Programme Vika Kirchenbauer
Acts of Looking Back
›Understanding‹ the other, excavating knowledge about the other on one’s own terms in order to render judgment or confirm prejudice, marks local and global realities significantly in seemingly disparate fields as art spectatorship, modern warfare, online dating, surveillance mechanisms, psychiatry, the movement of bodies between nation states or labour within the experience economy.
The violent gaze and its insistence on unilateral staring, where established hierarchies are maintained by their unmet gaze, brings us to this series of video works that constitute Acts of Looking Back. They serve as pieces of postinstitutional critique, playfully exceeding rationality and mere cognitive judgment in favour of affect, ambiguity and opacity.
We begin with Yvonne Rainer’s Trio A (1966) in which the choreographer translates into dance some of her No Manifesto’s claims quite remarkably: no to spectacle, no to the heroic, no to trash imagery, no to involvement of performer or spectator, no to style, no to camp, no to seduction of the spectator by the wiles of the performer, no to eccentricity, no to moving or being moved.
In Trio A, the dancer is to never make eye contact with the live spectator. Yet how can Rainer’s ideas be made useful in times where we have all learned to perform for camera, where being observed, assessed or under surveillance at work has become commonplace? Where personal trauma cannot be disassociated from the way one is looked at on screen and on stage? Where one perhaps wishes to return the violent gaze instead of constantly avoiding eye contact? How can queer bodies or ›othered‹ bodies on screen challenge the exoticising, legitimising or delegitimising gaze instead of merely feeding the need for ›edgy images‹, moving stories and engaging entertainment?
One answer is Nazlı Dinçel’s Solitary Acts #4, where the artist’s vagina dominates exclusively the act of looking at the audience. Another answer could be borrowed from Cecelia Condit’s operatic fairy tale Possibly in Michigan: »I bite at the hand that feeds me, slap at the face that eats me…«
_Vika Kirchenbauer
Solitary Acts #4
Nazlı Dinçel
A young girl explores her sexuality. In a humorous, impetuous and provocative manner, Dinçel shares with us her personal memories. […]
Dangling by Their Mouths
Colin Campbell
Dangling by their Mouths, one of Canadian video artist Colin Campbell’s DIY masterpieces, is a complex, humorous yet bleak study […]
It, Heat, Hit
Laure Prouvost
«This six-minute film requires all your attention.» Pictures flash staccato-like across the screen, abruptly, fragmentarily. They are accompanied by an […]
Lookin’ Good, Feelin’ Good
Stanya Kahn
In her exploration of the phenomena of anxiety and power, Kahn climbs inside a giant penis costume in Lookin’ Good, […]
Marcus Fisher’s Wake
Oreet Ashery
The mock documentary Marcus Fisher’s Wake shows some of the public interventions conducted by Oreet Ashery’s alter ego, Orthodox Jew […]
Possibly in Michigan
Cecilia Condit
Two young women are pursued in a shopping mall by a cannibal. In a surreal suburban setting, victims become aggressors, […]
A head on a screen. Like a planet it moves in the emptiness of space. It speaks. Its words appear […]
Trio A
Yvonne Rainer
Yvonne Rainer’s criticism of the conventions of watching in her films are based on her work as a dancer and […]
You Are Boring!
Vika Kirchenbauer
Following the service industry boom in the first decade of the 21st century, the concept of work in the new […]
Please Relax Now
Vika Kirchenbauer
»This is going to be a memorable event, orchestrated by me for you. Believe me, you will never forget this. […]