No Ghost Just a Shell at SFMOMA
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No Ghost Just a Shell at SFMOMA



SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.- The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art presents "No Ghost Just a Shell," on view through Sunday, March 16, 2003. Organized by Benjamin Weil, SFMOMA curator of media arts, the exhibition features digitally animated films by two of France’s most innovative contemporary artists, Pierre Huyghe and Philippe Parreno, partnering with Liam Gillick, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Pierre Joseph, Francois Curlet, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Joe Scanlan and Melik Ohanian. The exhibition also includes paintings by Henri Barande and Richard Phillips and a neon sign designed by Huyghe and Parreno.

No Ghost Just a Shell was initiated by Huyghe and Parreno in 1999 when they acquired the copyright and original image for a character named Annlee from Kworks, a Japanese company that develops figures (almost actors) for the cartoons, comic strips, advertisements and video games of the booming manga industry. The title of the exhibition is derived from the classic manga film, Ghost in the Shell, by Masamune Shirow.

Parreno and Huyghe bought Annlee for the modest sum of 46,000 yen. By purchasing the copyright to the character as well as her likeness, the artists "saved" Annlee from an industry that sooner or later would have condemned her to death. As a generic manga figure without any psychological background, personal history, specific characteristics, attitudes or abilities, Annlee was created to exist in any story but had no chance of surviving. Her destiny was to fade away quickly or to simply die after a few seconds or a couple of pages. Annlee was a cheap model-the price of a manga figure relates to the complexity of its character traits and thus its ability to adapt to a story line and last for several episodes.

Huyghe and Parreno used the original Annlee computer file as a starting point for an extended artistic project. They asked several artists to appropriate the character and bring her to life. Huyghe and Parreno suggested to the participating artists: "Work with her, in a real story, translate her capabilities into psychological traits, lend her a character, a text, a denunciation and address to the Court a trial in her defense. Do all that you can so that this character lives different stories and experiences. So that she can act as a sign, as a live logo." These artists, along with Huyghe and Parreno, have filled Annlee’s empty "shell" with ideas, manifested in the form of animations, paintings, posters, books, neon works and sculptures.

After SFMOMA’s presentation, Annlee will be "terminated." Artists will no longer be able to create works with her as a digital model. Huyghe and Parreno have hired a lawyer to develop a contract liberating Annlee from circulation and economic and artistic exploitation. The contract stipulates that the character will no longer be accessible to anyone. The No Ghost Just a Shell project will come to an end, and Annlee will be "buried" in a special coffin created by artist Joe Scanlan in the SFMOMA galleries. The life-prolonging measures taken by the No Ghost Just a Shell project for a short-lived, virtual and commercial being raise humanitarian questions, while they undermine consumer culture by allowing a product that is otherwise viable only in a commercial context to be used free of charge. The project also addresses issues of copyright as well as questions about how identity and difference can be formulated. In conjunction with No Ghost Just a Shell, the film Untitled, 2001 (Blade Runner) by Rirkrit Tiravanija will be screened in SFMOMA’s Phyllis Wattis Theater on Fridays and Sundays from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. throughout the run of the exhibition. The eight-hour film features Annlee reading the entire text of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K. Dick, the book that inspired the movie Blade Runner.











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