"Voids: A Retrospective": CENTRE POMPIDOU.
Too, Jian-Xing
I keep wishing "Vides: Une Retrospective'' (Voids: A
Retrospective) were a work of art, but it wasn't. It aimed to be a
retrospective survey. The curators--John Armleder, Mai-Thu Perret,
Mathieu Copeland, Gustav Metzger, and Clive Phillpot (along with
curators from the two hosting institutions, Laurent Le Bon of the Centre
Pompidou and Philippe Pirotte of Kunsthalle Bern, where the show will
travel in September)--brought together nine past exhibitions where the
artist left the exhibition space empty and fundamentally unaltered. They
chose to simply present these shows through other empty, unaltered
exhibition spaces that were neither reconstitutions nor new works. At
the Centre Pompidou, "Voids" occupied a section of the fourth
floor normally dedicated to the permanent collection. This juxtaposition
of empty rooms and habitual museum displays was a knockout. It showed
the physical context of art as one rarely sees it so plainly. The
downside is, it was hard to remember that the rooms represented nine
different architectural, geographic, economic, political, and artistic
contexts, not to mention different artistic goals.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
What made each room something other than an empty space was its
label and a large wall text in the central corridor describing the
artist's approach. "Voids" fully depended on these texts
to conceptually reactivate specific exhibitions. Of Yves Klein's
1958 exhibition known as "The Void," the wall text explained
that the artist painted the gallery white. What it did not say is that
he didn't use just any paint, but rather his special International
Klein Blue (IKB) formula with white instead of blue pigment. Unlike
regular paints, it retained the vividness of pure pigment and produced
an irregular surface; moreover, Klein rolled it onto the walls
expressively. Most important, his exhibition hinged on going from the
color blue in various forms outside the gallery to the emptied, whitened
interior. Publicity-drawn crowds and the presence of guards were also
part of the original experience. Klein's "Void" only
qualifies for this retrospective in a roundabout way: Ignoring half the
project, commentators focused on the emptiness; Klein later adopted this
focus himself. Unfortunately, as for most of "Voids," to get
the keys to the basic idea of this work, you had to leave the exhibition
and go to the catalogue.
Another wall text dated The Air-Conditioning Show to 1966-67 and
attributed it to Art & Language, which was not founded until 1968.
According to this text, Art & Language had presented a written
description--Michael Baldwin's article "Remarks on
Air-Conditioning," first published in Arts magazine and absent from
the current presentation--as equivalent to a work's possible
realization. But The Air-Conditioning Show is not declared as such in
Baldwin's article, which reads less as a description of a work than
as convoluted thinking out loud. Wryly subtitled "An Extravaganza
of Blandness," the article comes with a diagram from an
installation manual. As Art & Language confirms in the catalogue,
instead of appropriating preexisting air-conditioning as the
"Voids" curatotial premise suggests, the original hypothesis
involved installing equipment. Other wall texts also cropped the work to
fit their stand-ins at the Centre Pompidou, which really only suited
Robert Barry's Marcuse Piece, 1970, Robert Irwin's
Experimental Situation, 1970, and Roman Ondak's More Silent than
Ever, 2006. For example, it was not mentioned of Bethan Huws's Haus
Ester Piece, 1993, that an abstract visual poem was originally handed
out, to be read in relation to the Haus Ester's architecture, or of
Maria Eichhorn's Money at the Kunsthalle Bern, 2001, that the space
progressively changed as repairs (listed on the invitation so viewers
could look for them) were made to the building after opening hours. The
radicality of Laurie Parsons's exhibition of 1990 lay in the
absence of her name on the invitation and at the gallery; in this case,
the wall text said too much, disclosing that the room without a label is
hers.
"Voids" had gumption. It's too bad it was short on
rigor. Stanley Brouwn wasn't, however. He labeled his work An Empty
Space in the Centre Pompidou, 2009, thereby casting doubt on the
historical value of the exhibition as a whole, and refused to have a
didactic text and pages in the catalogue. Likewise, Michael Asher was
unable to come to an agreement with the curators for the exhibition, but
he agreed to have documentation of his past projects in the catalogue.
The only problem is, Asher thought the documentation would be used to
illustrate a general essay, not presented in the section devoted to the
artists in the show. In reality, the catalogue constitutes the true
survey, bringing together valuable information, even if readers have to
sort out things for themselves. Through its greater visibility, the
exhibition mainly functioned as a plug for the catalogue.