project and the elegantly framed shares. Eichhorn’s
Film Lexicon of Sexual Practices contains seven
silent three-minute, 16mm colour clips. In each sequence,
a static camera is positioned to film in close-up the
representation of one of the terms in the lexicon. These
range from activities such as “Cunnilingus,”
“Coitus,” and “Breast Licking,”
to practices such as “Bondage,” to body
parts such as “Mouth,” “Clitoris,”
or “Eyes.” The artist provided a dictionary
definition of each term. The immobile camera, the silence,
and the fragmented view produce the effect of a visual
lexicon in which the encyclopaedic definitions are translated
into a filmic form. In this work, the presentation of
these films is as important as the films themselves.
They are designed to be screened as single film, not
as loops, with the actual image quite small (about 60
cm wide). A professional film projectionist is present
in the exhibition space and is responsible for presenting
whichever film a visitor chooses. If there are no requests
then no images is projected. The performance of the
projectionist is as much a part of the work as the films
themselves. In addition, a film projector stands in
the exhibition space which is not darkened but filled
with natural light. Thus, film in this instance encompasses
an entire practice and event and not simply a celluloid
image.
Exhibition presented with the
support of the Institut
für Auslandsbeziehungen
|
|