PR / MeetFactory Gallery / THE JOURNEY
MEETFACTORY Gallery presents the exhibition THE JOURNEY
Exhibiting artists: Darina Alster
& Veronika Slámová (CZ), Francis Alÿs (BE/MX), Martin Bražina (CZ),
Jana Doležalová (CZ), Peter Fischli & David Weiss (CH), Vojtěch Fröhlich
(CZ), Harold Guérin (FR), Jan Krtička (CZ), Karel Kunc (CZ), Rudolf Samohejl
(CZ), František Skála (CZ), Adéla Součková (CZ), Guido van der Werve (NL)
Curator: Karina Pfeiffer Kottová
Exhibition
opening: 5. 6. at 7pm
Exhibition
duration: 5. 6. – 22. 8. 2014
MeetFactory Gallery presents a large group exhibition
mapping projects inspired by the motif of a journey, by artists of the youngest
generation as well as those who have already won international acclaim. A
number of new artworks were commissioned for the purpose of this exhibition and
will appear along with canonic works such as the film The Right Way by Peter Fischli and David
Weiss, or the Venice
project by František Skála. The exhibition renders the topic of motion in
contemporary art, but also of the tension between the place of the work’s
origin and the place of its presentation, between the space within and without.
The journey = longing. Why is it so fascinating to
escape everyday stereotypes and set out, be it in an urban landscape or the
wild? “Wanderlust” is a human constant. We feel the urge not to get stuck in
one place, explore the unexplored, and to get hands on experience actually, or
at least virtually. We strive to get acquainted with global navigation and
ignore boundaries, as well as take risks, have time to think, wait for an
ingenious idea or just see the sunset. The journey = political affair. Not all
paths are passable and not all zones open both ways. Sometimes one has to
choose one’s own direction, diverting from general expectations. One decides
not to follow the crowd, or go for a holiday in Bibione. The journey =
loneliness. You may talk to someone along the way and miss the purpose of your
journey in the meantime. As a test of courage, there is also the need to come
to terms with one’s own present. The journey
makes it easier, as unlike other things, it keeps going somewhere.
For artists at the turn of the last two centuries, the
way out of their studios had to do with the newly acquired freedom, but also
with the loss of a privileged status. An artist with a backpack on his shoulder
may be well mistaken for a vagabond and his or her work accomplished along the
way for a product of nature or even for a mere coincidence. This may be a
partial explanation of the monumentality of some Land Art projects that can be fully observed only from a bird’s eye
view. Or quite on the contrary, a slant toward quite minimalist interventions
into a landscape almost untouched by the human hand, which however often ended
up captured in a nicely framed photograph in some of the leading world
exhibition venues, thus eventually saving their ephemeral character for
eternity. By this I just mean to suggest that the world beyond the outlined
trajectory from a studio into an art gallery and back has been the focus of
artists for quite some time, so that the present topic is not a special
discovery. Yet it keeps changing both in its
raw contours and subtle nuances, depending on individual artistic attitudes and
the more general situation in the contemporary art. While in the time of the Barbizon School and beginnings of Land Art the
outcome of a journey was still a physical work, be it a landscape painting or a
nest made of meticulously piled up flat stones, a shift towards performance and
conceptual art provided the journey itself with much greater meaning. The fateful encounter of
two artists in the middle of the Great Wall of China
or the sudden escape across the Old
Town Square from a bunch of friends became the
very focus of the artist’s interest, the motion became an end in itself. For the emerging generation of artists, the
journey may be a surrealist return to the past, a physical contemplation of
weather conditions while driving a car, a collective picking of artifacts, a
parachute jump. It may materialize in monumental installations,
or stay at the level of a personal memory suggested by more subtle media.
When a journey becomes the theme of an exhibition, a
kind of inimical element enters the game: the static, impersonal art gallery,
which artists through the last century tried to conquer so many times, by
breaking its walls with excavators, and even digging tunnels under it. And yet,
their craters were just large scale pictures perfectly framed by the four white
walls. In this sense the exhibition at the MeetFactory Gallery is more
considerate, be it only for the reason that a twice-told joke is no longer
funny. Its domain is the ‘here and now’: this summer, at this very place
between the rails and the highway, where the artists who circled the world meet
with those who perhaps just reached the edge of their hometowns, yet in both
cases on quite personal and relevant grounds. The exhibition’s mood is
lighthearted, yet its approach to its journey is serious - its longing is to
defy stagnation.
MeetFactory is supported by
a grant from the City of Prague
amounting to 6.500.000 CZK for the year 2014.Media partner: GoOut.cz
Contacts and more info: Christina
Gigliotti – PR & Marketing / christina@meetfactory.cz
Karina Pfeiffer
Kottová – curator / karina@meetfactory.cz