POLITICAL AFFAIRS – Language Is Not Innocent

Participating artists: Karo Akpokiere, Art & Language, Alice Attie, Monica Bonvicini, Andrea Bowers, George Brecht, Daniela Comani, Guy Debord, Jeremy Deller, Willie Doherty, Sam Durant, Elmgren & Dragset, Öyvind Fahlström, Claire Fontaine, Jakob Kolding, Barbara Kruger, Aleksandra Mir, Adrian Piper, Pope L, Chris Reinecke, Allen Ruppersberg, Maruša Sagadin, Superflex, Ron Terada and Poet Ai, read by Donika Kelly

 

 

There is nothing more fragmented, interrupted, repetitive, conventional and contradictory than political speech. It never stops breaking off, starting over, harping, betraying its promises (…).(Bruno Latour, An Inquiry into the Modes of Existence)

 

The group exhibition Political Affairs – Language Is Not Innocent, explores how contemporary artists from different generations have dealt and deal with language -intended not only as tool of communication, but also as a visual and sculptural medium- to make political and social assertions. Curated by Monica Bonvicini and Bettina Steinbrügge, the show conceives the artistic practice as a reworking of visual forms and methods in order to present political and critical ideas about contemporary society. The use of language, as a political and social tool, is under observation then: how power is mediated, and how points of view are constructed, reproduced and manipulated through written and spoken words. Texts in the arts can be extremely subversive: decoupled from its original visual context, they allow imaginative readings of historical, social and political events. Acts such as copying, re-contextualizing or inverting the relation between text and image, can be powerful gestures with political implications, and they can function as compelling models for ways of reframing the world.

 

The works selected for Political Affairs – Language Is Not Innocent, share a visceral, affective resonance, able to transform ideas and concepts into a physical experience. The exhibition, composed by drawings, prints, sculptures, performative sound installations and other medium, attempts to shed light on the process of how subjectivities and personal experiences are products of the images and the concepts that circulate around and through us, historically and daily. It also offers new and contradictory readings of our current time, questioning its complexity. Many artists strategically adopt the language of politics and mass media, of cinema and literature, to reveal the conventions, stereotypes, behavioral patterns, entrenched opinions and taboos to which our society accommodates. In the context of an era in which political communication structures and channels have radically changed due to the development of technology, the show gives an insight into how artists address and elaborate the mutation of language in the political sphere and in the communicative form of negotiation.

 

Generally speaking, political language is a battle ‘for words with words’ that aims to influence public opinion. As Max Frisch wrote: ‘The artist looks at what is around him. By countering the idioms of political language with a different language, the language of his experience, he exposes the language of power as language of power, as a deceptive language (…).In a democratic society, we not only need ‘counter-powers’ within political language, we also need ‘counter-positions’ to power outside of it. Only in this balance can freedom provide the fresh air that we citizens need to breathe.’

 

 

Photo:
Chris Reinecke
Umgebungskleid (Düsseldorfer Kleid)
1967
plastic, nettle tape, yarn, marker
72 x 62 cm

Renecke_keine whalen.jpg
© Chris Reinecke

Available works of the artist

Chris Reinecke, Deklinierte Flächen / Matrix, 2020, © Chris Reinecke, Foto: Linda Inconi-Jansen
Chris Reinecke, Deklinierte Flächen / Matrix, 2020, © Chris Reinecke, Foto: Linda Inconi-Jansen
Chris Reinecke, Wege der Bewegung. Marsroute., 2018, © Chris Reinecke
Chris Reinecke, Wege der Bewegung. Marsroute., 2018, © Chris Reinecke
Chris Reinecke, Animali / Ober- und Unterstadt, 2008 – 2016
Chris Reinecke, Jagd mit verstärktem Restlicht, 2007 – 2008
Chris Reinecke, Ansteigendes Wasser, 2006
Chris Reinecke, Wider alle Vernunft / Ferguson, 1992 – 2015
Chris Reinecke, Deutschlandbilder No 1, 1989, © © Chris Reinecke, photo: Mareike Foecking
Chris Reinecke, Deutschlandbilder No 2, 1989, © © Chris Reinecke, photo: Mareike Foecking
Chris Reinecke, Tierbilder, 1983
Chris Reinecke, Ähnliches, Differentes, Gleiches / Pferdebild, 1981
Chris Reinecke, Nicht für Augen, Nase, Mund, Ohren, Hände, Füße, 1969
Chris Reinecke, PACKUNG - weiblicher Körper, 1968
Chris Reinecke, PACKUNG 2 - männliche Anatomie, 1968
Chris Reinecke, Gesichtsteile (roter Mund), 1965
Chris Reinecke, Gesichtsteile (mit Kaffeetasse), 1965, © Chris Reinecke

Past exhibitions at Beck & Eggeling

Selected Publications of the Artist

Chris Reinecke. Zeit und Arbeit. Momente.

Chris Reinecke. Zeit und Arbeit. Momente.

  • Artist: Chris Reinecke
    Editor: Susanne Rennert
    Text: Susanne Rennert
    Design: Beck & Eggeling (Antonia Eggeling)
  • English, German
    Hardcover, 28,5 x 24 cm
    128 pages, 68 illustrations
  • Beck & Eggeling Kunstverlag, 2016
    ISBN 978-3-94606304-9
  • 28 €
Order More

BECK & EGGELING INTERNATIONAL FIANE ART · DÜSSELDORF · VIENNA — INFO@BECK-EGGELING.DE · WWW.BECK-EGGELING.DE

BILKER STR. 5 & 4 – 6 · D - 40213 DÜSSELDORF · T +49 211 4915890 — MARGARETENSTRASSE 5 /19 · A -1040 WIEN · T +43 1 581 1956