Sense and Sentiment. Mistakes are closely followed by Effects (de) - a podcast by CastYourArt.com

from 2009-02-10T15:00

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Sense and Sentiment - Mistakes are closely followed by Effects
a) animals that belong to the emperor, b) embalmed ones, c) tamed ones, d) suckling pigs, e) sirens, f) fabulous ones, g) stray dogs, h) those that are included in this classification, i) those that tremble as if they were mad, j) innumerable ones, k) those that are drawn with the finest camel hair brush, l) and so on, m) those that have broken the water jug, n) those that resemble flies from a distance.
This unusual taxonomy of the organisms from the animal realm, attributed by the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges to a Chinese encyclopedia, was the inspiration for the French philosopher Michel Foucault for a book about the connection between our world of words and that of things.
What about this source had inspired Foucault? What exactly had moved him? In the preface of his book, he mentions that the reading of Borges’s enumeration had made him laugh. "This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of thought - our thought, the thought that bears the stamp of our age and our geography - breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing things and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with collapse our age-old definitions between the Same and the Other."
The laughter may just have sparked an uproar in the philosopher, one which caused a widespread, deep, uncomfortable feeling: that the terms with which we comprehend and keep the world in check - our system of classification that carefully orders the world - is only one among many, perhaps one that is just as impossible and disconcerting as the one in the Borges text.

Effects closely follow what we sense as wrong: the slapstick, the ridiculous, the ill-fitting, provocation, an apparent representation, the perception-changing, the offensive, and therefore, effects closely follow art. It is a characteristic of art that it confronts us with the unexpected, that it threatens the security of our expectations, of what seems normal to us, of what we are used to.

The exhibition, "Sense and Sentiment: Mistakes are closely followed by effects", investigates the ability of art to unleash those sensations which push the viewer into uncharted and hitherto unimaginable territory. What is sensation? How can I manufacture it? Where does it take place? For the curators Sabeth Buchmann, Eva Maria Stadler, and Kathi Hofer, these questions are posed to the artists. In addition, from a curatorial standpoint, dealing with the phenomenon of sensation brings up questions such as: How do I notice something? How do I approach a painting? What happens to me in this moment? What is acting upon me?

This exhibition is at the August Contemporary, a branch of the Belvedere in Vienna. On this home base, says Eva Maria Stadler, curator of contemporary art at the Belvedere, the museum is working on presenting young and current artists. One result of this effort is "Sense and Sentiment", a collaboration of the Belvedere with the Academy of the Fine Arts in Vienna. In the course of a semester, positions of sensations and perceptions were investigated, artistically realized, and selected for the exhibition. Works of the students are on view, placed alongside works from well-known contemporary artists such as Constanze Ruhm, Julian Göthe, Heimo Zobernig, and Tony Conrad, as points of reference. The exhibition will run through May 24, 2009. Guided tours are also available and on the weekend of March 28th and 29th, artists and cultural theoreticians will explore sensations and their effects in lectures, films, and music in an event called "Saturday Sensations". (wh/jn)

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