Projects

"Discover the projects driving innovation in contemporary art and new media."

Creating knowledge, a different kind of knowledge, making us see things in a different way and opening us up to new perspectives are some of the functions of art. Art can have a transformative role, it can change our perceptual experience, the way we see spaces we know or make us rediscover them. Intervening in a place is transforming it and also transforming our view, our way of thinking. It is possible to modify reality through gestures as small as they are precise.

Minimal gestures with maximum impact aims to discover/rediscover some spaces in the city of Vic and, through art, show them in a different way, based on gestures, everyday elements, poetic references and also the evidence of mechanisms. The four works presented on this occasion use projection, an immaterial medium, the visibility of which is directly proportional to the distance. At the same time, it is when the projections meet a real element, a space that is not flat but three-dimensional, that they reveal their transformative potential. The four proposals work in the field of fragility, ambiguity and complexity (of perception, intention, objects, media and the individual in relation to the public sphere).

In this sense, Wilfredo Prieto’s projection, made using a laser, recreates a phenomenon related to nature and the landscape, the vision of the horizon line, in the courtyard of the Hospital de la Santa Creu; The hand that opens and becomes a fist again, by Andreas M. Kaufmann, projected on the apse of a church, speaks of both power and the human condition. The power of decision appears again in the hands projected by Antoni Muntadas in the auditorium of a communications company. And, finally, the feat of walking on a tightrope, projected in the film that we do not see by Ignasi Aballí, shows the mechanisms of projection, of thought and, finally, of our relationship with spaces and with society.

Through minimal gestures and the use of everyday materials, Wilfredo Prieto sharply and poetically focuses on complex aspects of everyday reality. With A Second of Horizon the artist investigates the landscape genre from his own perspective. A 360º laser line (of the kind used in the construction sector) draws a line of light on the walls of the space, evoking an evening landscape. When the spectator moves in the space where the piece is installed, there is always a second in which the ray of light blinds him, evoking the second in which the sun rises or sets. It is, therefore, a symbolic landscape, a poetic game that arises from the juxtaposition of different realities: the austere nature of the construction element, the changing situation of the spectator, the physical and symbolic nature of the space in which it is installed and, finally, the poetic potential given by a minimal gesture and an austere material. In short, minimal gestures of maximum impact that open new perspectives, modify the meaning of the most everyday reality and allow us to imagine new possible scenarios.

-2.jpg

The idea of ​​the Videopaintings is computer-generated images that show images that are examples of human behavior. The starting point of the Videopaintings are images that record everyday events or isolated gestures that are shown in continuous movement. The images chosen – such as the hand that opens and closes until it becomes a fist – raise the question of whether they are still or moving images and function in such a way that the brain is unable to capture the progression of the movement, but can only perceive the change that confirms the action that has taken place. In the case of Videopainting # 3,
the closed fist, which is shown with a certain forcefulness – power? threat? rebellion? – is gradually transformed, imperceptibly, into an open hand that denotes openness and generosity, but can also show demand. At the same time, the very morphology of the hand, which is architectural in the sense that it shows an inside and an outside, the play of concave and convex shapes establishes formal relationships with the architecture in which it is installed.

-6.jpg

Ignasi Aballí’s work explores themes such as the conventions of art, the role of the artist and the relationship between cultural and economic value. Film Projection brings us closer to the mechanisms of projection. The artist films the light coming out of a film projector while it is projecting a film. The duration is the same as the film, that is, 90 minutes. The recording was made in 16 mm to return to celluloid. The film projected was Man on Wire (2008), a documentary about Philippe Petit, a tightrope walker who in 1974 walked between the Twin Towers in New York. Like Petit, the camera with which Aballí filmed the projection was also suspended between the projector and the screen.

In this way, Aballí establishes parallels between the tightrope walk of the tightrope walker, the role of the artist, the fact of focusing attention on that which is neither obvious nor conventional – not what is projected, but the projector – and carrying out a practically impossible activity – crossing the twin towers or filming that which is intangible, such as light in this case.

-4.jpg

In his work, Antoni Muntadas has been exploring social, political and communication issues for many years, as well as the relationship between public and private space within the social framework. In Portrait, Muntadas analyses the gesture as a symbol of power. The video captures the hand gestures of a character whose identity is voluntarily hidden except for the features of his clothing that allow him to be placed in a certain status. The hand gestures, which are presented with a certain slowness, show a forcefulness and also a certain strangeness, the appearance of unexpected nuances, which allow us to investigate the value and purpose of gestural stereotypes.

-7.jpg

 

El Viatge Frustrat is an artistic project by Enric Farrés Duran, produced by Cal Cego, in which the artist and the collector embark on a sea adventure with the intention of retracing the journey to France made by the writer Josep Pla and his friend Sebastià Puig i Barceló, better known as Hermós, in 1918. In the story “Un viatge frustat” (first published in “Un bodegó amb peixos”, Selecta, 1950), Pla explains in great detail the journey, made by sail, by rowing and without papers, as well as the main reason: to visit some relatives of Hermós in the French Roussillon, although during the course of the journey the main motivation is revealed, to return in order to be able to explain it. It is well known that Pla’s frustrated trip never took place and that it fits into the idea of ​​creating fictions built from numerous real details (characters, types of fish, weather conditions, moods, etc.) to give them veracity.
Unlike Pla, Farrés does make the frustrated trip, which takes place on the Costa Brava, in the middle of August 2015. His intention is not to create a realistic fiction but a fictional reality based on specific documentation closer to photos and videos of holidays than to the epic-tragic tradition that often accompanies the projects of artists and filmmakers related to the sea (we remember, In search of the miraculous by Bas Jan Ader or Fitzcarraldo by Werner Herzog, to name just a few).

Enric Farrés’ El viatge frustrat is the antipodes of the heroic: an artist is towed in his tiny boat (a 2-metre wooden barge, without an engine due to a mysterious theft) by another boat in perfect condition (a replica of the boat of the poet and editor Carlos Barral, called “Capitán Argüello”, popularly known as La Barrala), captained by a collector, Josep Inglada, one of the creators of Cal Cego. During the journey there are moments of difficulties, leisure, waiting and encounters.

In El Viatge Frustrat, everyday life occupies almost the entire film, it is populated by moments of waiting in which nothing extraordinary happens. There are no stories of love, hate, robbery or murder, there is no mystery or extraordinary coincidences, however the fact that nothing happens, even though expectations are created, also deserves to be explained, and as the voice-over narrates at one point in the video, “appearances do not deceive, they are appearances.” And, in that sense, we find Farrés’ references in writers such as W. G. Sebald and Enrique Vila-Matas or in artists such as Ignasi Aballí and a whole genealogy of “artists of No” who, like Bartleby, disappear, stop writing, stop making nothing the object of the work, approaching reality from new perspectives.

Time is another key issue, since vacation time and production time are mixed and confused, as is the time on land in which nothing happens, waiting for better weather conditions to be able to continue the journey.

In a close and very everyday way, the video deals with some of the great themes of art, such as the relationship between artist and collector, between letting go and taking the helm and, in a certain way, the demystification and revision of roles (the artist is no longer heroic and spends part of his working time lying on the small boat while writing on Facebook; the collector is no longer the one who buys the work, or produces it by providing the necessary funds for its realization, but rather the one who steers the boat, cooks or buys supplies). Another aspect is the journey towards internationalization (here certainly shown as a naive position) so important for the work of an artist to be recognized and legitimized.

In El Viatge Frustrat the script is being written as it happens. The video, a format that Enric Farrés explores for the first time with this work and that has been edited by Telma Llos Martí, uses resources that are reminiscent of YouTube tutorials or a Skype conference, including Google Maps, the use of archive material or the artist’s own computer desktop. In this way, using videographic solutions and current communication formats, Farrés Duran is able to translate into video the use of first-person narration that in other projects he has formalized in books or guided and commented tours.

.jpg

Disappearing, leaving a trace, tracking and linking stories to construct a tale, sometimes a vital one… All these concepts are not foreign to Lúa Coderch’s practice, a work that is anchored in reality and memory and that stands out for its rigor, precision, depth and for being subtly playful and subversive.

Drifts and storytelling are an essential part of her work. The concatenation of ideas, facts, anecdotes and situations configure hypertexts and non-hierarchical paths, in the manner of drifts, in the course of which the story is constructed. This is the case of the video Oro (2014), a narration based on very diverse references and visual material, about how value and charisma are generated and their relationship with distance, opacity and appearance.

The first-person narrative is also common in her practice, as is the case of Night in a Remote Cabin Lit by a Kerosene Lamp (2015), a brief video correspondence between two people, whose leitmotiv is the construction of shelters in nature, although the precariousness of the structures makes them the starting point for thinking about our ways of living and relating to the world.

Nature, its exploration and, let’s say, deconstruction/reconstruction, reappears in Or, Life in the Woods (2012-2014) first and, more recently, in Treball de Camp (2015), a sound piece produced by Cal Cego in which the artist has travelled through the olive groves and the humble forest that surrounds it in the Penedés area, recording the sounds that build the idea of ​​landscape. Thus, she selects sounds that the artist considers susceptible to being sung afterwards, such as birds, bees or the wind, while distinguishing others such as cars or planes. This approach turns the piece into an exercise in sound landscaping, not very different from what a landscaper might do using drawing. At this point, connections could begin to be made with the artist in Peter Greenaway’s film “The Draughtsman’s Contract” who was also commissioned to draw an everyday and domesticated landscape, a point at which the similarities with Lúa Coderch would end, since, unlike Mr. Neville, Coderch is not confronted with intrigues or plots. On the contrary, once the sound recording is finished, the artist undergoes a purely technical and laborious process, nothing spectacular (and for that very reason she prefers to keep unnoticed), consisting of dismantling the sounds one after another, slowing them down or speeding them up to bring them closer to the register of the human voice, then memorizing them, interpreting small fragments of sound, recording them and returning them to their original speed to gradually replace the natural sounds with their equivalent in the version, let’s say, sung. In short, to undergo laborious and precise work to produce an absolutely constructed soundscape that replaces the natural one in a believable way.

At the beginning of the text we spoke of a subversive and playful approach. Both aspects are very present in Treball de camp, although always preceded by the adverb subtly. Subtly is what makes it not obvious that the sounds we hear are not natural. Listening to the piece provokes certain moments of irritation, of having the feeling that something does not fit, of orchestrated or overly composed moments. Irritation or suspicion are precisely what reinforces attention and, with it, the need to investigate, to find out what exactly causes strangeness, to try to understand and discover the construction of the mechanism to think and ask ourselves questions, again, about the self and the landscape, which is the same as saying, about our relationship with the world.

Elective Affinities. The meeting of two collections takes its title from the novel Die Walhverwandtschaften (1809), in which Goethe used chemical affinity as a metaphor applicable to human relationships. In the present case, the elective affinities have to do with the sharing of points of view, visions of things, the taste for certain artists and the desire to create unique projects and the choosing of particular travelling companions. Roser Figueras and Josep Inglada, artificers of Cal Cego (www.calcego.com), a contemporary art collection with no fixed abode but a firm commitment to participate and collaborate actively with a variety of other agents and artistic initiatives, have extended an invitation to Ángel and Clara Nieto, collectors based in Madrid and Berlin and the only begetters of the project A Window in Berlin (http://awindowinberlin.com/), a platform for video works by Latin American artists, who hold screenings in an old shipping container in public spaces in Berlin. The aim of this invitation is to establish a dialogue between videos from the two collections.

The dialogue between works is synthesized in a ‘face to face’ between two works from 2003: Cowboy Inertia Creeps by Sergio Prego. Video | Colour | Sound | 3’56”. Ángel and Clara Nieto Collection, Madrid and Berlin, and Play Dead, Real Time (other way) by Douglas Gordon. Video | DVD | Colour | 21’55”. Cal Cego Contemporary Art Collection, Barcelona.

The work of Sergio Prego (San Sebastián, 1969) explores the notion of the sculptural through the expansion of the concept of sculpture in space and the amplification of the relationship with the body. Performativity plays an essential part in his discourse. In Cowboy Inertia Creeps, we see the artist crawling over urban structures in different cities. In this video, Prego defies the laws of physics, just as in previous works he has sought to liberate the human body from all kinds of rules and restrictions.

One of the lines of work explored by Douglas Gordon (Glasgow, 1966) places the performative self in front of the camera to evidence dichotomies and conflicts, which often derive from conventions. In the case of Play Dead, Real Time (other way) the protagonist is a trained Indian elephant, performing in the empty space of an art gallery: following the instructions of her trainer she stretches out on the floor to play dead, a position that is quite alien to the animal’s natural habits and inclination.

As well as being by artists from the same generation, and having been produced in the same year, 2003, both videos share a performative element, an exploration of the body that sets out to break the rules in relation to the space in question, and a technical use of the medium of video that both explores and manipulates its potential: in the case of Prego, it is the sequence of still images that creates the sense of action and movement, while Gordon reverses the temporal direction of the sequence so that instead of showing an elephant falling to the ground he presents it rising to its feet with remarkable agility.

Elective Affinities. The meeting of two collections is being shown at Ca la María from 28 May to 6 June, between 5.00 and 8.00 p.m., as part of the Loop Festival.

BEYOND OBJECTS? A debate of Engaged Attitudes towards collecting. A conversation with Angel & Clara Nieto. Friday 5 June 10 am – 12 am. Carrer Pelai, 28. Barcelona

Afinidades electivas. El encuentro de dos colecciones toma su título de la novela Die Walhverwandtschaften (1809) en la que Goethe utiliza la afinidad química como metáfora aplicable a las relaciones amorosas. En el caso que nos ocupa, la afinidades electivas aluden a la voluntad de compartir puntos de vista, visiones de las cosas, el gusto por determinados artistas, la voluntad de crear proyectos singulares y de escoger a determinados compañeros de viaje. Es, en este sentido, que Roser Figueras y Josep Inglada, artífices de Cal Cego (www.calcego.com), una colección de arte contemporáneo sin sede fija pero ávida de participar y colaborar activamente con diferentes agentes e iniciativas artísticas, invita a Ángel y Clara Nieto, coleccionistas afincados en Madrid y Berlín, impulsores del proyecto A Window in Berlin (www.awindowinberlin.com), una plataforma para mostrar trabajos videográficos de artistas iberoamericanos en un antiguo contenedor de mercancías en el espacio público en Berlín. La invitación tiene la finalidad de establecer un diálogo entre vídeos de ambas colecciones.

El diálogo entre obras se sintetiza en un “cara a cara” entre dos trabajos datados en el año 2003: Cowboy inertia creeps de Sergio Prego. Video | Color | Sonido | 3’56”. Colección Ángel y Clara Nieto, Madrid-Berlín y Play Dead, Real Time (other way) de Douglas Gordon. Video | DVD | Color | 21’55”. Cal Cego. Colección de Arte Contemporáneo, Barcelona

El trabajo de Sergio Prego (San Sebastián, 1969) explora la noción de lo escultórico a través de la expansión del concepto de escultura en el espacio y la amplificación de la relación con el cuerpo. La performatividad juega un papel esencial en su discurso. En Cowboy Inertia Creeps, vemos al artista reptar por estructuras urbanas de diferentes ciudades. En este vídeo, Prego desafía las leyes de la física, de la misma manera que en trabajos anteriores intenta liberar el cuerpo humano de todo tipo de normas y restricciones.

Una de las líneas de trabajo de Douglas Gordon (Glasgow, 1966) es la del yo performático ante la cámara para evidenciar dicotomías y conflictos, a menudo derivados de convenciones. En el caso de Play Dead, Real Time (other way) el protagonista es un elefante indio amaestrado que actúa en los espacios vacíos de una galería de arte y siguiendo las instrucciones de su amaestrador se hace el muerto, estirándose en el suelo, una postura que es contraria a los gustos e inclinación naturales del animal.

Así pues, además de tratarse de artistas pertenecientes a una misma generación, cuyas obras comparten fecha de producción, el año 2003, ambos vídeos tienen en común un elemento performático, una exploración del cuerpo que trata de romper las normas en relación al espacio así como una utilización técnica del medio vídeo que busca tanto su exploración como su manipulación: en el caso de Prego, es la sucesión de imágenes fijas la que crea la sensación de acción y movimiento, mientras que en el caso de Gordon, invierte el orden temporal de la secuencia puesto que en lugar de mostrar un elefante desplomándose en el suelo lo presenta levantándose con una agilidad inesperada.

Afinidades electivas. El encuentro de dos colecciones se proyecta en Ca la María del 28 de mayo al 6 de junio, de 17 a 20 horas en el contexto del Festival Loop.

BEYOND OBJECTS? A debate of Engaged Attitudes towards collecting. Una conversación con Angel y Clara Nieto. Viernes, 5 de junio, de 10 a 12 horas. Carrer Pelai, 28. Barcelona
http://loop-barcelona.com/loop-barcelona/loop-studies/panels/

Mind maps allow information to be organised in a visual way through associations of concepts, words and images. For some artists, mind maps can also be a working or presentation methodology that allows them to understand the world, create stories that are as personal as they are idiosyncratic or uncover twisted plots. Jeremy Deller, Patricia Esquivias, Clara Montoya, Gonzalo Elvira, Raimond Chaves/ Gilda Mantilla and Mark Lombardi are some of the artists whose work moves within these coordinates.

MIND MAPS

Catálogo
-5.pdf

Press:
“Hoy empieza todo” Radio 3

“El balcó” Cadena Ser