Vienna's Secession opens an exhibition of works by Nora Schultz
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Vienna's Secession opens an exhibition of works by Nora Schultz
Nora Schultz, would you say this is the day?, installation view, Secession 2019, photo: Iris Ranzinger.



VIENNA.- Everyday objects, language, recording systems, and cultural displacements play key roles in Nora Schultz’s art, as do the observation and critical activation of the exhibition space and the artist herself as the work’s producer. Recently, she has employed various cameras (GoPro, video drone, etc.) as automated “co-producers” whose contributions to the creative process she cannot fully control and which have their own internal dynamics and probe the artist/author’s changing position vis-à-vis its operation. In performative interactions, she often develops large installations that involve and take possession of the venue’s structure and sometimes project beyond its confines.

The exhibition at Secession will be the realization of a complex proposal that Schultz submitted within the accompanying publication designed by the artist, which comprises five magazines and six posters in a slipcase, and includes the written proposal. To create maps or instructions for a three-dimensioned realization of Atlas / The Day in the Secession, a calendar was transformed in different steps. The show is on a path between a concept, its simulation, and realization. It is animated by a draft that is enabled by an opening in the space, or, when the door is closed by wave currents within a fixed system: the air conditioning.

In the sense of would you say this is the day?, distance is a means of production. Closely following the instructions, drawings, renderings and notation of the proposal, the exhibition will be a traveling show, an all-encompassing installation in which Atlas and The Day appear as the central figures.

The installation would you say this is the day? was realized on the occasion of Nora Schultz’s solo exhibition and comprises several individual elements. These play with the specific architectural and local conditions, and literally inscribe themselves in the site.

On the one hand, there are three sculptures made of aluminium wire placed around the space and squeezed in between floor and ceiling (Atlas / The Day 1, 2 and 3). Their open shape forms abstract spatial drawings, which allow a view to the space above the glass ceiling that is usually concealed. The sculptures represent various steps of a found calendar sheet with its structuring grid becoming three-dimensioned. At the same time, they illustrate her artistic interpretation of sculptural paragons Atlas and The Day. The realization of the sculptures on site involved the close collaboration and communication between the artist in the USA and the curator and install team at Secession. Drawings by the artist that are published in the publication she conceived and designed served as a reference, on the one hand, as did small prototypes made especially for this process. The parties thus collaborating from a distance coordinated the on-going process on a daily basis and regularly discussed and tuned the composition with each other.

The aforementioned calendar sheet decorated with hand-drawn faces – a kind of subjective intervention that disrupts the ordering system – was manipulated by the artist in order to add a spatial (third) dimension to its temporal frame, and is presented as a 3 x 6 m large wallpaper on the left front wall (Hopes and Dreams, 2019). Resonating with the space’s grid, while simultaneously deviating from it with its warped lines, this image sets a tone to the overall impression.

Furthermore, two new video works – Whale Watch and Simulated Whale Watch (both 2019) – are shown in the side wings. While the former documents a boat trip for the purpose of spotting whales on the eastern coast of the USA around Boston, including a few distortions, Simulated Whale Watch was filmed with a GoPro camera in the artist’s studio and based on a script. Here, to a certain degree Nora Schultz relinquished control: due to her choice of camera without a monitor, but also by the way the camera was guided on a long stick that served as a sort of extension of the filming hand.

The sound installation The Sound will be Untied (2019) creates an invisible link that frames the space and creates a (performative) connection between the installation and the outside space. It is based on recordings of the constant hum of the air conditioning system in the artist’s studio in Boston. The aforementioned drawings for the making of the sculptures and notations drawn by Schultz, which are also published in the artist’s book, served as score for the (abstract) composition. The back door that leads to the garden behind the Secession building is opened during the daytime, letting ambient sounds flood into the exhibition space and complete the composition. The usually closed space of the institution – a kind of closed system or circuit – is opened and mingled. Only at night, when all visitors have left the building, the circuit is complete: when the sound of the artist’s and Secession’s AC systems, now switched on to cool down the space over night, overlap.

All elements share the common aim: to approach a space-time entity from a distance – a geographical reality for instance, or a distance grounded in mere imagination or memory – to comprehend and frame it, and to finally render the then filtered and manipulated entity.

Nora Schultz was born in Frankfurt in 1975 and studied at the Städelschule, Frankfurt, and Bard College, New York. She currently lives in Boston, Mass.

Curator: Jeanette Pacher










Today's News

June 27, 2019

National Portrait Gallery unveils Cindy Sherman's first major UK retrospective

Sotheby's sale led by Francis Bacon's evocative 'Self-Portrait' from 1975

New Museum announces design of second building by OMA / Shohei Shigematsu and Rem Koolhaas

Jerusalem's Tomb of the Kings to reopen to public

Christie's France achieves €6 million for the Old Master Paintings and Sculptures sales

Detroit Institute of Arts exhibits Impressionist era treasures from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Getty Villa opens first major exhibition on the Villa dei Papiri

Getty announces new Pacific Standard Time theme of art and science

Artsy names Mike Steib Chief Executive Officer

Hauser & Wirth announces representation of New York-based Swiss artist Nicolas Party

Prints as propaganda: Krannert Art Museum builds world-class collection of Dutch political prints

The Barakat Gallery presents eight millennia of ceramic art from around the world

Pinakothek der Moderne exhibits single-leaf woodcuts of the 15th century

Garage Museum of Contemporary Art opens 'The Coming World: Ecology as the New Politics 2030-2100

Michael Hoppen Gallery opens an exhibition of photographs by Ernest C. Withers

Nikita Kadan reshapes the Soviet-era hero-tipped plinth sculptures into heroless sculptural pedestals

Vienna's Secession opens an exhibition of works by Nora Schultz

Lil'Buck, US dancer mixing street and classical, ready for next level

Sudan's underground musicians turn defiant after uprising

Russian pottery "dark horse" sells for 157 times high estimate at Morphy's

OUT OF SIGHT, Lawrence Weiner's playful and inspirational installation, presented by LongHouse Reserve

The Ringling brings the museum experience to kids and families

The Fashion and Textile Museum brings the captivating art and textiles of Peru to the UK

New work by Jacqueline Humphries on view at Dia's Dan Flavin Art Institute

Abstract Art - 4 Ways To Decorate A Large, Blank Wall

Five Most Expensive Cartier Watches

How PeopleFinders Can Help with Moving

Making a meal of five famous paintings

Embracing the Art of Everyday




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful