Interview by Fucking Good Art Zine, Rotterdam with Szuper Gallery, Nov 2004
Question:
Fucking Good Art (FGA)
You operate as Szuper gallery. It’s strange to see this name in a list
of art shows with individual artists. What is Szuper gallery and how does it
functions?
To me Szuper gallery looks like an art project, and an unconventional way of
making art and/or what the contemporary art practice can be. How far do you
want to push the boundaries of art making?
Answer: Szuper Gallery (SG)
We have used the name Szuper Gallery for our collaborative practice since we
started as curators in a commercial gallery with this name in Munich. The gallery
went bankrupt because we were unable to sell any work. Probably because we turned
the running of the gallery into an art practice. We appropriated the name when
we left the gallery. Since then Szuper Gallery has been an interesting tool
to test out a number of strategies, practices and collaborations. As you say
it is odd to see the name included in shows with individual artists. We were
always interested in this sort irritation. Our experience with the commercial
art world had really changed our perception of the work that we wanted to do.
We realised that it makes no difference whether to be inside or outside the
system, as of course there is no outside. We began to develop strategies of
intervention and or collaborations with various locations and places. These
turned out to be mainly different institutions, places of work or authority.
We became interested in structures of power. Therefore it seemed appropriate
to act from the basis of an institution ourselves.
FGA:You invade into the white cube of the institutes looking
for its limits. How radical is your art practice?
SG: It is very difficult to reach a border or a wall within
actual art institutions, as they will appropriate and use any artist strategy,
so that there are no real boundaries. But of course in other sphere or institutions
there are still very clear boundaries. We could experience this clearly in our
LIFTARCHIVE project. The location of this project is the Munich Kreisverwaltungsreferat,
the district authority. It depends on the context how the work is received.
Generally we would say that we try to experiment with strategies, tactics and
locations. We like to make a comparison with the notion of La Perruque, The
Wig, that appears in Michel de Certeaus’ The Practice of Everyday Life.
The Wig is an expression for a practices and behaviour, something that probably
takes place at every work place. ‘It is the worker’s own work disguised
as work for the employer’ (de Certeaus). It doesn’t mean that the
worker is stealing or simply absent, but that the produces something during
his work time, like the office worker writing a love letter. We have tried to
exercise this in many different ways, for example when we are involved in money
making activities, like art school teaching or working on film sets. While we
are involved in this work we try to produce a piece work of our own. For example
we try to turn the teaching situation into an art piece or have secretly used
a film set as a backdrop for our own videos. At a normal work place usually
this kind of activity is penalized or ignored. But the worker using The Wig,
steals time from the company that is free, creative and not directed toward
profit. It is about spending time in your own way, for your own video. In some
ways this is a strategy, whereby the general order is tricked. And this means
that a different moment, reality or narrative is inserted into the institution
that is supposed to be served.
FGA: In 1999 you did Crash! in ICA in London. What is it
about and were other artists involved?
SG: Crash! was a group show at the ICA. The curatorial premise
was to show work that dealt with issues around corporatism and complicity. For
our project we asked the ICA for a sum of money to invest in the stockmarket
from within the gallery. The intention was to generate funds to pay us for the
idea and performance. The ICA found a donor who was willing to invest £5000
in the project. We had hoped to keep all the profits and return the original
amount. The final agreement was that we and the donor would share the profits
50/50. The installation included a real time trading arena with computer and
internet connection to an online broker. We started by trying us in day-trading,
a very risky but possibly efficient way to trade. However, since it is actually
quite difficult to find your way through the jungle of the stock market and
because no one was willing to give us any good tips, we lost most of this money.
FGA: 2000. The name Alexander Brener, the artist who sprayed
a green dollar sign on the Malevich painting can be found in your archive. Art
as a political activity. How political is Szuper? And what does Szuper think
of conventional art practice?
SG: This work is an interesting example for the relationship
between art and crime. For a show at the Smart Project space in Amsterdam we
made a cake with little figures on top that represented Alexander Brener’s
action „Gesture on Suprematism by Kasimir Malewitch". For this he
had sprayed a green dollar sign on a Malewitch painting in the Stedelijk Museum
and was imprisoned for 18 weeks. That action had a polarizing effect upon the
otherwise homogeneous art world of that time. One side insisted that he was
a serious artist and that this was an act of pure artistic expressivity, supporting
their opinion with art historical references (DADA, Fluxus, etc). The other
side perceived him as a criminal, plain and simple. Some people blame him for
the present situation where more and more works of art are displayed behind
thick bullet-proof glass. At any rate, Brener achieved over night international
fame and that’s rather astonishing as art history is full of examples
of more or less aggressive interventions into institutions. For example Macunias
suggested to stick chewing gum into the keyholes of museum doors.
FGA: One of the projects you did is Venice 2000. It was
commissioned by South London Gallery. The newspaper described it as a successful
art heist, which took place in Venice in 1999. A group of clever con men tricked
more than a dozen galleries out of million dollars worth of artworks. How do
we have to inteprete this work? Is it just about fucking with the system?
SG: We were intrigued by this news item and used it for different
outcomes: a video for which we organized a party that celebrated this successful
art heist and an installation in a shuttle bus between Tate Modern and the South
London Gallery. For the video piece, the heist included a detailed play whereby
a group of con men rented a 17th century Pallazzo and set themselves up as an
art collector’s family. The entire setting was so believeable, that one
gallerists after the other walked in and turned over their very expensive picture,
in exchange for a deposit slip, while a whole family drama enrolled in front
of them. And with every picture that was received and installed in the Pallazzo
the scene became even more convincing to the next gallerist. The Pallazo was
rented for only one week, paid with an invalid check. It is amazing how artful
the whole setup was, reminded us of the ‘invisible theater’ strategies
from the 70s. It would be great if one could for example use similar strategies
in the immigration politics. In Germany artists and sportsmen are usually able
to get long stay Visa’s and work permits. It would be an interesting enterprise
to invent a large number of artists in foreign countries who could then seek
work permits.
FGA: The LIFTARCHIV started in 2001 and was commissioned
by the Baureferat der Landeshaupstadt München. What was the initial question?
Did the idea for the LIFTARCHIV evolve from thinking differently about commissioned
work and art in public space?
SG: The LIFTARCHIV (www.liftarchiv.de) is a platform to test
out the possibilities for making art within an institutional or public domain.
It explores issues around intervention and decoration, collaboration and critique.
We didn’t want to make a participatory work. The context of the Kreisverwaltungsreferat
is difficult because of the massive politics related to the place. Therefore
we tried to insert this parallel structure into the context of the space. The
LIFTARCHIV consists of a moving glass elevator cabin and an archive inside,
situated in the foyer of the Kreisverwaltungsreferat, the Munich district authority,
which for example houses the Munich registry and immigration office as well
as the election office. One of the main activities of the host institution is
the administration of migration as well as cross-border travel, which on the
one hand regulates German travel abroad as well as travel, residence and mobility
of foreigners in Germany.
The lift cabin presents an archival structure within the ‘institutional
archive’ and serves as a mobile interactive sculpture. Designed to travel
up and down one of the walls of the foyer of the institution, it is used as
a platform for a series of presentations and events, programmed over the project
period of four years. It consists of a series of screenings, talks and performances.
For each event the institution opens its doors after office hours and transforms
itself into a new venue, where different people can meet. The lift cabin also
mimics the architectural features and themes of the authority building. The
institution tries to be transparent and customer friendly, and the LIFTARCHIV
mirrors this with its literal transparency, openness and mobility. But at same
time it appears non-official, non-functional, an absurd feature in the environment.
So far our relationship with the actual host institution, the KVR, has been
difficult but productive, and we came to understand, that it is probably symptomatic
for the difficulties of the issues that are related to the location, the tense
and heated debate around the issue of immigration. We found that we constantly
had to re-define the purpose of the project and to re-negotiate its conditions
of existence. However, this difficult dialogue with the institution has become
an integral part of the process of the work. The centre of the project has become
an ongoing collaborative process and a conflicted dialogue, but also an attempt
to create an interface between the institutions, the public, us and other artists
and groups. The LIFTARCHIV became a tool for negotiating our relationship as
artists with the institution, its employees and customers. It represents an
interface for the complex issues related to this location: the issue of immigration
and its administration, that doesn’t allow simple answers. Therefore we
are less interested in finding answers, but rather in starting a process of
movement, like the rise and the descent of the lift box, symbolic for the rise
of wishes and hopes, their symbolic language, their reflection and deconstruction.
FGA:
‘The movement began with a scandal’ was a project in the Lenbachhaus
München. You state that art critique still belongs to the museum. What
do you mean?
SG: In 2002 we curated a show together with Alun Rowlands of
works by different artists that were inserted into the Lenbachhaus collection.
Most of these works questioned the functioning of the museum and the art system.
For example, Salon de Fleurus is an anonymous group endeavor in the form of
a long term exhibit whose subject is the collection of modern art assembled
in Paris by Gertrude Stein. There is not an "official explanation"
or "manifesto" that would explain to the visitors what this place
is, what they are looking at and what might have been the intentions of its
"authors". All interpretations (statements, articles) of this place
so far have been external and they are all considered to be "legitimate".
There is a place in Manhattan, New York that defies description. It is not a
museum, gallery, residence or sacred space yet it suggests all of these. Its
caretaker, Goran Djordevic, explains to visitors that the collection of African
sculptures, antique curiosities and reproductions of modernist paintings constitutes
a contemporary exhibition of anonymous artists. He reveals that reproductions
relate to Gertrude Stein's art collection at her apartment on Rue de Fleurus,
Paris. The place is a Proustian return to the realm of memory. It is an evocation
of the modernist spirit of the early 20th century an imaginary restaging. At
the Lenbachhaus Museum we placed artefacts from the collection 'on tour'. Placed
in the Blue Rider gallery these facsimiles relate to Kandinsky et al's search
for original expression that included plundering non-European cultures. The
objects and paintings are, themselves, a negation of authenticity, authorship
and even historicity. The salon is a healthy antidote to the museum's demand
for clear and easy boundaries. It recaptures something of a bygone experience
of art-viewing, forging a critique of contemporary museum presentation imbued
with a shifting modernist revisionism.
Our own work, the video performance 'Good Morning Mr. Bloomberg' unveils a business
deal, recorded on video, which is being celebrated between the artists and collector.
The camera focuses on gestures, ritual actions, artificial friendliness and
smart dress. From these details the viewer begins to sense that here the art
world and economics are meeting in a lavish environment. The collection and
acquisition of art works, the clinching of a deal, all begin to display the
overlap of culture and corporate economy. We as artists, perhaps, are entering
into a partnership in which we are both complicit in our own manipulation of
symbols and representation.
FGA:
Trading Places was a show in the traditional Pump House gallery in London in
2004. It’s an encouter between art and migration. Art as a means to investigate
specific (social and political) topics. Is this still art? What will be the
role in the future of artists and what will art look like?
SG: We have actually an ongoing project called “gallery
fiction” which was a research into different peoples ideas and a projection
onto a future art system. We asked them how they envisage an art and exhibition
practice in 50 years time. We conducted a series of interviews with different
artists, curators, professors, museum people. It turned out that most people
think that not much will actually change but that there is only hope for small
or personal changes in working or living conditions. We thought about this and
realised that probably first of all we need to question and the role of art
education today, as it is still seems to be the channel through which most people
come to art and that forms views on art and the art system. Therefore our project
has become much more concrete in that we are now asking artists and curators
who are also teachers about their own experiences of their teaching as well
as of what other or future models of art education they might be able to envisage.
FGA:
This new way of making art has also a problematic side, I think. Most presentation
in an art space are simply not interesting for the public. Even with Teasing
Minds at the moment in the Kunstverein I observed that it’s hard for the
public to understand or get into it. And I must confess it is a bit boring,
but at the same time very interesting. Maybe the exhibition format isn’t
right, maybe a publication is more effective. My question is: how can we change
this format, what other presentation forms can we develop?
SG: We are not propagating an object-less art. We agree that
many presentations in contemporary art spaces are boring to the public and very
elitist in their approach. But is this a question of formats or of contents
or how contemporary art is embedded in society. Perhaps one suggestion is a
format like the LIFTARCHIV. An almost “autonomous” presentation
structure inserted into a non-art space. Let’s fantasize. “Non-art”
institutions will open their doors for “art “ initiatives, and in
return “art” galleries offer their space for these “non-art”
institutions to represent themselves.
(There is a quote from a TV program “Test Tube” by the Canadian
artist group General Idea. They called the format of their show the “
I can’t believe it’s a format”.)